Well I think it’s safe to say we went from a drought of inexepensive real analog synths to completely saturated. Studio Electronics has jumped onto the table with the Boomstar. The new guy comes in 4 filter types: 4075-classic Arp 2600, 5089-classic Moog 24db ladder, SEM-classic Oberheim 12db, 303-classic Roland TB-303. See that first type? The 4075? That’s a flavor we haven’t seen in anything inexpensive/new/reliable yet. That’s the one to get! $799.
“This new blazing brainchild of STUDIO ELECTRONICS represents the design collective ethos of circuit and software “Saseong” Tim Caswell, tactile layout and lead feature specialist Greg St. Regis, graphic and sound consultant Marc St. Regis, art design wizard of vector truth, John Greczula, cool-headed concept leader Geoff Farr and our relentless and wise feature and functionality consultant and “Whip”, Drew Neumann.” – studioelectronics.com
For more info: studioelectronics.com/products/synths/boomstar
via matrixsynth
This entry was written by , posted on March 21, 2012 at 5:50 pm, filed under synthesizer and tagged Boomstar, Studio Electronics. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.





































That’s Hot =o]
more sex appeal than the rack mount
funny how the industry is going table top
i was thinking about buying the Minibrute but i think i’ll take this one instead
so beast
still wish there was a keyless minibrute though
Its a fad… you’d think they’d have patch memory by now… oh but the knobs resolution will suck then… w’sup with OSC or high res MIDI implemented ?
get a doepfer beauty case and some budget modules off eBay for a fraction of the cost.. and it will be fully modular too… Minibrute was lacking for me… no envelope routing to pitch booo…