Jupiter-4 is a synthesizer launched by Roland in 1978. The monotimbral instrument offers one VCO per voice. The oscillator generates triangle, square, and square with PWM, there’s a sub oscillator included. One LFO produces sine, square and ramp (ramp...
The Groove Synthesis 3rd Wave is a premium wavetable synthesizer that could serve for some as a spiritual successor to the legendary PPG Wave 2. Founded by Bob Coover (known for his work with Dave Smith on synthesizers like the Prophet-12 and OB-6),...
The Roland MKS-80 Super Jupiter is a synthesizer module released by Roland in 1984. It is a rack-mountable version of the popular Jupiter-8 synthesizer and is known for its warm, rich analog sound. It features two oscillators, two filters, two...
The Moog One represents Moog's most ambitious synthesizer project to date - a flagship polyphonic analog synthesizer that serves as the long-awaited successor to the legendary Memorymoog. Available in both 8-voice and 16-voice configurations, this...
Jupiter-6 was introduced in 1983. The analog instrument has a 6-voice polyphony and is bitimbral. The structure provides each voice with 2 VCOs giving 12 oscillators allowing the keyboard to split into two zones one featuring 4 voices and another 2 and...