Synclavier Product Specialist Kevin Maloney - Full Interview

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 245

  • @Andronicus2007
    @Andronicus2007 Год назад +66

    Thriller and Bad certainly had a couple of football teams worth of talented sessions musos, synth nuts and cowriters. As talented as MJ was, these albums definitely were a team effort.

    • @caleykelly
      @caleykelly Год назад +5

      Songwriters as well!

    • @Esperluet
      @Esperluet 9 месяцев назад

      Collective creative genius

  • @FrancisMaxino
    @FrancisMaxino 2 месяца назад +3

    The Korg M1 has very similar round buttons that glow like that, didn't know they were military spec from bombers. Had no idea that the Synclavier could do so much and always thought it was some sort of simple electric harpsichordey thing with a few limited sounds, wow, what a machine!

  • @jeremy8936
    @jeremy8936 Год назад +28

    At the age of 49, I spent the last year getting educated into all things sound design and buying my first synths. I am finding your videos breaking down the history of this world so inspiring. Better late than never :)

  • @bart.grantham
    @bart.grantham Год назад +51

    This is amazing. There's not a lot of material about how the Synclavier was used, so a demonstration like this from the people who were there is really special and unique. Thank you for sharing, and thanks for everyone involved in putting this video together.

  • @vaportrails7943
    @vaportrails7943 8 месяцев назад +3

    The song “Synchronicity I” by The Police is also built around a Synclavier sequence. And Frank Zappa made a whole album with it.

  • @TruthSurge
    @TruthSurge Месяц назад +2

    Imagine living pre-electricity. :( This was an amazing look at an amazing synth and history of some of it.

  • @dessiplaer
    @dessiplaer 10 месяцев назад +3

    I had that demo record back in the day. Unfortunately, that was about as close as I ever got to having a Synclavier.

  • @dstarling61
    @dstarling61 7 месяцев назад +4

    After the comment about the B-52 buttons, it reminded me that I always thought the buttons on an Oberheim look like the ones in an Airbus flight deck.

  • @whatspadethinks
    @whatspadethinks 6 месяцев назад +3

    One of the reasons I have been using iOS Music Production apps exclusively in my home studio since 2015 is apps like Synclavier Go. On a device no bigger than a magazine you have DAW's that are just as capable as those on a laptop (Cubasis for years, Logic Pro has been around 6 months), full on code parity versions of all the Fab Filter plugins, tons of new software synths and versions of every bigtime electronic instrument in history (the Moog stuff, Korg, and of course, a rare, historical piece of gear like the Synclavier)...

  • @neocollective5959
    @neocollective5959 11 месяцев назад +11

    I'm a bass player but cannot stop watching your vids Anthony ! Thank you !!

  • @Martin-cb4fh
    @Martin-cb4fh 11 месяцев назад +15

    OMG,,, I can't believe I'm watching this. This the real MARTIN ROYER and I remember the day that was made (25:20 in the video). I was an NED Employee working there in tech support. It was a total dream job and I miss those days so much. I remember how cool Kevin was as the lead Product Specialist in LA. He was (and still is) an awesome person and musician. HI KEVIN! And of course there wasn't a synclavier person that didn't know the name Anthony Marinelli. He and his music partner were Synclav geniuses. HI ANTHONY!

    • @russ254
      @russ254 8 месяцев назад

      how cool!

    • @gingervytis
      @gingervytis 16 дней назад

      Hi Martin! John Slick here, product specialist from Richard Head's Songbird Digitial, the Southeast NED indy distributor. I remember staying at your apartment briefly when I went to L.A. around 1992 to do temporary tech support for the owner's group. Griff offered me a full time job, but I was torn between that and going to work as a fledgling C programmer in Boston. I thought the software engineering path might be more stable then sound design. Who could know which would be better? I still live in Nashville and do software dev for a submarine builder in CT.

  • @dnsmusic
    @dnsmusic 9 месяцев назад +12

    I was so lucky to have my hands on this beauty 24/7 for 10 years in the 90s - the best sounding, most reliable and smartest "DAW" evva!! I want her back!!!

  • @DSZI.ShyHunterBB
    @DSZI.ShyHunterBB Год назад +10

    This is such a magical instrument and there’s hardly anything else quite like it!

  • @zarcon85
    @zarcon85 Год назад +4

    The weird Sample Stretching Sounds a lot what Kraftwerk did with some parts on 1991s "The Mix" Album....Namely "Radio Activity" and especially a Part in "Music non Stop"...

  • @wallacebillingham9388
    @wallacebillingham9388 Год назад +14

    This is rapidly becoming my favorite synth channel

  • @Bent6
    @Bent6 Год назад +24

    Anthony & Kevin, thank you for this!
    I caught the Synclavier bug in grad school in the 90s (the fact they had a Synclavier II seriously influenced my decision to go there). I spent a lot of time with it over a couple of years. I now see how I only scratched the surface of its capabilities. Even so, I loved working with it and have come close to buying a system a number of times. When Cameron announced the Regen, I bought one as soon as I could.
    Your Synclavier vids have helped me to get up and running as quickly as possible. I've been using them as tutorials and have been attempting to translate what you've been doing to the Regen. I've also been tearing into the factory libraries (thanks for your great patches!) to see how these timbres are constructed.
    My Regen has already proven itself indispensable for music and theatrical sound design projects. Thanks for your timely help!

    • @issiewizzie
      @issiewizzie Год назад +1

      I got into synthesis through the Synclavier in 84..... manage to get the Arturia version .

  • @boldstandard
    @boldstandard Год назад +4

    It would be amazing to see a video where you AB the original Synclavier against the Arturia app and maybe the iPad app and new desktop version, and give some pointers on how to make the software emulations sound or function more like the real thing.

  • @kimzim2001
    @kimzim2001 Год назад +4

    I wish Synclavier would make a control keyboard which reminds of the VPK to hook up to the Regen. Maybe complete with a control knob ;)

  • @philipjohnson2652
    @philipjohnson2652 Год назад +9

    I assembled all NED keyboards their last three years of existence.

  • @battledj2933
    @battledj2933 Год назад +6

    When we were amazed in the 80s to be able to create stereo music on the Commodore Amiga 500 with fast tracker, there already existed this ingenious device of which we were totally unaware. Such a fascinating insight into how this sound design was made back then. We assumed it was produced by real musicians playing real instruments for recording 🙂

    • @ShallRemainUnknown
      @ShallRemainUnknown 11 месяцев назад +3

      Actually, the Synclavier did not have polyphonic sample playback until 1985, the same year the Amiga debuted - and the Amiga would have been released a year or so earlier if not for Atari suing Commodore to prevent its release. Until 1985 the Synclavier, even with its digital recording expansion, was purely monophonic - a single mono or stereo voice. Amiga was 4-channel polyphonic sample playback.

    • @battledj2933
      @battledj2933 11 месяцев назад

      @@ShallRemainUnknown Thank you for this story, nice to know this!It was funny that you had sometimes only the kickdrum in the left or right channel :-)

    • @ShallRemainUnknown
      @ShallRemainUnknown 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@battledj2933 Haha, you ALWAYS had the kick drum (and every other sound) completely in either the left or right channel, since the Amiga stereo output hard-panned each channel fully to either right or left, nowhere in between. It was a limitation of the design, although some musicians/programmers nevertheless used the Amiga's stereo capability to interesting effect.
      Also, you could actually load Ensoniq Mirage sampler samples into the Amiga directly from Mirage floppy disk using special software, giving it a big library of samples. And you could devote much more RAM memory to samples than a Mirage could (or an $8,000+ Emulator II, for that matter!)

    • @battledj2933
      @battledj2933 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@ShallRemainUnknown Yes indeed, there we're mod files that sounded incredible like Jesus On E's was my favorite Amiga demo, 32 min of music on 2 floppy's! And the first (that i know) demo with digitized video fragments!

  • @jakehendriksen2841
    @jakehendriksen2841 10 месяцев назад +5

    It's exciting to hear that the Arturia "emulation" I already own is in fact not an emulation, but the actual code of the Synclavier. I'm excited to dig into it more - particularly the resynthesis engine. You weren't kidding; What a brilliant and exciting instrument, even all these decades later.

  • @issiewizzie
    @issiewizzie Год назад +4

    I guess the Regen video in relation to the Synclavier will be next .lol

  • @JKVisFX
    @JKVisFX 9 месяцев назад +2

    I was in high school when the Synclavier was first released. I was deep into electronic classical music and had just purchased "The Four Seasons" by Patrick Gleeson" and was transfixed by those sounds. I even remember taking out a magnifying loupe and was looking at the grooves on the LP during the final, heaviest part of "Summer." From that point forward, I did everything I could to learn more about the Synclav (long before the internet). I so lusted after that instrument and all of the possibilities that came with it. Now, I have the Arturia version as part of the "V Collection."

  • @lundsweden
    @lundsweden Год назад +4

    As a little nerd in the 80s, I knew about the Synclavier from MJ's liner notes. This is also where I first saw the names of people often reffered to in this series. But how similar was a 1986 Synclav to an '83 model, or a '77 model? Did the underlying architecture eventually become a liability by the late 80s/early 90s, or did the updates keep it relevant?

  • @jlindborg1105
    @jlindborg1105 Год назад +4

    A great interview!!! The Synclavier 9600 has been a dream of mine for many years. I do own the Arturia version but miss some attributs around the resynthesis which the original has.
    Between the old Synclavier and the newer desktop, regarding sound. Yeah, you can (should) hear the difference. This purely because designated DA-converters on the old system.
    The same goes for the Fairlight CMI. I had one some years back and it sounded HUGE and HEAVY compared to my other samplers which was EMU E6500, Ensoniq EPS 16+ and a PC.

    • @issiewizzie
      @issiewizzie 10 месяцев назад +1

      I tried the resynthesis on the Arturia synclivaier version it does not sound like this :(

    • @jlindborg1105
      @jlindborg1105 10 месяцев назад +1

      That’s really sad….

  • @GregoryKeithe
    @GregoryKeithe Месяц назад +2

    I'm going to rewatch Stand By Me just to listen to the sounds❤

  • @ArgumentShow
    @ArgumentShow Год назад +4

    MY SET UP IN THE 80, INCUDING THE CAT AND KITTEN AT THE TOP OVER A SYNCLAVIER II

  • @jppagetoo
    @jppagetoo Год назад +7

    I always was amazed by the Synclavier. This demonstration is mind blowing. I came to know it's use through Frank Zappa's albums of the 1980's. I always wanted to mess around with one. Now I see that wasn't really going to be what I needed. This is deeeeep.

  • @bigglesfm
    @bigglesfm Год назад +3

    Nice viewing thanks for the vid. I'm going to try to replicate that secret mj piano and moog bass sound now. I spotted that Telequipment scope behind the laptop ! We had one in the workshop back in the 70s.

  • @MusicoElectronico
    @MusicoElectronico Год назад +7

    Great! Resynthesis is so interesting. Synclavier was, and still is, a dream machine 🎶 🎵 ❤️

  • @alphabeets
    @alphabeets Год назад +5

    Are these two of the coolest guys in the world, or what! Great stuff, guys.

  • @pwmodulation467
    @pwmodulation467 Год назад +9

    Anthony your channel has become essential viewing. Your song breakdowns are not only very educational, they capture the moments with the artists when the songs were conceived. Add to this the deep insights you give into the role the Synclavier played on the track and also how the Synclavier system works. For me the Synclavier has always been shrouded in mystery until now. I can’t thank you enough for making these videos and please keep making them for as long as you can please.

  • @neilloughran4437
    @neilloughran4437 Год назад +4

    Interesting to hear the famous Kevin resythesis sample! I recall Billy Joel mentioning it in an interview and saying "why do I need to have a sound saying Kevin?"... I guess he didn't quite see the possibilities of the overall concept...

  • @chupathingy5862
    @chupathingy5862 Год назад +13

    I heard an interview from Karl Bartos of a Kraftwerk who said programming the Sinclavier was a joyless, tedious process. It's amazing to see this man work on it so blazingly fast.

    • @unduloid
      @unduloid 18 дней назад +1

      He's not really programming it as he is calling up presets. I guess making original sounds on it can be very tedious indeed.

  • @trentpmcd
    @trentpmcd Год назад +5

    Thanks, this is a great video! I'd love to be able to sit down at an original Synclavier II. I do have Regen and love it. So far I've done mostly just additive/FM, but a huge amount of fun, even without the samples. Hanging out in music forums, they still interact with their customers and listen, which is great. Question, though - do they still sell the stand alone big knob? I thought it was discontinued. I'd like to pick one up... Anyway, looking forward to more Synclav videos!

    • @Synclavier
      @Synclavier Год назад +3

      Yep, there are some in stock now, they should be added to our online store very soon.

    • @trentpmcd
      @trentpmcd Год назад +1

      @@Synclavier Thanks! I just ordered one. As a FYI, I did a search to find it, I didn't see it in the store.

  • @neilloughran4437
    @neilloughran4437 Год назад +5

    I'd be fascinated by a 1hr video on the resynthesis part alone... not quite grabbing how it completely works.. sounds a lot like how modern synths like the Iridium and the like convert audio to wavetable "frames" but not quite... I recall Kraftwerk used resynthesis a lot on "Electric Cafe" so assume a lot of their strange voice samples are coming out the resynthesis.... there is a whole lot more to the Synclavier than the Fairlight it seems!

    • @lars1588
      @lars1588 7 месяцев назад

      I thought it was a very complex envelope generator for the additive waveforms, but I could be wrong-- I've never even seen a Synclavier in person!

  • @andrewpatterson7932
    @andrewpatterson7932 Год назад +5

    Your videos on subtractive synthesis have been so helpful in clarifying the steps to bringing a sound from your imagination to life: I’d really like to understand your method for acheiving the same with additive and FM synthesis.

  • @AScheidlerable
    @AScheidlerable Год назад +5

    Awesome 🙂 When I got to the University of Michigan in the fall of 1981 they had just gotten a Synclavier in the electronic music studio. More long format videos like this!!!

  • @toolman8269
    @toolman8269 Год назад +10

    Fantastic video! I remember hearing about the amazing Synclavier in the early '80s. Stevie Wonder and Tony Banks did some amazing work with them. It's a joy to hear the stories presented here from you guys. So amazing that Synclavier is alive and well in 2023 with their ReGen product! Looking forward to more videos. I can't wait for a lengthy and informative video on your favorite synthesizer, Anthony...the ARP 2600!

  • @jimbotron70
    @jimbotron70 Год назад +5

    Synclavier should re-release the VPK keyboard in a 1:1 copy with the mainframe shrinked into it, 40 years later it would be possible with today's technology and it would sell like crazy.

  • @SticksAandstonesBozo
    @SticksAandstonesBozo 27 дней назад +1

    Can not express the happiness that finding this channel yesterday has brought me.

  • @Dwaalspoor98
    @Dwaalspoor98 Год назад +4

    This is so cool and such valuable footage for the generations after us. I did not realize there was such advanced and capable audio related hardware back in the day while I was still a kid.

  • @CaptainZuurpruim
    @CaptainZuurpruim Год назад +8

    So cool to see and hear this. Never knew it was all mostly the Synclavier that defined the sound (together with the brilliant engineers!). Keep it up!

  • @autecheee
    @autecheee Год назад +4

    Definitely going to get the Synclavier Go app…..and considering the knob, if I can find a used one.

  • @klaassiersma4892
    @klaassiersma4892 Год назад +2

    I loved this, a nice old fashioned geek out. This stuff is on a whole different level than the DX7 and the Ensoniq EPS I used in the late 80s.,( that thing had poly after touch too)

  • @testohtoby
    @testohtoby Год назад +5

    I've always seen the Synclavier as a "fancy additive closet" but your experience combined definitly made me a fan of the synth (and the people behind it)
    I can't wait to get back to my studio and fire up again the Arturia Synclavier V
    Time for some "unusual sounds"
    please, never stop explaining this wonderful synthetic world!

    • @issiewizzie
      @issiewizzie Год назад +2

      been using the Arturia Version ... also been using the Logic Alchemy version ..... Great Times

  • @PutItAway101
    @PutItAway101 Год назад +3

    Instant thumbs up, great to get the history from the guys who were in the middle of it

  • @georgesidmusic524
    @georgesidmusic524 Год назад +6

    What a fascinating video! It is amazing how great this is instrument is. I always wondered how they got that bass sound on Smooth Criminal. I thought it was a DX7! Keep these videos coming Anthony!

  • @mudi2000a
    @mudi2000a Год назад +4

    Incredible interview, mind-blowing. Especially the fact the Synclavier V, which I like very much, is using the actual Synclavier code so it is really a Synclavier!

  • @spyrock247
    @spyrock247 5 месяцев назад +2

    This was super helpful to hear how good the sampling and frames sounds, amazing

  • @MakerFarmNL
    @MakerFarmNL 11 месяцев назад +3

    Impressive series of videos! Thank you Anthony for sharing your very special life - and synth-experiences.

  • @_fig.8
    @_fig.8 Год назад +4

    loving this series! especially since receiving my Regen. invaluable resource and history.

  • @lit3work
    @lit3work Год назад +4

    Absolutely fabulous insight. And still inspiring all these years later. That machine was so ahead of its time.
    Thank you both!

  • @creamydistortion
    @creamydistortion Год назад +2

    I can hear the sound from 'Blown Away' by DMX,, that "female voice" preset... :-)

  • @paulhorsley8922
    @paulhorsley8922 Год назад +3

    Cool video , I want one…… but then again I want to keep my house ££😂 .

  • @mitchelstephen7536
    @mitchelstephen7536 Год назад +3

    This is so good. I bought an Emax II in the early 90's, I was 19 years old...
    Two years years later.. I bought an Oberheim Xpander, it took me a whole year to save up for that, which was very educational like an Arp 2600. .. Then several years later..Frames.. is like a PPG, totally cool. I bought Waldorf Microwave XT.
    I hope you guys sell lots of the new Synclavs.... like the cooking channel and the lobsters by the beach!

  • @mikegeary8056
    @mikegeary8056 Год назад +5

    It shocking how advanced it was for when it was made.

  • @SuperWave86
    @SuperWave86 Год назад +3

    An amazing Interview 🎵 i love the synclavier its so unique and rich with sounds that is prevalent in music today. I loved to hear the history overview of the timeline of how the Synclavier has progressed till now! I love using the Synclavier Go! On my phone to create my music! Thx 🙏 for this more Synclavier videos please!

  • @GabePickles3837
    @GabePickles3837 7 месяцев назад +1

    33:13-34:08 I absolutely love these strings! Absolutely gorgeous! And the soundtrack for The Princess Bride is absolutely beautiful. Love it. One of my most favorite movie scores. I also now have it on CD. I already have the movie on DVD and plan on watching it soon.

  • @llemaire1
    @llemaire1 Год назад +3

    It would be interesting to present the Synclavier Regen, and explain how it can reproduce the original Synclavier sounds, and goes further on some aspects.

  • @llemaire1
    @llemaire1 Год назад +5

    Hi Anthony & Kevin. Thx a lot again for this great video !!! It demonstrates how the Synclavier is an incredible instrument, from the sound aspect but also from the ergonomic of its interface !

  • @AndyGrayedout
    @AndyGrayedout Год назад +3

    We had one in the studio where I worked, from NED UK , the studio was looking at buying one. To replace a CMI3 at the time, it came with presets from Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson, and also Englishman in New York sting . Was great fun playing with it for a few weeks, but it was very close to the S 1000 coming out not long after all of these Titans which I loved slowly disappeared.

  • @SarcasticTruth77
    @SarcasticTruth77 Год назад +4

    I'd love to observe the workflow of creating a large project. Would be great to see how fast the dedicated controls make it to get through tasks when the operator isn't having to continuously stop to explain. I'm sure the limitations of the old tech make some tasks slower, and that would be great to see, too. Don't misunderstand. The details are great. Please keep doing those. Every creation process I've seen, though, has been heavily edited, and that gives no impression of how long, or not, things take, all of the little work details, etc.

  • @KingMJForeverAndEver
    @KingMJForeverAndEver Год назад +2

    So cool to hear more about Beat It thank you thank you thank you 🫶🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻

  • @Robbinsffxi
    @Robbinsffxi 7 месяцев назад +2

    An incredible instrument for it's time.

  • @citizen530
    @citizen530 6 месяцев назад +1

    The good old days. Great to see these guys still in the business.

  • @zarcon85
    @zarcon85 Год назад +2

    The Scene in Beat Street, where the Guy thought, He broke It....i was so sorry for him.

  • @translucent_nick
    @translucent_nick 6 месяцев назад +1

    Funnily enough, the "Beat it" sound was featured on Tangerine Dream's "Kiew Mission" track from "Exit"..... 1981 !!! Because these guys had a Synclavier too on their Spandau Berlin studio.

  • @brandon1351
    @brandon1351 Год назад +4

    Again this machine leaves the fairlight in the dust and farrrr behind.

  • @soundanswer
    @soundanswer Год назад +6

    Thank you so much for making this!
    I was really intrigued after seeing your demonstrations in other videos. Growing up I heard the term “synclavier” in hushed, revered tones and after watching this I feel like now “I get it.”
    The resynthesis and “frames” and how it relates to the different partials is something I would love to drive more into.
    Thank you!

    • @lundsweden
      @lundsweden Год назад +3

      I have a Kawai K5000W which was released in 1996. It has some of the abilities of the Synclavier, Additive synthesis with control over harmonics, PCM samples (but no sampling) internal sequencer, multiple partials (you can mix Additive, PCM and AM).

  • @patriciaoudart1508
    @patriciaoudart1508 Год назад +3

    Love This one, simplicity and the studio is like being at home, i've not this particular instrument but works always on complex setups, with multiple computers and FM and analogs, so was a pleasure to listen your explanations🙏💚🧡👍

  • @fragnet7673
    @fragnet7673 8 месяцев назад +1

    So cool. Makes me wanne get my synths back from the dust.

  • @andrewgenner2613
    @andrewgenner2613 3 месяца назад +1

    Simply brilliant video. Fascinating history and educational. I'm going to fire up my Synclavier V this evening.

  • @lesfuller5984
    @lesfuller5984 Год назад +4

    Another great one, Anthony! I never get tired of these “in depth” chats with Kevin! So much history in one product. Again, I never knew the Synclavier featured in “The Princess Bride”! 🙌👏🙏

  • @edgardvera3132
    @edgardvera3132 5 месяцев назад +1

    Priceless inside information!

  • @darrelldiaz
    @darrelldiaz Год назад +4

    Great job Kevin and Anthony! Would it possible to add to this series showing how to recreate some of these techniques using Regen, the Synclavier Knob and sequencing with Synclavier 3?

  • @KingMJForeverAndEver
    @KingMJForeverAndEver Год назад +3

    Thank you 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @dfglojkg
    @dfglojkg 5 месяцев назад +1

    It is amazing how much improvement NED put into that 9600 system vs The Synclavier II. Sure the FM on the II sounds evocative for '83, but add the HD recording, sampling, and other wildthings that a loaded $250 thousand dolla' system 9600 brings to the table before you get the "classic" Synclavier sound.
    I remember a Keyboard article in maybe '86 with Guy Babylon. He lamented spending his life savings on the II because a year later his DX7 was just as good!

  • @issiewizzie
    @issiewizzie 10 месяцев назад +2

    figured it out after 7 years - short samples for resythesis works perfectly
    did the same with Logic alchemy it sounds the same except the synclavier now sounds the way i've always wanted ...
    Happy man here

  • @oscillationcommunications709
    @oscillationcommunications709 Год назад +4

    This is so great! Thanks for sharing the memories and sounds! ⚡️

  • @Maximgurman
    @Maximgurman Год назад +2

    You tell us secret stories I really wanted to know! Please, make video about MJ's drums! "Remember the time" drums is awesome!

  • @Vosper808
    @Vosper808 Год назад +4

    Anthony & Kevin, amazing video! Great to see some of the original Synclavier abilities.
    So you think you guys could meet again and go through REGEN?

  • @matti8208
    @matti8208 Год назад +2

    Thank you for the information of how expensive the instruments were back then. I would like to get this kind of perspective from other synths too.
    For what I know, in early seventies MiniMoog costed as much as a new VW beetle in northern Europe.

  • @mark35mi
    @mark35mi 7 месяцев назад +1

    Loved this interview. I am a musician... not a keyboard player... falling in love with synthesizers. And old enough to appreciate this bit of history. Bravo!!!

  • @alexfrombarnet
    @alexfrombarnet Год назад +4

    Such a great video! So interesting to hear all the different sounds with everything else stripped away. Keep these coming!

  • @kenzoblytheproducertv4934
    @kenzoblytheproducertv4934 Год назад +6

    I hope kids that want to sound design and make there own sounds are watching this.This is like going to a prestigious school for music. for free.🫡🫡🫡

  • @arcadiosrakopoulos
    @arcadiosrakopoulos 9 месяцев назад +1

    Being a professional musician myself(mainly classical(opera) but also electronic and synth lover), now In my 50s I understand the value of all this hidden treasure behind the stage. (when I was 15 I was focusing more on MJ(Elvis or other rock 80s stars and groups), as most fans may do, but now I am more and more amazed at what was happening behind the lights. This is a really deep dive into the ocean of the music industry at top level.

  • @cresshead
    @cresshead Год назад +4

    Superb video.

  • @alanredversangel
    @alanredversangel Год назад +3

    As amazing as the Synclavier is, it's immediately apparent that you need a very specific type of musician using it otherwise it's practically useless.

  • @Meteotrance
    @Meteotrance 11 дней назад +1

    I saw a documentary of sound designer from Skywalker sound that use that sampler synth for the sound effects of toy story and Jurrasic Park, but the first i heard of that machine, it was by the sound design team of Katsuhiro Otomo for the movie Akira, but since i heard that Sting do dream of the blue turtle and some of he's finest 80's album, with it im ever more impress by the FM and multi layer ability of this machine the FM plus additive sampling make this a total beast , it's like having a Roland D 50 with a Yamaha DX 7 and an E-MU emulator combine in the same machine but with a sequencer that's insane for a 1982 machine. Stephen Lipson and Trevor Horn do also crazy pop chart tune with that from Frankie Goes to Hollywood to Propaganda and Grace Jones...

  • @paulfisher1665
    @paulfisher1665 9 месяцев назад +1

    I had the tremendous privilege to compose with a Synclavier 2 while studying with Jon Appleton at Dartmouth, '79 through '82, in a crazy little studio in an old railway utility station next to the Connecticut River. I always signed up for the Friday and Saturday night studio sessions because I could get 7 hours from 11PM to 6AM the next morning.
    Sometimes I would put together a multi-layered sequence, put it on loop, and sit on the steps and watch the northern lights (summer, '81). Amazing instrument and amazing times. I sill have a copy of the original instruction manual and a half dozen of the old 5 inch floppies with my patches and sequences.
    (never got to use one of the sampling units though ... we did old school tape slicing for that while I was there ... )

  • @rdubb77
    @rdubb77 Год назад +5

    According to Karl Bartos and Wolfgang Flur, the Synclavier was why Kraftwerk didn’t release any music after 1986. Spent too much time playing with it.

    • @cnfuzz
      @cnfuzz Год назад +2

      He said it was like a dinosaur that was so central in the production and he lost the fun of making music that way by then.

    • @cnfuzz
      @cnfuzz Год назад +1

      There was also a phase problem with the separate outs , Alan wilder was quotes for the original intro of stripped they stacked so much synclavier sounds in the intro that all that came out was a sine wave😅

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten Год назад +2

    Ever since I first saw the Akira Production Report, the Synclavier has fascinated me. While I have accepted that their claims that it was the hardware that enabled surround sound editing was probably a misunderstanding being mistranslated and read by a voice over guy who had no clue what he was saying.
    But the way it can be used for general sound design is very fascinating indeed.
    So seeing, and hearing this deep dive was well worth the lenghty runtime. :)

  • @mobimalin
    @mobimalin Год назад +2

    Thank you 🙏

  • @Bonamici
    @Bonamici 10 дней назад

    Watching it again and it's even better!!! This is 💙💛

  • @bwm5150
    @bwm5150 Год назад +2

    Thanks you Anthony and Kevin for sharing your stories, experiences and expertise!

  • @markmallinder7618
    @markmallinder7618 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for giving me a deeper understanding of this awesome instrument. It sounds to me like this is the best keyboard ever designed, even by today’s standards? Would you agree?

  • @partridgefamilybus2021
    @partridgefamilybus2021 7 месяцев назад +2

    Very cool!

  • @blooddude
    @blooddude Год назад +4

    Depeche Mode's Some Great Reward, and Black Celebration albums apparently were both significantly built on the Synclavier!

  • @thirstyCactus
    @thirstyCactus 7 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video! Love the stories and level of detail. Great stuff