Building a Subharmonicon: What it's like to attend a Moog Engineering Workshop
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If you were ever curious about what it's like to attend Moog's Engineering Workshop at Moogfest - join me as I walk you through the process of building the Moog Subharmonicon, including some pretty nasty mistakes I admit to making along the way. Luckily Moog's engineers are patient and helpful, and used to dealing with such things...
Moogfest is a synth fan's dream come true, with live shows, music making workshops and plenty of synths on hand. A small subset of Moogfest is the "VIP Engineering Workshop" - where, for a hefty price ($1,500+fees) you get to build a new, unreleased synth, with guidance by top Moog engineers.
Some of the synths in previous years ended up being released (Werkstatt, DFAM) and some did not (BFAM). When I read the description of this years' workshop synth - the Subharmonicon, the idea sounded so special, I decided not to take the chance that it won't be released, and to document the process along the way.
I had very little previous soldering experience, but decided to go for it anyway. The kit you get in the workshop requires soldering 81 components with 340 joints, not to mention dozens of nuts, washers and screws.
The workshop spans over two sessions of four hours each, across two days of Moogfest, and is a very memorable and positive experience.
The soundtrack for this mini-documentary was made entirely using the Subharmonicon, with some assistance from Valhalla Shimmer and Touche by Expressive E.
NOTE: Occasionally I’ll try out affiliate marketing and include affiliate links. This means that I may earn a commission when you click on or make purchases via affiliate links. The content of this clip is entirely my opinion, and was not paid for or dictated in any what by the company creating the gear. Without addressing the particulars of products shown here as they might be under NDA, gear shown on this channel may be either sent by the manufacturer, on loan for review or bought at a discount.
Видео Building a Subharmonicon: What it's like to attend a Moog Engineering Workshop канала loopop
► Patreon: https://patreon.com/loopop
It's been released! Check out Subharmonicon pricing (affiliate links help the channel):
► Sweetwater: https://imp.i114863.net/LJo4Z
► Thomann: https://www.thomann.de/gb/moog_subharmonicon.htm?offid=1&affid=369
► Amazon: https://amzn.to/2T1kafw
Other places I hang out:
► Web: https://loopopmusic.com
► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/loopopmusic
► Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/loopopmusic
► Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/loopopmusic
My music:
► Bandcamp: https://loopop.bandcamp.com
► Spotify: http://bit.ly/LoopopOnSpotify
► Apple Music:http://bit.ly/LoopopOnAppleMusic
Want to email me personally?
► Ziv (at) loopopmusic.com
If you were ever curious about what it's like to attend Moog's Engineering Workshop at Moogfest - join me as I walk you through the process of building the Moog Subharmonicon, including some pretty nasty mistakes I admit to making along the way. Luckily Moog's engineers are patient and helpful, and used to dealing with such things...
Moogfest is a synth fan's dream come true, with live shows, music making workshops and plenty of synths on hand. A small subset of Moogfest is the "VIP Engineering Workshop" - where, for a hefty price ($1,500+fees) you get to build a new, unreleased synth, with guidance by top Moog engineers.
Some of the synths in previous years ended up being released (Werkstatt, DFAM) and some did not (BFAM). When I read the description of this years' workshop synth - the Subharmonicon, the idea sounded so special, I decided not to take the chance that it won't be released, and to document the process along the way.
I had very little previous soldering experience, but decided to go for it anyway. The kit you get in the workshop requires soldering 81 components with 340 joints, not to mention dozens of nuts, washers and screws.
The workshop spans over two sessions of four hours each, across two days of Moogfest, and is a very memorable and positive experience.
The soundtrack for this mini-documentary was made entirely using the Subharmonicon, with some assistance from Valhalla Shimmer and Touche by Expressive E.
NOTE: Occasionally I’ll try out affiliate marketing and include affiliate links. This means that I may earn a commission when you click on or make purchases via affiliate links. The content of this clip is entirely my opinion, and was not paid for or dictated in any what by the company creating the gear. Without addressing the particulars of products shown here as they might be under NDA, gear shown on this channel may be either sent by the manufacturer, on loan for review or bought at a discount.
Видео Building a Subharmonicon: What it's like to attend a Moog Engineering Workshop канала loopop
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25 мая 2018 г. 16:03:39
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