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    <s:Snip rdf:about='http://www.cassiel.com/rdf#Gearhead/Waldorf+Micro-Wave'
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        <s:name>Gearhead/Waldorf Micro-Wave</s:name>
        <s:content>{!components/__archivelogo}&#xA;&#xA;{image:microwave.jpeg}&#xA;&#xA;The Micro-Wave was one of the instruments at the vanguard&#xA;of the currently trendy&#xA;analogue revolution. In essence, the Micro-Wave is a modern rackmount MIDI version of&#xA;the classic ~~PPG Wave~~ synthesiser designed by ~~Wolfgang Palm~~.&#xA;The PPG Wave combined a digital synthesis section (8-bit, highly-harmonic&#xA;wavetables which could be swept for dramatic timbral change) with&#xA;true analogue resonant filters.&#xA;&#xA;Rather than being a truly vintage instrument, the Micro-Wave (designed&#xA;and built by Waldorf GmbH, since PPG folded in 1986) is a modern&#xA;MIDI device with the features that one would expect, including multitimbral&#xA;operation and a comprehensive modulation architecture. However, it still&#xA;carries the original PPG ~~wavetables~~ (in fact, Palm designed the&#xA;Micro-Wave&apos;s custom DSP), and is quite capable of making&#xA;all the stark, metallic tones associated with the PPG. In fact,&#xA;the original ~~Wave 2.3~~ patches ported to the Micro-Wave sound&#xA;quite authentic.&#xA;&#xA;The modulation architecture is impressive, bearing a resemblance to&#xA;the matrix modulation scheme found on the ~~Oberheim Xpander~~&#xA;and [Matrix-6R|Gearhead/Oberheim Matrix-6R]. A sideband modulation&#xA;scheme allows one modulator to regulate the&#xA;amount of a second. The internal wave envelope can be looped (although&#xA;it is nowhere near as sophisticated as the function generators found&#xA;on the [Gearhead/Morpheus]. Filter resonance can be controlled separately from cutoff&#xA;frequency.&#xA;&#xA;The latest revision of the Micro-Wave operating system adds some new&#xA;features, such as algorithmic wavetables. These allow waves to be&#xA;constructed &quot;on the fly&quot; by loading parameters for generating the waves,&#xA;using frequency modulation, waveshaping, or various other synthesis methods.&#xA;What is more, the table parameters can modulate one another, so that&#xA;a table can change algorithm part way through. So, the Micro-Wave is the&#xA;only synthesiser which can change synthesis algorithm part-way through&#xA;a note.&#xA;&#xA;One irritating feature is the association of the multiple edit buffers&#xA;with patch locations. Program changes will recall edited patches rather&#xA;than stored ones. If the instruments of a multi setup share a patch&#xA;location, then edits of the separate instruments will interfere. This&#xA;design is quite nice for front-panel editing, but a headache with&#xA;a computer-based editor.&#xA;&#xA;From some points of view, the Micro-Wave is underpowered: it only has&#xA;eight voices, there are no onboard effects, and the (four) monophonic&#xA;individual&#xA;audio outputs, if activated, steal voices from the main mix. However,&#xA;such criticism misses the point: the Micro-Wave is very good at what it&#xA;does, and the sound is such that multiple layered voices, or flashy&#xA;onboard effects, are largely superfluous. Anybody wanting an instrument&#xA;with lots of voices should buy something boring like an&#xA;Alesis QuadraSynth.&#xA;&#xA;People keep asking me what the Micro-Wave sounds like. My answer is&#xA;always the same: go and buy a copy of the ~~EXIT~~ album by&#xA;~~Tangerine Dream~~. Anyone who likes the sounds on that album (which are&#xA;almost exclusively PPG Wave) will like what a Micro-Wave can do. However,&#xA;it does require careful programming. I have had mine for nearly six&#xA;years and am still learning how to program it well. However, the&#xA;factory presets give you plenty of encouragement to begin your own&#xA;programming, since they stink.&#xA;&#xA;My Micro-Wave, being one of the first units in the UK, has the original&#xA;rotary encoder dial. The red knob for this dial was made of cheap&#xA;plastic (which explains why my unit has a custom acrylic paint job),&#xA;and the encoders themselves are prone to corrosion, causing problems&#xA;when programming via the front panel. I believe that later machines&#xA;(with the good-quality red knob) are free from this problem.&#xA;</s:content>
        <s:mTime>2005-09-11 22:20:02.342</s:mTime>
        <s:cTime>2005-09-11 22:13:49.602</s:cTime>
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                        <s:date>Sun Sep 11 22:15:42 UTC 2005</s:date>
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                        <s:date>Sun Sep 11 22:15:52 UTC 2005</s:date>
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