KORG MONOPOLY Analog Synthesizer 1981 | HQ DEMO | Mono Poly On YouTube.
The Korg MonoPoly came out 1981 and was the last analogue monophonic synthesizer from Korg (ok, they have now the Monotron, but this is rather a toy). Actually, the MonoPoly is a monophonic synth - but you can play it polyphonically, too - if necessary. The Korg/Mono Poly is a very flexible synthesizer: It has 4 oscillators, oscillator sync, cross modulation, PWM, noise generator (white noise), 24 dB Filter, 2 ADSR envelopes, 2 LFO's with many waveforms, ARPEGGIATOR, CHORD MEMORY and portamento. The built in microprocessor makes many things possible: chord memory, arpeggiator, key assign and polyphony. It is built around SSM chips like the Korg Polysix. I think, with the MONOPOLY Korg wanted to produce a synth as an alternative to the Minimoog and Sequential Circuits Pro One. Please don't expect it to sound like a Minimoog. The Minimoog remains one of the best sounding analog synths, and the Monopoly (like many others) can not compete in terms of sound quality. The basic sound is a bit "lo fi" but not too much like the MS series. It is a flexible instrument with an amazing potential. The most characteristic thing on the MonoPoly is the arpeggiator, when it triggers the oscillators in poly-mode. Every step of the arpeggiator triggers a different oscillator - unique patterns can be produced. The MonoPoly is a great synth with awesome sounds - it produces fat basses and leads - but also FX sounds, bells, like you can hear in the video. I played the Korg MonoPoly sometimes ...
Tags: Korg, Polysix, Sequential, Circuits, pro, one, Moog, Minimoog, SSM, chips
Friends Link : Generator Buying Guide electric portable generators diesel inverter generator diesel generator home
No comments:
Post a Comment