TOUR EQUIPMENT:
There have been a lot of questions about what equipment
I'll be taking on the road for the Tony Levin tour. Times
have sure changed from tours I did years ago carrying Moog
modular synthesizers, or even the Fairlight CMI series II.
I'll be bringing rather minimal equipment with me, but the
capabilities are so great these days that I'm not feeling
restricted at all:
- Kurzweil K2000 synthesizer (the one from my studio);
full 700k PRAM, 64 meg sample RAM, 500 meg hard
drive
- Emu Audity 2000 synthesizer
- Rolls RM-65 mixer
- Alesis Midiverb 4 digital effects unit
- Synergy Systems stage/house sound/subwoofer routing
panel
- Furman PL-Plus Power Conditioner
- 2 Trace Elliot TEK150 keyboard amplifiers
- ServoDrive Contrabass subwoofer
- Randall RRM-200 power amplifier
That's really all that there is (Tony's stick is in the left
foreground)
I'll also have my "portable studio" with me. This
equipment is not part of the stage set, but I will be using
it for several writing projects during the months on the
road.
- Roland SK-88pro keyboard and synthesizer module
- Mark of the Unicorn FastLane MIDI Interface
- Apple Macintosh "Pismo" PowerBook 2000
- Mark of the Unicorn: Digital
Performer
- Opcode: Galaxy Plus
Editors
- Bias Peak: Peak
- Waves: plug-ins
- BitHeadz: Retro AS-1,
Unity
- Channel D: Mac The
Scope
STUDIO EQUIPMENT:
We'll be putting up some pictures and
additional information about the Synergy Studio at some
point in the future.
In the meantime, there have been a lot
of questions about what equipment is used in the Synergy
Studio. Briefly, this is what is is currently connected and
used to some degree (there is a LOT of stuff retired and in
storage):
Instruments:
- Kurzweil K-2000 with sample
playback
- Yamaha SY-77
- Korg Wavestation AD
- Emu Audity 2000 synthesizer
- Emu Xtreme Lead 1 (XL-1)Turbo synthesizer
- Emu Proteus 1 XR with Orchestral
Module
- Roland D-550
- Roland D-110
- Alesis D4 drum module
- Roland R-8M drum
module
- Emu Emulator II
- Sequential Circuits Prophet 5 rev
3
- PAiA Fat Man
synthesizer
- Moog Model 15 modular synthesizer
(plus additional modules)
- Memorymoog synthesizer
- PAiA midi2cv8 MIDI-control voltage
adapter
- PAiA Theremax (theremin-like
instrument)
Signal Processing:
- DeltaLab DL2 with memory
module
- Lexicon PCM60
- Alesis Quadraverb
- Alesis Microverb
- Alesis Micro Limiter
- Yamaha SPX-90
- Symetrix 511A single-end noise
reduction
- PAiA Tube Head preamp
- Hughes SRS sonic
imager
- Aphex Type C
- Roland Dimension D
SDD-320
Mixers:
- Roland M-160 line
mixer
- Roland M-120 line
mixer
- Teac Model 2 6 x 4 aux.
mixer
- Tascam M-50 12 x 8 monitor
mixer
Speakers and Amps:
- JBL 4311B reference
monitors
- Intersonics model 215 ServoDrive
subwoofer
- McIntosh 2105 monitor
amplifier
- McIntosh 250 monitor
amplifier
Computers &
Interfaces:
- Apple Macintosh G3 (blue &
white) 450mHz Yosemite 6 gig drive & 18 gig
drive
- Mark of the Unicorn 2408 digital
audio interface
- Mark of the Unicorn MIDI Time
Piece AV
- Mark of the Unicorn MIDI Time
Piece 1
- Power Computing Macintosh Power
120 NuBus 1 gig drive, 6 gig drive
- Digidesign 422 digital
interface
- Digidesign ProTools SMPTE Slave
Driver
- Apple Macintosh G3 (beige) 266 mHz
AV config w/ Orange Micro Pentium card 6 gig, 4 gig
drives
- JL Cooper Sync Link
- Yamaha CDE-100 II CD-R
burner
- Southworth Jambox 4 MIDI
interface
Software:
- Mark of the Unicorn: Digital
Performer, AudioDesk
- Opcode: Galaxy Plus Editors,
Studio Vision
- Bias Peak: Peak, Deck
II
- Digidesign: Sound Designer II,
ProTools, MasterList CD
- Waves: most plug-ins that they
make
- Adaptec: Toast
- BitHeadz: Retro AS-1,
Unity
- Channel D: Mac The
Scope
Recording Machines:
- Panasonic SV-3900 DAT w/ SH-MK390
remote
- MCI JH-110/8 analog
multitrack
- Pioneer RT-1050 1/2 track analog
recorder
- dbx/Teac noise reduction (8
channels)
- dbx Model 180 noise reduction (2
channels)
- Sony WM-D6 Pro cassette
recorder
- Sony D5-A CD Player
- Yamaha MT100 II 4 track mini
studio cassette recorder
- Sony VP-2011 3/4" Umatic video
machine
- JVC HR-S6600U S-VHS video
machine
January, 2000
Most recording is now done direct
to disk within the computers. The analog recorders are
hardly ever switched on, and the DAT only occasionally. The
computers can record and play back up to around 32 tracks of
digital audio at 16 or 24 bits, and a nearly unlimited
number of tracks of MIDI data. Automated mixing is done
within the computers, too. Software plug-ins are used for
most audio signal processing rather than the aging hardware
signal processing boxes listed above. Final output is
usually done directly to CD-R as is archival file backup.
The old analog mixers are mostly used as monitoring devices
since most mixes are actually created digitally with the
computer. In the coming years the hardware signal
processing, mixing and even synthesizers are likely to be
supplanted by all-software systems running inside the
computer.
©1999-2001 Synergy®
Electronic Music, Inc.
This page was last updated on June
27, 2001
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