JoMoX Elektronische Musikinstrumente GmbH is a German electronic musical instrument manufacturer founded in 1997 and based in Berlin. Jürgen Michaelis is the CEO and product developer.[1] The company specializes in analog synthesizers. The XBase 09 was the first product offered from JoMoX, and it continues to be the most requested device from the product line.[2][3]
Products
Current products
- Alpha Base - analog drum synthesizer and drum machine, with analog instruments (Kick drum, MBrane), sample capabilities, 6 hybrid samples channels (that are processed through analog VCA and VCF), 2 channels of pure digital samples + 1 FM synth. LFOs, reverb and delay
- M.Brane11 - analog percussion synthesizer
- MBase 11 - kick drum synthesizer, sequel to MBase01
- T-Resonator - filter with digital stereo delay integrated into the feedback loops
- MBase01 - kick drum analog synthesizer
- Resonator Neuronium - experimental analog neural network synthesizer
- M-Resonator - filter based on the Resonator Neuronium idea
Discontinued products
- XBASE 888 - Analog drum synthesizer and drum machine identical to XBASE 999, minus the X-Filter
- SunSyn Mk2 - 8-voice true analog synthesizer
- Midi-to-CV Interfaces - old MIDI interfaces 1994-1996
- MoonWind - Analog stereo filter tracker
- SunSyn - 8 voice polyphonic multitimbral true analog synthesizer. JoMoX's first major analog synthesizer.[4]
- XBASE 999 - Analog drum synthesizer and drum machine with downloadable percussion samples and assignable analog stereo multimode filter with LFOs
- AiRBase99 - A 1U drum module based on the XBase09 with additional features[5][6]
- JaZBase03 - Alternative to AirBase99
- XBase09 - Emulator of TR-909 with its sequencer qualities plus additional features[7][8]
See also
Note: XBASE 888 and XBASE 999 are considered clones of the TR-808 and TR-909
References
- ↑ "Biography". Jayemsonic. 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-24.
- ↑ Michaelis, Jürgen. "Company". JoMoX GmbH. Retrieved November 24, 2010.
- ↑ spainwaxlove (January 2010). "Tech Talk Jomox". JOMOX pt.1. Tech Talk. Retrieved November 25, 2010.
- ↑ Friedman, Matt (2010). "SunSyn". Vintage Synth Explorer. Retrieved November 24, 2010.
- ↑ Friedman, Matt (2010). "AirBase-99". Vintage Synth Explorer.
- ↑ "Jomox Airbase99 Expander/Synthesizer". Sound on Sound (August 1999). Retrieved November 24, 2010.
- ↑ Friedman, Matt (2010). "XBase-09". Vintage Synth Explorer. Retrieved November 24, 2010.
- ↑ "Jomox Xbase 09 Drum Machine". Sound on Sound (June 1997). Archived from the original on 7 June 2015.
External links
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