- Moog Filter Vst
- Moog Source Vst
- Moog Synth Vst
- Moog Minitaur Plugin
- Minotaur Moog Vst Drums
- Moog Bass Vst
The new Minitaur v2.2 update expands this powerful analog bass synthesizer with a host of new performance elements and user requested features, including front-panel access to new LFO wave-shapes, oscillator hard-sync and much more-and Minitaur's new Librarian/Editor Software makes DAW integration seamless between your synthesizer and Mac or Windows machine. Manuals, firmware, software, and presets for all your Moog instruments. Re: MOOG Minitaur & Sub 37 VST editors NOT WORKING in Ableton 10 Post by papawise » Wed Mar 14, 2018 10:39 am I spent all night reinstalling all my system, migrated to Windows 10 Pro, I have everything working as intended now and like it must be, with MIDI only thru USB. Manuals, firmware, software, and presets for all your Moog instruments.
This panel has been designed to work with the Minitaur which is a compact and powerful analogue bass synthesizer created, produced and sold by Moog Music Inc. This panel will allow the user to have access to this powerful synthesizer as a VST/AU enabling the user access within programs such as Ableton Live and Logic Pro using full automation.
This panel is still in development and I look forward to any comments, suggestions and recommendations. The purpose of this project is to allow my son access to this device using full automation in the aforementioned programs. I have been developing and testing as a standalone panel and am ready for some initial testing and feedback on the panel.
The controls on the first tab (Minitaur Editor) use a vertical drag to alter them and they show a bubble with the value. The second tab (Under the Hood) uses a rotary drag to move the knobs. This screen will also allow one to position the knob at the point where they click on the knob, eliminating some of the need to drag. The third tab (Miscellaneous) uses a horizontal drag. Both tabs 2 and 3 do not show the bubble when dragging. All three tabs allow the user to double click to set value back to Default as specified in the Minitaur manuals and documentation.
Please feel free to test and provide feedback on anything. Currently, avoid using the Erase Firmware and Save Firmware functionality on the Miscellaneous tab. Those setting may require physically putting the |Minitaur in a special mode, so avoid those at this time. On that tab is the Set All Defaults button. This button may be useful if settings go astray.
When using some of the settings it may be necessary to either Send Snapshot or Receive Snapshot depending on where the change was made. Once Set All Defaults is performed one may want to hit the FW VERSION GET button and watch the firmware version on the screen get updated. Also, the FW VERSION DISPLAY has your Minitaur show its display by flashing the Oscillator button LEDs.
The Refresh button on the Under the Hood tab will update you MIDI settings so one may also select and make changes from those LED style list boxes. I also have not tested anything on the Hardware/Calibration page. Use that at your own risk and really only if you know what you are doing.
All the Presets buttons work now. The Save Local Preset function is identical to functionality on Moog’s Minitaur Editor, except for a slight difference in two of the settings. Those settings are:Glide Type and LFO Clock. Work is still being done to better the functionality on this tab but it is now fully functional needing some User Interface improvements as well as perhaps correcting the aforementioned difference.
The panel is downloaded from here:
Download Count: 2,871 Panel Size: 5.0 MB
Bass Synthesizer- Synthesizers >Sound Modules
Moog’s bovine bass synth just keeps getting better.
In the 1970s, Moog dominated the market for self-contained, analogue synthesizer bass pedals but, by and large, these fell out of favour following the advent of MIDI. Consequently, it wasn’t until 2010 that the company replaced the original Taurus and short-lived Taurus 2 pedals with the Taurus 3, which seemed to me to be everything that the Taurus was, and more. Then, in a wry twist of fate, the company took the Taurus concept and in 2012.. turned it into a small MIDI module.
Catch Up
Like its forebears, the Minitaur had a limited note range and a sound generator focussed on bass, but it wasn’t a Taurus 3 in a box. It offered two VCOs with an unusual synchronisation capability that ensured that phase cancellation never caused the start of any note to sound thin or an octave higher than intended. Then, following its mixer, its VCF was an implementation of Moog’s resonant 24dB/octave low-pass filter that offered velocity sensitivity, as did the VCA that followed it. Unlike the original Taurus pedals, the Minitaur offered two contour generators based upon the Minimoog’s ADS(D) design, whereby the release time was either zero or equal to the decay time. Vibrato and filter cutoff frequency modulation was provided by a single triangle-wave LFO that could be synchronised to MIDI Clock, and three modes of portamento completed the visible part of the package; all of its other parameters could be accessed only using MIDI CCs or the editor that was released shortly after the Minitaur itself. Providing a representation of the front-panel controls on one page and all of the hidden parameters on a second, this made a huge difference to the Minitaur experience, although it was a stand-alone application, which precluded automation within DAWs. Nonetheless, automation could be achieved by recording and replaying the MIDI CCs that the Minitaur spat out every time that you moved or pressed a control. As for the sound, I found that it justified the Taurus name, which was no mean accolade.
Following my review of the Minitaur in 2012, it was soon upgraded to Rev 2 and then to Rev 2.1 and, in retrospect, these probably turned the Minitaur into the instrument that Moog would have liked to have released in the first place. Perhaps most notably, these updates added 100 and then 128 patch memories to the Minitaur, and you could scroll through these using the Glide button as a Shift key together with the VCO1 and VCO2 buttons as up/down keys. It was clunky, but it worked, and making it slicker would have required additional controls and perhaps a screen, which would have turned the Minitaur into a different instrument altogether. Patch selection was much easier using the editor but, unless you already used a computer on stage, this was of no help in live situations.
Rev 2 also separated the decay and release times so that the contours were genuine ADSRs, and Rev 2.1 extended them still further by adding a hold stage between the attack and decay to turn them into five-stage AHDSRs that were streets ahead of the original ADS(D) contours. CV mapping was also added, meaning that three of the four control inputs could now be directed to any two continuous controllers and a switch. This greatly increased the Minitaur’s usefulness when used within a modular setup, and made things far more interesting when using it to treat external audio. Furthermore, since the Minitaur sent a stream of MIDI CCs whenever a parameter value was updated, this meant that you could use it as a three-channel CV-to-MIDI converter, taking analogue control signals from elsewhere and applying them to MIDI instruments, soft synths, and anything else that responded to MIDI CCs. I was also delighted to discover that the Minitaur could now generate (as well as receive) 14-bit MIDI CCs. To put this into context, the Minitaur’s filter cutoff frequency is quantised to approximately semitone steps when swept using 7-bit CCs, whereas the quantisation is finer than one cent using 14-bit CCs.
Other new features included an LFO sync reset function that sync’ed the LFO waveform to MIDI Clock, top-octave wrapping so that you didn’t obtain silence if you accidentally played above the available note range, transposition, alternative tuning scales via SysEx, a drone mode, plus three knob modes — snap to value, pass-through, and relative position — as well as the ability to save and reload the mod wheel position so that modulation amounts could be recalled as part of a patch. Oh yes, and there was also the addition of a Poly Chain mode that allowed you to string together a number of Minitaurs (or other Moog monosynths that support this feature) to create a polysynth. How do you fancy combining seven Sub 37s for leads and chords, plus a Minitaur for bass duties? That would be interesting!
Revision 2.2
Today, Rev 2.2 develops the Minitaur still further. Moog’s literature says that there are now six modulation sources, but I’m afraid that this is just the marketing department getting carried away. Download software spss 21. There are two sources — the LFO, which is now capable of generating five waveforms rather than just a triangle wave, plus the filter contour — either one of which can be directed to the VCOs’ pitches and the VCF cutoff frequency. However, you can now disconnect VCO1 from the modulation source so that only VCO2 is affected, allowing you to create chorused sounds that previous versions couldn’t. Alternatively, you can use just a touch of random modulation (ie. pitch drift) to emulate the inconsistencies of the original Taurus pedals to wonderful effect. But the ability to sweep VCO2 independently is most dramatic when you engage the new oscillator sync function; the results can be superb. The final update is a delay stage before the attack of the VCF contour, which turns it into a six-stage DAHDSR.
Getting to grips with the extended voicing using the Minitaur alone is a bit fiddly because, for obvious reasons, all of the new facilities exist as Shift functions. Normally, I would be rather critical of this but, since there’s no other way that Moog could have squeezed the additional parameters on to the existing control panel, we have to accept it. Fortunately, a cheat-sheet illustrates the shifted functions so, having spent a bit of time learning them, I was soon whizzing around the panel, selecting from the new modulation waveforms, extending the range of contour shapes and, in particular, creating all manner of snappy, hard-sync sounds. Interestingly, all Minitaurs can be upgraded to Rev 2.2, which means that the RAM for the patch memories and the code space and processing power for the new functions always existed. I wonder why it has taken five years to implement them?
Moog Filter Vst
The Minitaur editor software’s Extended view.
The Minitaur editor has also been significantly updated and now runs within DAWs on both Macs (OS 10.7 and higher) and PCs (Windows 7 and later). Having installed this, it was immediately available when I created an Instrument track within Digital Performer 9 on my MacBook Pro and, when selected, automatically hooked itself up to the Minitaur. The original two pages are still available, but there’s now an Expanded page that lays (almost) the full voicing structure out in front of you. Two further pages provide a comprehensive librarian plus a setup and calibration page that is more extensive than you might imagine. Its ability to provide automation is a big step forward but, even disregarding this, I found it to be a distinct improvement over previous versions, not least because the Extended page makes everything much clearer, although the omission of the delay and hold stages of the contour generators is a surprise, meaning that these parameters can only be programmed from the Minitaur itself. Perhaps a future upgrade will rectify this.
Conclusion
It’s naughty of Moog to advertise that updates such as the on-board presets and the CV mapping with its consequent CV/MIDI conversion are new features in Rev 2.2. I wouldn’t have objected to them reminding us that these have been introduced since the original was released, but to say that they’re new in Rev 2.2 is wrong because.. well, they’re not. But overlooking this, there’s no denying that the Minitaur is now a better synth than it was when I first reviewed it. Sure, it’s no longer quite as straightforward as it once was, but that’s the price that has to be paid for shoe-horning so many additional functions into an existing control panel. Whether it can compete against the new breed of miniature analogue synth modules such as the Roland SE-02 isn’t clear, but there’s still something that I rather like about a product that does just one thing, but does it well. Now, if Moog would implement aftertouch so that I could open the filter by leaning harder on a set of MIDI pedals, and would produce a synth-on-a-stick kit so that the Minitaur is as convenient to edit on stage as the Taurus 2.. well, that would be really something!
Inputs & Outputs
Physically, the Minitaur is unaltered, with a quarter-inch monophonic output, a quarter-inch external signal input and a 3.5mm headphones socket. There are four control inputs: CVs for pitch, volume and filter cutoff frequency, the first two of which can now be reassigned to the continuous controls of your choice, and gate, which is now assignable to the switch of your choice. MIDI connections are provided by USB (in and out) and five-pin DIN (in only). Finally, there’s a socket for the supplied 12V DC wall-wart.
A Problem Cured
Moog Source Vst
I had one significant reservation about the Minitaur that I reviewed in 2012; it generated a quiet chattering noise when connected to my previous MacBook Pro running on mains power. I hadn’t heard this noise during the current review, but I was using a later generation of Mac, so I dug out the old one and tested it with the current Minitaur. Happily, all was well and there was no unwanted noise.
Pros
- It now generates a much wider range of bass sounds.
- The editor is much improved and now runs within DAWs and other VST/AU hosts.
- You no longer need to use the editor or streams of MIDI CCs to get the best from it but..
Moog Synth Vst
Cons
- .. the new parameters have to be accessed via the editor or Shift functions, none of which are annotated on the panel.
Summary
Moog Minitaur Plugin
I’ve been performing with a set of theatre-rattling analogue bass pedals for more than 30 years, and the Minitaur is the one product that makes me wonder whether I should change my setup to include a modern set of MIDI controller pedals and a dedicated bass synth module.
information
£435, wooden end cheeks £70. Prices include VAT.Source Distribution +44 (0)20 8962 5080
Minotaur Moog Vst Drums
$539, wooden end cheeks $59.Moog Bass Vst
Moog Music Inc +1 828 2510090.