Last-Minute Meta-Gift-Guide: Music and Electronics Gift Guides from the Blogosphere
It’s either the last chance to rush delivery on gifts, or the first chance to start thinking about picking up some music tech projects for yourself to keep up with musical New Years’ Resolutions. Either way, it’s time to give a shout out to some of the great gift guides that have been going up around the Interwebs.
And nicely enough, there’s a strong emphasis on cheap and DIY projects, meaning these can be ideal even in tough economic times.
SX-150 button mod from Collin Cunningham on Vimeo.
MAKE: Blog > Music Makers’s Gift Guide
Assembled by our friend (and Handmade Music regular) Collin Cunningham, these are the geekiest DIY treasures you can find. I got hands-on with a couple of these recently. The plastic Theremin kit is fun, although you won’t get fantastic results out of it. My favorites: the awesome SX-150 synth kit (above), previously seen only in Japan, and the Thingamakit (which also got mentioned in our holiday guide). They’re both affordable and make some lovely sounds the moment you start using them, with hacks possible later.
For fans of the Arduino electronics/microcontroller platform, see Collin’s separate guide.
The monome didn’t make the guide this year, though it topped our list, but given that you have to basically preorder the moment a run is announced, that’s not exactly a slight.
wire to the ear > Five inexpensive Chistmas gifts for musicians
This small but neat selection is just perfect, I think, from the Moog schematic on a t-shirt (above) to flash memory earrings to Live sound packs from Puremagnetik.
Digital LoFi > The 2nd Annual Digital LoFi Holiday Gift Guide for the Disenfranchised
Digital LoFi has some fantastic selections: buy one, get-one-free offerings from Soniccouture (makers of fantastic Kontakt scripts, by the way), a pay-what-you-will EQ, and wonderful donationware plug-ins. The site also calls out CDM’s own Winter Guide print-on-demand – thanks!
Honorable mention: The wacky scientists in residence at New York’s Eyebeam research center have introduced Hack Me Elmo. (Thanks, Chris Hahn!) That’s right: it’s a blockbuster holiday toy from years past, hacked into something very odd. Check out our own Mike Una’s how-to on circuit bending if you want to transform a toy into something musical and wonderful, also in our Winter ‘08 guide.
And yes, the rest is here:
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6 Comments
Leave a CommentCreate Digital Motion » Gift Guides for Visualists, Video DIY
[...] the music site, see also our last-minute gift guide round-up, holiday season discounts (thank you, global recession?), and of course the new print-on-demand / [...]
December 19, 2008 @ 2:39 pm
Puffer
Thanks so much for the shout. It’s good to be in such esteemed company. Also, in addition to posting another suggestion (Nine Volt’s excellent charity melodic loop pack), I’ve sorted out the tagging. You can find the posts assembled here: 2008 Holiday Gift Guide for the Disenfranchised
And, yeah, I so want that SX-150 synth kit.
December 19, 2008 @ 3:27 pm
lekvar
I just developed a serious case of gearlust for the SX-150. There are already layouts and schematics online for adding MIDI and CV/Gate.
December 19, 2008 @ 10:49 pm
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December 20, 2008 @ 2:30 am
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[...] to keep up with musical New Years鈥?Resolutions. Either way, it鈥檚 time to give a shout Read More|||I enjoy buying a few things for loved ones during Christmas, but I do not enjoy standing in line [...]
December 21, 2008 @ 7:51 am
Tim Moore
Got an SX-150 from my brother for X-mas. Super easy to build — everything is pre-soldered, you just have to screw it together. The instructions were in Japanese (luckily, my other brother, who reads it fluently, was also there) but I think it’s pretty easy to figure out from the pictures.
January 4, 2009 @ 10:40 pm
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