PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
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The Memotron is a digital remake of one of the most unusual and fascinating electronic music instruments.
The classical design and the configuration of the display and knobs are based on the original instrument.
A comprehensive sound library with high qualitative samples of original instruments of the Sixties and Seventies gives you the chance to experience the legendary sound of Pink Floyd, the Beatles, Procul Harum, Genesis, Klaus Schulze and Tangerine Dream.
Sounds can be load up from a CD, individually combined and stored up on compact flash cards.
The Vintage Collection will be shipped with the Memotron, the Studio Collection is available separately.
M-Audio MTron library is fully compatible and can be loaded.
A fully working Mellotron, without the hassel of tapes getting older and older, with no mechnical problems and costing less then the real thing. But with the very same sound and feel.
You load sound either from the Manikin sound CDs ("Vintage" and "Studio" are the first being availble now), from the CDs of the M-Tron library or from Compact Flash Cards. You can also store sounds from the CDs to the Flash Card.
So you get the full collection of all the classic Mellotron™ sounds plus some less known ones. All of them are stored, of cause, without looping in all their max 8 secs glory. And the Memotron plays them back without voice stealing or the hassle of changing a tape frome.
You can load three tracks. And because you are not limited by the real Mellotron tracks being on the very same tape, you can choos three sound from the library and play them together. And the Track selector switch also allows you to cross fade somewhere between the track. So you can for example mix the Cello and the 3 Violins to a homogene new sound easily on the fly.
Besides the obvious volume control, you also get a center detent pitch knob. And just like on the real thing there is no spring returning it to zero. The Tone controll appears to work way more on the sound then the real thing. You get a 12 dB lowpass. For a more vintage sound set this knob to somewhere between the 2 o'clock and the 4 o'clock position. Beware of setting on the counterclockwise end of this knob. It might filter everything of so you get silence and wonder what's happening.
The little switch above the Volume is labeled Half-Speed. It plays back each sound at have the speed. This gives you an one octave lower tone and doubles the length of the tape to up to 16 secs. Some vintage Mellotron players liked it. And it is endeed doing samething usefull on some of the sounds.
The Data knob is the only encoder knob. And it is doubling as ENTER or OK button by pushing it down. It appears to use the same type of encoder as the Manikin Schrittmacher. The Escape button is used to say NO or to move upwards in the easy to use software menu's.
Inside the machine are more parameters available:
Volume per track
Attack per track
Release per track
Panning (all tracks together)
And there is a little FX build in. It gives you some reverbs, delays and chorus FX. Its rather an add-om then a full FX for studio recordings. Think of it as an extra for live concerts.
Manikin might give us additional features with OS updates you can load by burning a CD or writing them to a Compact Flash Card before loading them within seconds.
In the back there is a power cable input, a Volume control pedal in, left and right Audio outputs and a little knob for adjusting the contrast of the always good to read display.
And if you ask yourself now: "where is the CD slot in the fine white wooden housing?", here is the answer:
the slot-in CD reader is under the panel. It is just a little slot to the front. You have to eject CDs through the software function.