Monday, March 18, 2013

My Favorite Vintage Synthesizers

I have had the privilege to own and/or play several legendary synthesizers in the 1980s - 1990s.  Now, I never played that well on the keyboards, but I dabbled enough to get by on stage for mostly simple pop stuff.  I never strayed into complicated songs and managed to fool most listeners into thinking that I could play.  Most of the stuff I performed was 8-10 chords for the whole song, if that.

Besides my own synthesizers, my buddies and I also practiced at several rehearsal studios around Jakarta, giving me more opportunities to get my hands on other keyboards that were available there.  Needless to say, I enjoyed myself immensely.

Nowadays, all synths are digital with sampled sounds rather than analog avatars of sounds from back in the days on the analog sets.  They are great, great products and their sounds open up the imagination for creativity and inspiration, but I do miss the old analog sounds of the 80s.

This short list is a recollection of my favorite vintage synthesizers from back in the day and here they are:

1.  Roland JX8P



Polyphony: 6 voices
Oscillators: 2 DCO's per voice (12 oscillators),
VCF/ VCA: low-pass and hi-pass filter / 2 ADSR envelope generators per voice; Keyboard: 61 note keyboard with velocity and aftertouch;
Effects: portamento, chorus
Memory: 64 patches; Released in 1985


My favorite patches from this gem are: Stab Brass, May's Wind, Soundtrack and many others.  The JX8P was one of the last true analog synths from Roland (the Super JX10 was actualy the very very last one).  I actually still own 1 unit of a perfectly working JX8P at home.

2.  Yamaha DX7





  • Polyphony - 16 Voices
  • Oscillators - 16 bit Digital 6 operator FM. 
  • LFO - Sine/Square/Tri/SAW up/SAW Down/Random
  • VCA - 6 Envelope generators 8 parameters each


  • The first FM tone generator at the time. Patches are adjusted through Yamaha's own logics, which is really weird if you are used to the analog sliders or the Roland user interfaces.  Anyway, the sounds coming out of the DX7 was just different than anything the other synths are producing, plus most of the GRP jazz musicians were always sporting these cool synths on their videos.  Classic patch on this thing would be the unmistakable DX digital piano sound.

    3.  Moog Liberation

    One of the cheapest Moogs (if there were ever such things) around at the time.  Released back in 1981.  Look cool with the very rare white Moog Liberation - most are in black.  I fooled around with a white unit at the Pangkalan Jati Studio of Eramono Soekarjo's way back in 1984/85.  Me & my band mates turned off the studio lights and went through hundreds of otherworldly patches of analog sounds.  Awesome, man.  Even without any drugs.


  • Polyphony - Monophonic (plus 10-voice poly-section organ)
  • Oscillators - 2 VCO: OSC 1: Pitch: 32', 16, '8'; Wave: Sawtooth, Triangle, Rectangle. OSC 2 : Pitch: 16', 8', 4'; Wave: Sawtooth, Triangle, Square.
  • Filter - one 24dB/oct lowpass; cutoff, emphasis, env amount; Attack, Decay/Release, Sustain.
  • VCA - Attack, Decay/Release, Sustain


  • 4.  Korg Poly 800 MK II
    In the early 80's, first Korg offered the Poly-800 an 8 voice polyphonic analog synthesizer with 64 memory patches and up to 50 editable parameters! There's also a stereo chorus effect, a sequencer, and a funky joystick used to adjust pitch, modulation and the filter. There is a double mode in which the oscillators double up making 4 fat voices of polyphony - fun for trance and techno.  Fun fun stuff.  But then, Korg raised the bar shortly after, when one year after the introduction of the Poly-800, in 1984, came the Poly-800 mkII which added digital delay effects and a darker paint job. All sound editing is done by scrolling to a given parameter, described by little more than a number, and pushing the up or down buttons to adjust it. Fortunately every parameter’s numeric code and data-range is printed on the faceplate. However, some sort of external MIDI controller is the best way to edit here.  I've used this little baby on stage performing songs by the romantics and others.

    5.  Casio CZ 1000

    I had the chance to play the CZ 1000 back in 86.  I strapped it on and performed a couple of Van Halen's keyboards songs (jump, dreams, why can't this be love, etc).  Never learned how to play proper guitar, but strapping this thing on and 'dueting' with the lead guitar player on VH's songs gave me thrills as if I'm a shredder on stage.  In fact, I was able to out-"tap" my guitarists on the solos part - that was fun. One major drawback after performing more than 2 songs with the CZ on is that my shoulder & back was really sore, and this is back when I had a much younger & physically fitter body.  The CZ 1000 is certainly no lightweight (literally).

    Next gen synth such as the Roland D-50, the Korg M-1, etc was just around the corner at the late 80s - early 90s, and they would provide a different kind of inspiration, but that will be a story for another day.....


    Wednesday, August 29, 2012

    Another Friend Takes The Big Step Up.....

    Recently I've lost another friend AM, who is a very talented, very passionate guy but at the same time very friendly, giving and humble human being - despite having a lot of things going for him.  He's a fellow biker, although he kept active on the roads compared to me - I've been off for a few years.  He's a fellow Ducati nut who can't help but fly on the asphalt roads of Jakarta.

    He is not a reckless rider, for sure, but I guess when it's your time, it's your time.

    Bro, you will be missed.  We will all miss you.  I'll miss you on your Duc.

    Saturday, July 7, 2012

    Songs that move My Spirit part 2 - Vienna

    My musical taste is perhaps rather eclectic, it includes Post-Punk New Wave from the early 80s.  Back then, it was quite cool to have androgynous looking people all pretty and made up with strange sounding synthesizers blaring while they spew  (supposedly) deep and philosophical lyrics - but some of them do stand out in my memory.  One particularly haunting song that moves me is Vienna by Ultravox.

    Ultravox circa 1980s

    Ultravox was a struggling English synthpop pioneer band in the late 70s and was left behind by their original vocalist & leader John Foxx.  Midge Ure took over as frontman, vocalist, keyboardist & guitarist of Ultravox in 1979 and this was the turning point for the band.  Vienna was part of the album "Vienna", released in 1981 - the song was actually put on side 2 of the vinyl album and number 8 of 9 songs.  The Vienna album was supposed to be titled Torque Point (a little Ultravox trivia there), but the record label Chrysalis changed it to Vienna after hearing the song.

    The song begins with a bass drum beating like a human heart with an odd sounding noise replacing the usual snare drum part (to my untrained ear, the odd noise sounds like a bottomed out clap sound with a fat gated effect).  An analog lead synthesizer voice patch whines it way through as if it was a voice wafting in over the sparse music backdrop.  The song smolders for a bit with somber lyrics delivered in a haunting, low tone.

    Later the keyboards enter like ray patches of sunlight bursting through thick dark clouds, Midge Ure's vocals bursting out into full force in a cry verging on the operatic, punctuated by delicate piano keys.  The song is gives an imagery of longing and sorrow for me.

    Despite never reaching the top of the chart, for me, “Vienna” is Ultravox’s greatest triumph.  The song’s beautifully restrained composition is its strength,  giving the beautifully-realized atmosphere of “Vienna” space for the lyrics to craft emotions instead of outlining hard details.  The lyrics never explicitly state what the song is about, for they were focused with conveying the feeling through word choice and phrasing rather that explaining what exactly the narrator is reflecting about.

    Upon the single’s release, the members of Ultravox played up the Teutonic, Old World associations of “Vienna” in the music press by discussing topics related to the Austrian city at end of the 19th century, particularly the Vienna Secession art movement and its president, Gustav Klimt.  Simon Reynolds picked up on this thread in his book Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984, where he cited “Vienna” as an example of an undercurrent of Eastern European imagery that dominated the New Romantic movement in the early 1980s.  Cataloging the track as Ultravox’s descent into “full-blown Teutonica”, Reynolds described “Vienna” as “inspired by a vague notion of a past-its-prime Hapsburg Empire sliding into decadence.”

    Vienna Music Video
    Sorry to disappoint you, because the song isn’t about that at all.  In truth, the song originated from an episode where an acquaintance of Ure’s misremembered the title of the Fleetwood Mac song “Rhiannon”.  The singer formulated what became the song’s chorus line, then wrote the rest of the song around it with his bandmates.  In his 2004 autobiography If I Was…, Ure explained, “[‘Vienna’] was a love song, the story of a holiday romance, about going to a beautiful place and meeting someone special.”  Ure’s lyrics were completely based in fantasy; he emphasized, “I’d never been to Vienna, never had a holiday romance.”  Perhaps most disappointing to music journalists, Ure revealed that there is no political subtext in “Vienna” at all.  Ure admitted in his book that he and his bandmates lied in interviews about the song’s meaning, throwing around any facts about turn of the century Vienna they could conjure in order to make themselves “sound interesting.”

    Despite its actual meaning, it is not obvious from a scan of the lyrics that “Vienna” is about a holiday fling with a special someone.  There’s no direct mention of romance, much less a vacation aside from the almost casual inclusion of the Austrian city’s name in the chorus.  The object of the narrator’s affection is almost spectral; the only sign of intimacy is the warmth of a hand in the midst of an evening sky that “fades to the distance” as daylight breaks.  The song could be about any two people on a cold, lonely night anywhere in the world. 

    This vagueness is key to “Vienna”.  Amidst the shuttering drumbeat and Ure’s late-night-fog croon, what the listener is left with is the sad sensation of reflecting on an incident from the past that grows ever more distant until it is almost meaningless.  As Ure explained, “You have this huge holiday romance, that you vow is going to continue forever, but, once you get back home and start living your nine-to-five job again, it just fades away.”  The lyrics stay away from specifics because the whole event is slowly fading away from the narrator’s memory.

    As the wonderful holiday memory recedes into nothingness, what is prevalent is a sense of discomfort and loneliness.  Ure’s snatches of imagery conjure up impressions of unease.  Chilly imagery fills the lyrics, with references to “freezing breath”, “cool empty silence”, and a “cold grey sky”.  For what is supposed to be a touching memory, there is a definite sense of dread, illustrated by the “man in the dark in a picture frame” and the couplet “A voice reaching out in a piercing cry / It stays with you until”.  Even so, the memory beckons: Ure sings, “The music is weaving / Haunting notes, pizzicato strings / The rhythm is calling”.  Why are the narrator’s reflections so foreboding?  It feels as though the loss of that special moment is so overwhelming that it bleeds into and overwhelms the memory, so that all that are left are painful sensations.

    Midge singing Vienna live back in 1988

    The most striking lines in “Vienna” are in the chorus.  Upon first glance, the chorus seems to come from the “all that matters is the two of us” school of love songs.  It appears as though the narrator is noting that whatever gloom wafted through the verses has now gone, leaving only the two lovers.  However, he follows up the line “It means nothing to me”, with the more curious “This means nothing to me / Oh, Vienna”.  Ure hits the last line with a sorrowful ecstasy, where one can practically envision him looking up to the heavens as he feels the past fade away.  Ure elaborated in his book years later, “You say, ‘It means nothing to me,’ but you’re lying, harking back to Vienna, to a fabulous moment in time.”  What the chorus illustrates is that as time goes on, not only do the events of the narrator’s sojourn mean nothing, but so does the entire episode itself, leaving him to mourn the memory of what no longer is.  The “feeling is gone”, but he yearns for that time in Vienna nonetheless, no matter how much he denies it.  Except there really is nothing left to pine for.

    Commenting on the fading memory he conceptualized for “Vienna”, Ure said, “I’d love to have it, but it’s all gone—forever. It wasn’t real life.” And that’s the key to “Vienna”.  Even though Ure has confirmed the song has no basis in reality, due to the impressionistic lyrics Ultravox is able to make the listener feel like something priceless has been lost.

    Thursday, October 6, 2011

    Re-organizing my thoughts

    I thought about my various interests in sports, music, films, comics, novels, mythology, sci-fi, vampire lores, werewolf lores, etc., then I thought about what my blogspot would look like and I realized - dang! Must be confusing as hell to look through the stuff for a particular thing.

    So I've decided to re-organize my blogs according to subjects, so hopefully anyone who may stumble onto my blogs wouldn't be so confused.  Like I always hear and agree with "Live and Learn".

    The Blundering Through Life Blog will remain as my musings for things other than:
    -  Sports
    -  Music
    -  Films
    -  Comics
    as I will be creating specific Blogs for the above subjects.

    Take heed, oh ye the faithful.....

    Friday, September 23, 2011

    Songs that move my Spirit

    
    "Music Soothes the Savage Beast"
    In my humble opinion, music creation and appreciation are parts of what separate us from the lower level living animals.  Please understand that I am not advocating that we are the only animals who can do these things (whale songs, anyone?), but I shudder to think that any other living creatures in this world can be moved and swayed as much as human beings with music, but the saying "music soothes the savage beast" certainly comes from some truth.

    Earlier on in life, I have been influenced musically by my parents, my older sister and my cousins who lived with our family in Jakarta when they were studying or starting out their careers.  Later on, outside influences include girlfriends, friends from school, from cub scouts and other circles but instead of moving me through trends of music, I found that I've been slowly adding to and expanding my musical tastes.

    I would like to take this opportunity to share with whoever's out there in this cyber universe - songs that moves my spirit.  Some are more obscure than others but I hope that somehow this little musings will help open up opportunities for someone else to appreciate these timeless songs.

    I will try to do one song per posting in order to go deeper into the song's backgrounds and other interesting tidbits and especially how the particular song affected me.  On with the show!

    One by Metallica

    This powerful anti-war song is the fourth song of the fourth studio album released by Metallica in 1988 titled "...And Justice For All".   The song was written by James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich, the two primary composers in Metallica.

    It opens with eerie battlefield sounds of artillery, helicopter and distant screams fading into a much more serene guitar intro by Hetfield which is then layered with a clean-toned guitar solo by Kirk Hammett.  Hetfield actually sings instead of screaming the lyrics in the beginning of this song!

    The song picks up as Ulrich drums joins in, Hetfield's vocals and guitars sound become heavier but the song surprisingly becomes clean again.  The second Hammett solo kicks in, the heavy sound returns until the lyrics cut out.

    This is when the music achieves transcendence for me.  The build up of the rat-tat-tat-tat machineguns-like energy of the two guitars with an energetic bass foundation and the legendary Ulrich double bass kicks combo from this one song really pushed Metallica upwards in my list of favorite rock bands. 

    I never really headbanged seriously in the past before this song.  It was almost always trying not to be the square surrounded by the rockers kinda thing for me, but this song made me want to headbang hard - onlookers be damned.

    All these before I saw the video......and then.....comes:  One - the video

    "One" by Metallica Video screenshot (1989)
    When I first read the lyrics of One, it was already powerful for me.  The anti-war message was loud and clear in my ears, but coming from Indonesia - I wasn't aware of the book and film which inspired the story of One - "Johnny Got His Gun" by Dalton Trumbo.

    When MTV aired One - the video in January 1989, I was already living & going to school in the States.  The imagery of the video includes scenes from the "Johnny" film and it reemphasized an even more powerful imagery for me.  The sight of Timothy Bottoms frantically morse coding with his entire body - screaming in silence - still sends chills up my spine when I recall it.  I actually went out and looked for the film and the book because of the music video.
     

    Scene from "Johnny Got His Gun" (1971) - Written & Directed by Dalton Trumbo

    Even as I read the book and watched the film, the powerful sound of the song One by Metallica reverberate through my core being and it made me shudder.  I don't believe I would have had the same experience with the story without the song One.

    Hetfield's screaming the lyrics only gave me a clearer feeling of the anguish of the character John Bonham or anybody put in such a situation.  The horrors of war is much more graphic when you cut it down to individual experiences and I am so grateful that I have never had to go through anything of the sort.

    "landmine has taken my speech,
    taken my sight,
    taken my hearing,
    taken my arms,
    taken my legs,
    taken my soul,
    left me with life in hell"

    Life in hell indeed.  One is a song that will always move my spirit everytime I hear it.

    Thursday, September 22, 2011

    15 Favorite Drummers (in no particular order)

    Terry Bozio's Drumset - "WOW!!!"

    I play the drums a little bit.  I used to play a lot more than I do now.  I used to think I was not too bad back then, but years of non-activity on the drums have taken its toll - as muscle memory can only help so much.  I have had 3 instructors in the past: Cendy Luntungan (Emerald, Java Jazz), Gilang Ramadhan (Krakatau, PIG, Java Jazz) & Philmon Haryadi.  I am very much influenced by Phil Collins, Jeff Porcaro, Vinnie Colaiuta & Billy Cobham - but I don't play anywhere nearly as good as they do - OBVIOUSLY.

    I now like to list my 15 favorite drummers, in no particular order, as each bring their own uniqueness and gifts to the table and I greatly appreciate each of them in their own right.  So without further ado, here's the list:

      1.  Steve Smith
      2.  Dave Weckl
      3.  Vinnie Colaiuta
      4.  Jeff Porcaro
      5.  Neil Peart
      6.  Billy Cobham
      7.  John Bonham
      8.  Steve Gadd
      9.  Vinnie Paul
    10.  Alex Van Halen
    11.  Max Roach
    12.  Art Blakey
    13.  Buddy Rich
    14.  Phil Ehart
    15.  Phil Collins

    I would love to take the time to discuss each particular drummer, their unique techniques and how they influence me as a (wanna-be) drummer and as a music listener in general, but it would take much more time than currently available for me now.  There are many more drummers whom I admire, but I think these guys give you a good idea on the kind of music I like.  Ciao

    Tuesday, September 20, 2011

    First Entry.....

    I've recently lost a good friend, GK.  He's young, only 42.  He lives a healthy life, doesn't smoke, doesn't drink, doesn't really party all night (ever), doesn't overeat, maintains rigorous daily exercise and the whole nine yards.  Yet, he's the first one of our small group to go.  Godspeed my friend, my thoughts and prayers are with you.

    Between me & my buddy NS, we always joked that "Exercise Kills!!" and cite persons of prominence and/or fame who passed away during or right after exercising (many came to mind: James Fixx, Ray Ziel and closer to home are Benyamin S, Basuki, Adjie Masaid, etc) as prime examples why portly men like me & my bud are living and living well.

    Well, when it's someone close to you then the joke sours pretty quickly and you start to think about your own mortality and what kind of legacy you are leaving behind.  Have you done enough for your family, have you done enough for your children, how do you want to be remembered, where do you want to be buried?  Grim thoughts but like I said, when reality smacks you in the face, you take stock of what you've done or what you haven't done.

    That said, is what I'm doing now part of leaving a 'footprint'?  I googled my own name out of curiosity and looked at what popped out.  Mostly internet social networking stuff and not much else.  Doesn't really tell anybody who I am, what I like, what I dislike.  Not that a blog will always do that, mind you.  I thought it'll be eerie if when I'm gone, someone googled me up and thoughts that I left behind are available for them to see.  Technology is a boon and a curse at the same time, I have always thought.

    On a lighter note, my Trike is being fixed & I'm hoping to Trike along happily every morning with my Nano. God knows I need the exercise, but I hope I can remain healthy as another good friend, DB, set an example of how incorrect exercise can hurt - He's immobile due to a pinched nerve in his spine.

    Peace out, world! BigA is still around and kicking - blundering through life