ARP 2500 Part 4 The Oscillator Module(s) 1004
Part 4 of my series about the ARP 2500 is finished and ready to watch (for members* only). It´s all and everything about Behringer´s hardware remake of the oscillator module 1004 (-T). Then the video compares the hardware remake with Voltage Modular´s software version, and both with the functionality of the original ARP module from the 1970s. There´s even a short excursion to compare the ARP module with the Roland oscillator module 112. A bit of patching rounds the video up. The public trailer is on YouTube (see link).
* Members of our rofilmmedia community. Learn more about it at: https://dev.rofilm-media.net/membershipview
You can watch the complete video even if you are not a member by donating. Watch the trailer on YouTube to learn more. (link above)
And this is the content of the whole video:
0:00:00 Intro and Historical Context
0:01:12 The Oscillator Module 1004
0:01:41 The T-Version and the P-Version of the Original from 1970
0:01:20 The Elements on the Front Panel – a Walk-through
0:05:10 The Waves and Their Inverted Shapes
0:05:50 Combining and Mixing up to 5 Wave Shapes
0:07:22 P-Version and T-Version – the Differences
(0:07:32 Mistake: the original DID have individual outs)
0:08:20 Inputs and Outputs and Modulations
0:11:40 Frequency Ranges
0:17:07 Remarkable Effects of Combining Wave Shapes
0:20:12 Some Special Combinations of the5 Wave Shapes
0:27:06 The Module 1004 as an LFO
0:35:03 Comparing the Wave Shapes of the ARP 2500 and the Roland System 100m
0:43:18 Patch 1
0:50:40 Patch 2
0:51:36 Patch 3
0:55:38 Comparing the hardware Module and the Software (Voltage Modular)
1:02:50 Authenticity Check: Hardware Remake, Software Remake and the Original
1:06:28 The End
Part 4 of my series about the ARP 2500 is finished and ready to watch (for members* only). It´s all and everything about Behringer´s hardware remake of the oscillator module 1004 (-T). Then the video compares the hardware remake with Voltage Modular´s software version, and both with the functionality of the original ARP module from the 1970s. There´s even a short excursion to compare the ARP module with the Roland oscillator module 112. A bit of patching rounds the video up. The public trailer is on YouTube.
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