

In a polyphony of six notes, this thing is very well for bass heavy pads redundant stuff trs punchy, sounds apriodiques, caressing the R2D2. Then you look a little better, and aperoit the (small) sequence, (lightweight) arpgiateur, the programming buttons, then costs a little better, and we feel very heavy analogue of the large, we understand that is the bte MIDI. At first glance, the syxtrak looks like a toy ugly.

it can help the beast is pretty solid)Ĭompared for example to a Juno 106 which leaves at this time around 1000 bullets because he has some faders on the front, I laugh quietly.

In short, in the context of speculation around the old analos I place this SixTrak in the top of the podium bargains: pure polyphonic weird-vintage juice, original functions (the stack), Original MIDI implementation, storing presets (if you take it live. We even have a small sequencer and arpeggiator bonus! Oh and I forgot the unison mode which makes the animal more damn nasty on leads and bass (it's quite a bonus, right?) But honestly for the price, ending up with 6 lanes of his "Sequential" provides damn fun. The stack mode (stacking six programs into a multi-timbral polyphonic) is very fun and allows the main bearing of this toy defect, namely only 1 VCO and a matrix of conventional modulation.
SEQUENTIAL CIRCUITS SIX TRACK MOD
Some agreements with some release and a tad slow mod on the pitch, and buddies of Boards of Canada are not far away. Question tone, this beast will please those seeking a retro pulp in their sound. This is one of the first synths to push the implementation noon, so any controller noon to 30 balls transform this austere panel in paradise tweaking. "Oulala there's no pots, too boring to program." NO. Recess I just put my two cents on this point that repels ordinary mortals.
