Stasyq 605 ✭ < HOT >

9/10 (Loses one point because it once erased my Ableton project file via magnetic interference). Do you own a piece of obscure gear that no one has heard of? Let me know in the comments below. And if you have a line on a Stasyq 603 vocoder, my DMs are open.

Only 200 units were ever made. Today, perhaps 50 remain in working order. When I first plugged in the 605, I expected nothing. The power light flickered like a dying candle. But then, the hum. It wasn't a 60-cycle ground loop hum; it was a sonic event . The Stasyq 605 has a notorious "output transformer" that saturates at incredibly low volumes. Even with the oscillators off, the 605 produces a brown noise that sounds like a freight train passing through a cathedral. stasyq 605

The 605 is a 4-voice, paraphonic analog synthesizer with a built-in 16-step sequencer and, most bizarrely, a spring reverb tank big enough to use as a weapon. It weighs 34 pounds. It has 47 knobs, 12 sliders, and a patch bay that uses old German telephone switchboard plugs. 9/10 (Loses one point because it once erased

Because of . Modern synthesizers are perfect. They stay in tune. They have USB ports. They have presets. The Stasyq 605 has none of these things. To save a patch, you have to take a Polaroid picture of the knob positions. And if you have a line on a

Turning on the VCOs (Voltage Controlled Oscillators) changes everything. Unlike the sharp, precise sawtooth of a Roland Jupiter, the 605’s oscillators drift. They drift hard . Within five minutes of warm-up, the tuning wanders by nearly a quarter-tone. Most musicians would hate this. The Stasyq 605 makes it beautiful. The heart of the 605 is its VCF (Voltage Controlled Filter). It is a 24dB/octave ladder design, similar to a Moog, but built using faulty, surplus Soviet transistors that Stasyq bought on the cheap.

Since "stasyq 605" does not correspond to a known mass-market product (it sounds like a model number for industrial equipment, a vintage audio component, or a high-end European appliance), I have taken creative liberty to position it as a from the early 1980s, recently rediscovered by modern producers. The Deep Resonance: Unearthing the Secrets of the Stasyq 605 Date: October 26, 2024 Author: Analog Archaeologist Category: Gear Talk, Synthwave