The first Taurus Bass synthesizer able to summon lead sounds.
Sirin, The Analog Messenger Of Joy is a limited-production analog synthesizer module based on the legendary Moog Taurus Bass sound engine, and created in celebration of the 2019 Moog House of Electronicus experience in Los Angeles, California.
Only 2500 Sirin will be produced worldwide.
Specifications: monophonic; 2 VCOs with Sawtooth and Square waveforms: oscillator sync; VCO mixer; traditional Moog ladder filter (lowpass); 2 ADSR envelope generators; LFO for VCO and VCF modulation, syncable to MIDI clock; fully controllable via MIDI; metal enclosure; audio out (6.3 mm jack); headphones out (3.5 mm stereo jack); audio in (6.3 mm jack); 4 inputs for CV / Gate signals (6.3 mm jack); MIDI in; USB-B port; dimensions: 222.3 x 130.2 x 79.4 mm; weight: 1.2 kg
Very interesting if the Minitaur and Sirin have the same PCB. Maybe it's just a few component values that were changed to extend the VCO range... or the whole "Minitaur can't go higher than C4 (or whatever it is) due to CV range" isn't entirely true. Interesting that there's trimpots as well. Maybe...
...been eying in. Having heard demos of the DeepMind, I picked up a rack mount DeepMind 12. I got a Sirin. Now I was set. I was going to make amazing music. I don't think I ever plugged in the unos ever again but after feeling the pain of the loss on the TR-8S,...
...mount the Prophet 12 (although it is an odd size). And I guess you can even put the Moog Minitaur/Sirin in a rack, although I'm not sure if I would want to use up three rack spaces for it, at least not like this: This is sort of cool, though: But here, too, I was thinking...
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