I got to play one of these at Sweetwater's brick-and-mortar store and I was floored. It was so easy to make a great sound. The build quality is also top-notch.
@@peripheralvisions Nope. I looked into it recently. Behringer tried to trademark Oberheim and got rejected. Tom Oberheim is the rightful owner of the "Oberheim" name. Behringer managed to snag the old logo though.
God what a joyful synth. I think Dave’s original designs are my favorite in the world of analog synths, second only to Studio Electronics, who take place #1 in my book. Omg max voices/max detune CRANK UP THE RAVE!!! That’s awesome. The Prophet 10 is a kingly synth indeed. Lol life needs a vintage knob. Brilliant little tune to finish the video. Love it.
This is a great demo! Decent amount of talking (not too much, and well balanced, volume-wise, with the musical bits), great sound and music examples. Probably the best I've seen.
I always lusted after the old two-keyboard version of the Prophet 10. NOW, I want a "hernia inducing" multitimbral Prophet 20, with two keyboards and twenty notes of polyphony! 😍
As I get older and older I appreciate the Prophet more and more! Thanks for thes relaxing video and music! Dealing with tropical storm here in Florida and numbing myself with weed hoping to eventually sleep through this so this is perfect.
Such a thing of beauty. I make that same face when I look at the Prophet-10 on my wish list. Alas, it will probably stay there, so I'll just enjoy yours vicariously. Love the jams, as always!
Another video with some great tunes! Always love that you make songs for each review... really lets you hear it in context with everything, rather than hyper-focusing on just the instrument alone.
I have no particular love for vintage nostalgia, but this synth sounds fantastic and is definitely one of the most beautiful electronic instruments ever built. But I'm very happy with my Rev2 🙂
I had a rev2. I can assure you the P5 is on another level. It amazes me every time I play it. I don't think there has been any polysynth that has bettered this design. Rev2 can do things this can't do but I don't think it captures the sound quality and the ease of programming is great. Rev2 takes 30m minutes to make a patch. P5 is pretty much instant.
Fantastic. Loved this. Reminds me of Level 42 synth sound and so many hits. Really enjoyed this vid. Thanks. PS. What a tune at the end. Such a great player mate.
wow...such fun for a pro musician to watch somebody who is not just doig techtalk, but uses the instrument as a skilled keyboarder and arranger. Super demo and encouraging to buy a p10. Thanks!
Great video- nice concise run through the features (we don't always need each wave on every octave in a synth demo!!). I'm deeply jealous, of course- but still very happy with my Prophet '08 after 08 years...
I just got the Sequential Take 5, and am saving up for the Prophet 6. This Prophet 10 on your video is a sonic dream come to true. I cannot afford one, so I will just watch videos like yours and dream...
Good time, Alex! It was bright, capacious, and very musical. And a stylish frame: the combination of colors in the frame pleases the eye. And your short haircut refreshes you well. Thank you😊
Glad you got one, Alex! I know that you'll put it through its paces in a way that shows off its capabilities in a very musical way. Look forward to you doing a programming video as there are tricks within that deceptively simple architecture. I'm excited for you, and excited for me that I'll get to watch and listen.
Thank you David. Yes, that's absolutely right, it's simple on the face of it but there's so much mileage in those features. There's also an art to arranging _for_ Prophet which is another thing. It's very like arranging for guitar which is probably why I love it so much being a guitarist.
@@AlexBallMusic As a guitarist myself, I agree--to the extent that my hands-on experience is with my modded Prophet 600 rather than a "real" P5. (Although my Gligli 600 has Prophet 5 knobs and is quite proud of itself for how close it can get to an original P5 on many sounds.)
@@AlexBallMusic Yep, your video was a selling point for me before I got mine (and then added pan mod and a new keyboard, both of which really boost it although it's a bit like modding out an economy car).
Thank you Alex and looking forward to what is to come (also enjoying the tease of the S2400). One thing that would have been worthwhile mentioning is that the filter revision switch also changes the envelopes from being modeled after the SSM or CEM, which in my opinion makes quite a noticable difference for Brassy envelopes.
Ah, thank you. Didn't realise that. I know the envelopes and LFO are digitally generated. I guess that's why that's possible to do with the push of a button.
I'm glad they kept the look of the old Schadow momentary buttons. I liked the look of them so much on the 1970/80's Prophet 5 that I designed them into a product I worked on in 1990.
@@AlexBallMusic It was for a controller used for measuring propagation on the short wave radio bands. The entire production run was for 20 of them. Unfortunately all the pictures and archival stuff has been lost since then. Except for the push buttons, it looked nothing at all like a musical instrument! More like a black sheet metal box designed to live its life out in a rack.
im real pleased for you getting one - mmm i would kind of like it to be mine but hey - real happy to see you with it :-) it sounds really good - making some super sounds there - sounds really metalic , in a nice way.
Awesome demo!! Been running mine through the Eventide h8000 with the RMS DMX Chorus on one channel and the Black Hole on the other. Probably going to keep it patched like that for the next 10 years lol SO BEAUTIFUL ❤🤘
Dave Smith is a very nice guy, who occasionally has some really great ideas, like this one. The sounds from this thing tickle my space glands. Congrats on this fine acquisition bro!
A classic and so much a keyboard that I always wanted but could never afford way back when. But now maybe one day along with a replacement Minimoog and a Fender Rhodes. (old school) Thank you for showing this wonderful re-released instrument off.
@@AlexBallMusic best new minimoog is the one you can build from AJH synth modules, and better than most of the original due to choosing the sweetest sound version of the Model D
I think most people on RU-vid are too focused on dry, out of context demos rather than... Y'know... USING the bloody synth. And that goes for most synths I've heard. Commenters love to cry when you put effects on synths it seems.
I’ve often regretted that the late Dave Smith (despite having worked with Tom Oberheim on the OB-6) was not so quick to acknowledge the genetic tie between the Four Voice and the Prophet 5. Mr. Smith’s innovation with the microprocessor might’ve predated the launch of Oberheim Electronics, but it’s always worth noting that the architecture itself was rooted in the SEM models, since Tom is the one who pioneered the implementation of the reduced-size monophonic voices to achieve polyphony. Only the late Herbert Deutsch (musician, composer, professor and co-inventor of the original Moog modular) appears to have explained that connection (in the 1985 edition of his textbook Syntgesis). It might be thick of me, but I half expected to hear the DrunTraks during the different tunes you created with this beauty.