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As you'd expect with a five-star pedigree, this chunky synth offers quality to go with value
Future Music, Tue 23 Oct 2007, 12:07 pm UTC
The massive influence of Bob Moog on most pieces of synth gear sitting in your studio should not be underestimated. He was a genuine legend of the music world.
The last project over which he presided over before he died in 2005 was the Little Phatty Tribute Edition, an affordable product designed to bring the classic Moog sound to more studios.
So what exactly are we dealing with here? Well, the Little Phatty is an analogue monosynth in the tradition of the Minimoog.
It's built around a three-octave keyboard and, behind that, a raised panel that houses all of the knobs and switches that let you at the sound.
Synthesizers, and particularly Moogs, will always be judged on the noise they make.
Throw in all the arpeggiators, real-time performance controllers and effects sections you want, if the core sound doesn't cut it then you may as well forget about it.
We're delighted to report that the Little Phatty could happily pick a fight with any of its synth contemporaries right now and be assured of bloodying its collective nose.
The sound structure is now legendary. The two VCOs can draw from a pool of four waveforms, which are continuously variable from Triangle, to Sawtooth, to Square to Rectangular waves.
That means that if the rotary encoder that selects your waveform lies between two waves, you'll get a blend of both, which in turn allows for the possibility of pulse width modulation between the Square and Rectangle waves.
Oscillator Two is tuned relative to Oscillator One with an offset of up to seven semitones achievable up or down.
The waveforms can be sync'd for a potentially monstrous sound, while glide can also be applied with variable rate.
The filter, too, is classic Moog. It's a 24dB/octave, resonant affair with dials for Cutoff, Resonance, Keyboard amount, Envelope Generator amount and Overload.
For those unfamiliar with these latter terms, a positive Keyboard amount setting forces the filter to open as you play higher up the keyboard.
The EG amount selects how the filter envelope will shape the brightness of the sound over time, while the Overload sets an amount of signal clipping, adding anything from a little bite to full on speaker-busting distortion.
The sound is then shaped by envelope settings for the amplifier and filter sections.
The envelopes are governed by traditional Attack, Decay, Sustain and Release sections and editing these is very straightforward.
If you want to modify the amplifier attack time, for example, simply press the appropriate button and its value will be displayed on the rotary encoder above it.
The soft blue light that exists in the centre of every button allows you to keep tabs on exactly where you are.
So even though the Envelope Generator encoder can display any one of eight parameters, it's obvious which one you're looking at.
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Awesome little monosynth, extremely well built, and can easily knock pictures off of your walls with the bass.
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Gorgeous sounds. Terrific usability. The Moog pedigree. Great price.
Not a lot at this price.
The original and still the best, this is everything you'd expect of a Moog. Simple as that.
All MusicRadar’s reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.
Little Phatty
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superfrog
Mon 24 Dec 2007, 6:31 pm UTC
User rating 5 of 5