The CASIO CZ Synthesizer from the year 1984 is a very interesting synth. Here can you find the full CASIO CZ playlist with single sound demos, sound tutorials and one synth demo tracks. Enjoy. The CASIO CZ playlist ----> ua-cam.com/play/PLe08Lbpy8pPbVOueQikTUmJ4mH_RvubhF.html
"I've... heard things you people wouldn't believe. Casio CZ101's taking on the role of Yamaha CS-80's. I've heard VL-Tones imitating modular synths through a Sennheiser mic. All these technologies will be assimilated in time, like... Fairlights on your iphone. Time... to roll another spliff."
This is making me happy to have a CZ-101. You're making me want to make patches on it. Is it just me or is it a little buggy sometimes? Pushing the pitch bend wheel all the way up or down causes the sound to cut out for example. Also patches don't seem to actually persist after turning the synth off. Is this normal? Do I need a memory card to save patches? Maybe I just need to clean mine. I found dead crickets in my Wavestation EX when I got it from an auction so who knows what could be lurking in my CZ-101? :s
I keep rewatching your CZ vids--especially this one--because they really showcase what a fantastically diverse Synth the CZ series is. I love my 101 and 5000. I've had them since the 1980's and they're just as relevant today as any of the massively expensive synths out there (which is good, because I can't afford them. Lol). They can emulate the sounds generated of just about any of the other synths, and every time I play a few of my electronica and industrial pieces for other people--including other musicians--they just laugh and don't believe me when I tell them every track is 100% Casio.
I punched in this patch on my Casio CZ-101 and boy oh boy does it sound magnificent (with appropriate delay and reverb dialed in on a Zoom MS-70CDR)! Great tutorial! Thank you especially for this one!
Aw yis, helped a friend repair his 101 last week and found a “broken” CZ-1000 for $40 yesterday. Took longer to unscrew the thing than to replace the dc jack and reflow the poor soldering. Immediately loved what came out of the shop speakers, and finished the rest of my work with your videos on in the background.
I bought one after having my eyes on it for almost two years yesterday. I wanted it for it´s somewhat unique brass sounds and DX like Moog- Bass approaches cause I do 80´s Boogie/Modern Funk. It also can rock the bells 4 sure... But this and your whole video series showed me a whole `nother rabbit whole to what Phase Distortion is capable of. Thanks for the input and chappeau!
These demos have sparked the GAS light, and I just bought another CZ-101! I got my first CZ-101 back in 1985 and had it until it died in 2000. The CZ is a secret sauce synth - it's truly remarkable.
Wow. i have seen these CZs and read the ad's, but never expected such a beautiful think sound. I love the Cs80, but too heavy costs too much I love this. thank you for sharing.
Vangelis Yamaha CS80 sounds & Casio CZ lovers... Watch it ! Hat off & thanks for this delight for ears... once again you've proved that underrated synths allows tremendous sounding possibilities, depending on the user's programming skills... Keep sharing your passion & talents through these projects ! ;-))
Thanks for showing what synthesizers are really made for. I really love those PD synths. The CZ-1000 is my favorite. Adding chorus or phaser really makes it shine!
A lot of people looked (and still look) at the CZ-101 series as a poor person's DX-7, but they were really never comparable in what you could get out of them.
my first synth was a CZ5000, I had no idea about romplers, analog, digital, etc.... Programming it was impossible for me at that time, but it had some really great sounds. I might get one again, just to see how it suits me now.
I've always said you could run a Casio toy through an Eventide or other high end effect machine, and with just a bit of effort, make it sound better. Not that the CZ is a toy, in 1985 it was the first synth I ever bought brand new. But I would be curious what an old home Casio unit like a Casiotone MT-68 would sound like through a good quality reverb and an amp simulator. Never underestimate a good quality effect unit. Usually even the most inexpensive and used synths have some Oscillator/Filter/Amp design. Any half-way decent synth, even if it sounds thin by itself, will sound much fuller through quality outboard effects. As good as a Minimoog sounds by itself, it sounds even better with just a little reverb or delay. Great tutorials. Makes me want to go out and pick up some of these old gems while they're still affordable and not $10k, LOL!
Sweet! I have a Casio CZ-1000. I did a demo with it the other day. I never tried to program a sound with it though. I did get a pretty sweet CS-80 type sound on my Roland Fantom G8 though. :) Keep up the videos. I'm always enjoying them. :) Take care, Sam.
Great tutorial! Now I'm just trying to figure out how to translate your tutorial in Subtractive synthesize terms in my head so I can try and create a sound like this on my JP-08.
A truly fantastic sound! The right key size, velocity, poly aftertouch and a ribbon controller are however also very important because they are the keys to the CS's expression. Of couse the first 2 points could be taken care of by buying a bigger CZ but the last 2, very important points, would be a lot more difficult to solve. Otherwise I might be selling my original because it getting so old that it's electronic components haves become a bit of a liability.
Great videos man! The cz range dont seem to get the love they should. The other "sleeper" casio is the wk3700 and wk8000. These have been completely missed by synth lovers.
You've got the entire sound already built when you start, so the tones we hear starting with the DCO are not the same on our machine as yours. And, we don't get to see how you save them. It would be better if you start from the beginning as we are doing!
Great videos man. You do a great job with PD! The other casios worth looking at are any of the early 2000s silver wk range with the blue dsp button to the right of the screen. Wk3500-wk8000 and also the MZ2000 which all those are based on. Very few people have ever used them creatively and are a sadly under rated range of synths. Very quick interface which is nice and fast to get what you want on the fly. Once again, great job :)
Although bringing up some cheap alternative to the ridiculous huge and expensive CS-80 is only half of it, the other very important part is the cheap alternative to the ridiculous huge and expensive Lexicon 224, which very much was the salt in Vangelis' soundscapes :-)
I had one of these in the 80’s , sold it didn’t really know how to use it, it didn’t sound very realistic to the Yamaha pss and Roland D50 ect keyboards that were about then just hisses and squeals and pops and monophonic as well to my untrained ear. Now I know more about synths and grown up I wish I knew then what I know now, these older synths have unique qualities in their own right , yes there are more powerful affordable units today’s but none will have the same charm , tactile experience or sound as the original does. Did you buy yours from a spotty teenager in Gtr Manchester ?
I'll tell you what, I made the right decision in 1986 of buying a Casio CZ instead of a DX-7 or Oberheim Matrix 6 as friends of mine did. I typically loved analog synth sounds, and the CZ's do way better for classic synth sounds than either of those do. OB-X or OB-8 would have been another story (for real time tweaking anyway). The CZ's make better analog lead sounds than the Matrix 6 does, very surprising. Not to mention his Matrix 6 spent half it's life back at the factory for repairs. A decent Oberheim (OB-X or OB-8), Moog (Mini, Memory), ARP (Pro Soloist, 2600. Odyssey) or Sequential (Prophet V or 10) can still make some sounds I have not heard of the CZ's and I had thousands of sound patches since I interfaced my CZ's to my Amigas. Especially sounds that require real time knobs for tweaking. But the CZ were able to mimic a surprisingly high number of those type of sounds, unlike a DX-7, DX-100, or Matrix 6, or Sequential Max, some other synths my friends had. I'd still choose a CZ over some of the Roland Juno's, and cheaper 1980s/70s Moogs. Pretty much any synth in the 80s under $2000, I think the CZ's were generally better for analog type sounds, especially true for lead sounds. Maybe not for a few string patches & pads.
Do NOT sell your Microkorg..it's a little beast..and way more capable of analog sounds..well..sounds of any character really..plus..you have a vocoder...CZ:as are still pretty cheap..so get one in addition instead..CZ1 ..3000..and CZ5000 and CZ 101 are the same synths..just without the pressure sensitivity and full size keyboard..same sound engine :-p But with the CZ5000 you get an 8-track sequencer..and it's a hell of a lot of fun :-p
The only time I make comments is when I’m trolling. This is the first time I’m a positive troll. Thank you! My memory card should be here in a few days. And then the world!!!
Really late reply but I’m just going through setting up these patches. What you need to do is set the line selector to 1+1 which basically copies the first line exactly but then allows you to detune it giving that wide sound. It looks like maybe he is using line 1+2 which means that you would have to manually edit the same parameters into line 2 then with different envelope settings as he mentioned. It’s a little unclear to be honest. But it still sounds really good using line 1+1.
The difference is: CZ-1000 has full size keys, CZ-101 has mid-size keys (main difference) CZ-1000 has membrane buttons vs physical. I sold my CZ-101 and bought a CZ-1000. If you know how to actually play keyboards, you'll find the full size keys make a huge difference, and mid size keys would look silly on stage. However, consider the CZ-101 was a lot cheaper, it made sense for a of people. Also, the CZ-101 & 1000 speak the same language. Some software like libarians and patch editors did not work on the other model CZ synths unless specifically written to be compatible with them. . Another good reason to keep one of these, and have a later model with more features if you needed them. A synth is only as good as your sound collection, unless you make everything from scratch. The CZ's had an excellent collection, and that was it's biggest selling point besides the low cost. Having a computer and MIDI interface, and the know how to use it is essential. Because the CZ's were affordable, easy to purchase (some retail stores and even small music stores sold them), and the CZs were one of the very first popular synths with built-in MIDI, it was an ideal synth for a home computer enthusiast and for those reasons had one of the better sound collection libraries. The DX-7 had huge collections of sounds too, but it was a different animal all together and made totally different types of sounds. The CZ was basically an analog synth made digitally. I had a cheaper Yamaha FB-01 then later got a module DX-7 and now use a soft synth of one. I later purchased a 2nd CZ-1000 and then bought the ultimate CZ, a CZ-1. Then a 2nd CZ-1. The sound system is identical in all CZ keyboards, the tones it makes. CZ-1 adds a 61 keybed with full aftertouch and velocity, more notes polyphonic, split & layer ability, better LCD screen, etc. The sound is still exactly the same to the human ear. Maybe under a scope converters could be different. Same difference, believe me. Also has a chorus effect. CZ-5000 lacks the aftertouch (very important especially when using as a MIDI controller for other sound modules) but added a sequencer (I didn't care about that). CZ-3000 was also 61 keys, but lacks aftertouch and maybe the velocity (I forget). As someone else mentioned, and effects pedals or a multi-effects processor will make a world of difference with any CZ. The same could be said about nearly any synth from this era. In the 80s I bought a digital reverb pedal, a phaser, flanger, chorus and distortion. The reverb I found by far the most useful. Phaser would be next. I used the chorus pedal more on other synths like my Yamaha FM synths to add a Leslie effect to the organ patches. Now a days you can buy a multi-effects processor cheap. Going the software synth route mostly, my effects pedals are one less thing I need to drag to the gigs and setup. I have all of those effects done in software and they work on all of my software synths. I add a touch a reverb to many sounds, sometimes phase or flange, etc.
the CZ virtual instrument emulations sounds pretty good... and comes with easier interface. But at some point those hardware versions could probably be had for less than the emulation even when there is a sale.
Where? I got my CZ-1 for $300 and $80 shipping. It came with all original manuals,booklets, even the super rare cartridge.(rare because the CZ-1 used a different type of cartridge than all the othe CZ synths.) Anvil carry case, and was in perfect condition. I see the CZ-1s go for around this price and cheaper all the time. The reason the CZ-101 goes for more usually even though way more of this model were made is because it is the minikey small portable version and has no issues fitting in any studio. Where the CZ-1 is a beast and demands your attention and space. Some say the CZ-101 and 1000 sound fatter than the 3000,5000, and 1...but I have never had any but the 1. I will sometime this year get a cz 101 just to see if I notice any difference. The main difference is the 101 (and 1000) are half as powerful as the 3000,5000, and 1. It is more complicated than that but if you wanna compare go read the specs of all models and compare.
The reason that some say that a CZ-1 sounds "thinner" compared with the other models in the CZ range is simple. The CZ-1 is the only CZ model with a velocity and after touch sensitive keyboard. The patches can also be affected by velocity and/ or after touch, affecting many parameters of the patch. In other words, unless you hit the CZ-1 keys with maximum velocity, the patches won't sound exactly the same as the non velocity keyboard CZ's. That's the whole point, the velocity sensitivity adds an extra element of expressiveness to the CZ-1. Bar the velocity, the CZ-1 uses the same sound engine and patch data to build the sound as all the other CZ's, so switch off velocity sensitivity and a CZ-1 will sound exactly the same as an identical patch in a CZ101/ 1000/ 3000/ 5000. Also agree that prices are yet to go that high. I bought my first CZ-1 in the UK in 2010 for 129GBP, plus 20GBP shipping. When I moved to the USA in 2015, I found a better conditioned CZ-1, also with 2 x RA6 Ram cartridges AND RC10 and RC30 ROM cartridges. All for just $180 plus $40 shipping. Prices are on the rise though, and after this video (and the previous Retrosound video making a CZ101 sound like an Oberheim OBXa), values of CZ's will likely rise further!
+Chas D nice, very lucky find with that CZ-1! By twice as powerful I meant the later CZ models are 16 voice and the older ones are 8 voice. I heard rumors there were two CZ models released for the Japanese market, which were speaker variants of the 3000 and 5000, know anything about that?
Sounds actually nothing at all like the CS80 in Blade Runner. The Casio CZ is actually capable of sounding like one for that famous lead sound, though.
The ME80 is even cheaper and said to be quite close to the original. Combined with a Valhalla Vintage for emulation of the 224, it could give you probably the best cost efficient way for replicating the sound. But then it's not hardware, most people seem to despise that they can't twiddle the controls directly, and no, midi controllers don't count. The old discussion "emulation vs original" is as old as emulations exist :-)
midi controllers however rarely have an interface that matches the software or the original. (there was the oscar controller, and the System-8 can be used as a controller for the System-8 virtual instrument). There are some overlays for the BCR-2000 for software... however, the interface is a bit cramped, to really be user-friendly. (on the other hand, the memory programmer on the CS-80 was several times worse in terms of cramped layout compared to the BCR-2000, but it had those two voices at proper size on the front).
The CASIO CZ Synthesizer from the year 1984 is a very interesting synth. Here can you find the full CASIO CZ playlist with single sound demos, sound tutorials and one synth demo tracks. Enjoy.
The CASIO CZ playlist ----> ua-cam.com/play/PLe08Lbpy8pPbVOueQikTUmJ4mH_RvubhF.html
I know I'm kinda off topic but does anyone know a good place to stream new series online?
"I've... heard things you people wouldn't believe. Casio CZ101's taking on the role of Yamaha CS-80's. I've heard VL-Tones imitating modular synths through a Sennheiser mic. All these technologies will be assimilated in time, like... Fairlights on your iphone. Time... to roll another spliff."
perfect :D
wonderful !
More CS-80 than CS-80
@@romanbaygildin315 Uh what? Lol
This is making me happy to have a CZ-101. You're making me want to make patches on it. Is it just me or is it a little buggy sometimes? Pushing the pitch bend wheel all the way up or down causes the sound to cut out for example. Also patches don't seem to actually persist after turning the synth off. Is this normal? Do I need a memory card to save patches?
Maybe I just need to clean mine. I found dead crickets in my Wavestation EX when I got it from an auction so who knows what could be lurking in my CZ-101? :s
I keep rewatching your CZ vids--especially this one--because they really showcase what a fantastically diverse Synth the CZ series is.
I love my 101 and 5000. I've had them since the 1980's and they're just as relevant today as any of the massively expensive synths out there (which is good, because I can't afford them. Lol).
They can emulate the sounds generated of just about any of the other synths, and every time I play a few of my electronica and industrial pieces for other people--including other musicians--they just laugh and don't believe me when I tell them every track is 100% Casio.
I punched in this patch on my Casio CZ-101 and boy oh boy does it sound magnificent (with appropriate delay and reverb dialed in on a Zoom MS-70CDR)! Great tutorial! Thank you especially for this one!
:)) thank you
I love these CZ-101 video’s. You should do a series about it.
thank you for watching :)
Aw yis, helped a friend repair his 101 last week and found a “broken” CZ-1000 for $40 yesterday. Took longer to unscrew the thing than to replace the dc jack and reflow the poor soldering. Immediately loved what came out of the shop speakers, and finished the rest of my work with your videos on in the background.
I bought one after having my eyes on it for almost two years yesterday. I wanted it for it´s somewhat unique brass sounds and DX like Moog- Bass approaches cause I do 80´s Boogie/Modern Funk. It also can rock the bells 4 sure... But this and your whole video series showed me a whole `nother rabbit whole to what Phase Distortion is capable of. Thanks for the input and chappeau!
Thank you for your feedback
These demos have sparked the GAS light, and I just bought another CZ-101! I got my first CZ-101 back in 1985 and had it until it died in 2000. The CZ is a secret sauce synth - it's truly remarkable.
great . thanks :)
i just copped one of these for $330 off reverb. 8 note polyphony & still cheaper than a minilogue!!!
I managed to get it for $200. Feeling lucky and beyond excited! How are you liking yours a year later?
Wow. i have seen these CZs and read the ad's, but never expected such a beautiful think sound. I love the Cs80, but too heavy costs too much I love this. thank you for sharing.
Thanks for reminding me why I loved the CZ series so much...
yes fantastic synths. a bit forgotten these days analog hype
I've told you before, stop showing everyone how good the Cosmo synths are. It's a secret! :D
haha
Vangelis Yamaha CS80 sounds & Casio CZ lovers... Watch it !
Hat off & thanks for this delight for ears... once again you've proved that underrated synths allows tremendous sounding possibilities, depending on the user's programming skills...
Keep sharing your passion & talents through these projects ! ;-))
thanks a lot my friend :)
You're welcome !
Fully deserved my friend ! ;-))
Awesome. The PD synthesis is so underrated.
agree with you. thank you
Recommend any resources to learn more about it?
6 months later update: I still have a hard time wrapping my head around it.
I really appreciate this series
haha cool. :D
yes more coming soon.
Thanks for showing what synthesizers are really made for. I really love those PD synths. The CZ-1000 is my favorite. Adding chorus or phaser really makes it shine!
thank you for watching and your comment :)
That "Blade Runner" sound is so fantastic ....CZ is a little demon !
Amazing vid. Marko !
yes Eric. :D
thanks a lot
Its like the CS-80 but more gritty and digital, its awesome
:)
A lot of people looked (and still look) at the CZ-101 series as a poor person's DX-7, but they were really never comparable in what you could get out of them.
Ooooow, yes! This is marvelous. Finally I can put my CZ-1 to work.
Great to hear!
I’ve always been a fan of the CZ-101. Nice work from you.
thank you for watching :)
Just emulated the sound on my own cz101 great tutorial!! Just wish you had the settings just listed in the description for quick reference.
thank you :)
Could you post the settings and how you got the sound??? Trying to recreate on my cz-1.
my first synth was a CZ5000, I had no idea about romplers, analog, digital, etc.... Programming it was impossible for me at that time, but it had some really great sounds. I might get one again, just to see how it suits me now.
yes the CZ series was the first synth for a lot .
First "real synth" for me too (after a Yamaha CS01MkII). Sold it for a Roland U20, wish I never had
My first one too, to my regret I swapped it for a guitar🤔😀
Excellent man I see/here what you have done with your clever pitch envelope programming!
yes the pitch envelope is here very important.
thank you
great job with this patch!
🙌💫
Amazing! If a cheap Casio can mimik a CS-80, it should be possible with my Prophet Rev2 as well ... getting up at 2 am ...
Ja, sehr geil. Hut ab!! Vom Claim über Video bis hin zum Inhalt!
Authentisch nachgestellt mit dieser kleinen Kiste!
Der kleine Scheißer spielt alles an die Wand :D
I've always said you could run a Casio toy through an Eventide or other high end effect machine, and with just a bit of effort, make it sound better.
Not that the CZ is a toy, in 1985 it was the first synth I ever bought brand new. But I would be curious what an old home Casio unit like a Casiotone MT-68 would sound like through a good quality reverb and an amp simulator.
Never underestimate a good quality effect unit. Usually even the most inexpensive and used synths have some Oscillator/Filter/Amp design. Any half-way decent synth, even if it sounds thin by itself, will sound much fuller through quality outboard effects. As good as a Minimoog sounds by itself, it sounds even better with just a little reverb or delay.
Great tutorials. Makes me want to go out and pick up some of these old gems while they're still affordable and not $10k, LOL!
the vst emulation of CZ, offer much better interface, though.
yes sure. its the cream for a synth. :)
thank you
Sweet! I have a Casio CZ-1000. I did a demo with it the other day. I never tried to program a sound with it though. I did get a pretty sweet CS-80 type sound on my Roland Fantom G8 though. :) Keep up the videos. I'm always enjoying them. :) Take care, Sam.
thank you Sam :)
Great tutorial! Now I'm just trying to figure out how to translate your tutorial in Subtractive synthesize terms in my head so I can try and create a sound like this on my JP-08.
You can do it!
A truly fantastic sound! The right key size, velocity, poly aftertouch and a ribbon controller are however also very important because they are the keys to the CS's expression. Of couse the first 2 points could be taken care of by buying a bigger CZ but the last 2, very important points, would be a lot more difficult to solve. Otherwise I might be selling my original because it getting so old that it's electronic components haves become a bit of a liability.
yes the CZ is no CS and it was a experiment but I think the CZ is better as the most here thinking
casio cz series its a very underrated synth muy menospreciado por la mayoria, but very plenty of marvelous timbres
Agreed
Great videos man!
The cz range dont seem to get the love they should.
The other "sleeper" casio is the wk3700 and wk8000.
These have been completely missed by synth lovers.
Could you please specify in the description the configuration of the preset? this video and the oberheim video are very cool!! Congratulations
thanks a lot :)
Nice blade runner reference.
+1 respect
thank you :)
What a great synthesizer!
🎹🔨
not sure if you already have done a video on them. but i would love to see one about Roland Sound canvas modules.
unfortunately not
how about "how to bring the 200 000 $$ moog modular 55 sound in a 200$ casio ..." next? ;-) alles gute, marko!
haha...kommt noch ;) ich danke dir.
You've got the entire sound already built when you start, so the tones we hear starting with the DCO are not the same on our machine as yours. And, we don't get to see how you save them. It would be better if you start from the beginning as we are doing!
thank you!
Great videos man.
You do a great job with PD!
The other casios worth looking at are any of the early 2000s silver wk range with the blue dsp button to the right of the screen. Wk3500-wk8000 and also the MZ2000 which all those are based on.
Very few people have ever used them creatively and are a sadly under rated range of synths.
Very quick interface which is nice and fast to get what you want on the fly.
Once again, great job :)
Thank you
You tempted me to try this sound on a reface dx. I did ok. i filmed it on a potato if anyone wants to hear it.
cool. try it!
RetroSound Did mate. Thanks for the idea
CZ-101 is a versatile instrument as i know :) Can you repeat this with any Access Virus?
Although bringing up some cheap alternative to the ridiculous huge and expensive CS-80 is only half of it, the other very important part is the cheap alternative to the ridiculous huge and expensive Lexicon 224, which very much was the salt in Vangelis' soundscapes :-)
yes that is the legend.
How can You do this AWESOME things? Nice, Man. Still raising
It´s my job. ;)
thanks a lot
Amazing video thanks for the share
thank you for watching :)
I recall reviews at the time were a little bit dismissive not only of the cheapness but also of the 're-synthisis' aspect of the CZ range.
yes I know. You have here no filter. Its more FM like as analog.
Update:
"How to bring you the 10.000$ Yamaha CS-80 sound in a 5000$ Casio CZ synthesizer"
:D
@@retrosound72 I just bought one for 200$
@@pecne Same here, I got lucky. There's one on Reverb right now for just under $200 too.
impressive!! sensational!!! I would like to know where you have this patch to download for my CZ5000, I would love to have ... thanks
thank you. Try it.
very well done
thank you :)
I can't believe it!
muchas gracias hermano
:))
thank you
Brilliant video.....again.....
thank you so much :)
more coming soon
I had one of these in the 80’s , sold it didn’t really know how to use it, it didn’t sound very realistic to the Yamaha pss and Roland D50 ect keyboards that were about then just hisses and squeals and pops and monophonic as well to my untrained ear. Now I know more about synths and grown up I wish I knew then what I know now, these older synths have unique qualities in their own right , yes there are more powerful affordable units today’s but none will have the same charm , tactile experience or sound as the original does. Did you buy yours from a spotty teenager in Gtr Manchester ?
Ive actually changed my mind about Casio's now.
a new chance for casio love...;)
Yo, just realized your into is from a DX7. 👏
Where were these videos before I sold my CZ?
buy a CZ :)
thank you
RetroSound I'm actually looking into another
I'll tell you what, I made the right decision in 1986 of buying a Casio CZ instead of a DX-7 or Oberheim Matrix 6 as friends of mine did. I typically loved analog synth sounds, and the CZ's do way better for classic synth sounds than either of those do. OB-X or OB-8 would have been another story (for real time tweaking anyway). The CZ's make better analog lead sounds than the Matrix 6 does, very surprising. Not to mention his Matrix 6 spent half it's life back at the factory for repairs.
A decent Oberheim (OB-X or OB-8), Moog (Mini, Memory), ARP (Pro Soloist, 2600. Odyssey) or Sequential (Prophet V or 10) can still make some sounds I have not heard of the CZ's and I had thousands of sound patches since I interfaced my CZ's to my Amigas. Especially sounds that require real time knobs for tweaking. But the CZ were able to mimic a surprisingly high number of those type of sounds, unlike a DX-7, DX-100, or Matrix 6, or Sequential Max, some other synths my friends had. I'd still choose a CZ over some of the Roland Juno's, and cheaper 1980s/70s Moogs. Pretty much any synth in the 80s under $2000, I think the CZ's were generally better for analog type sounds, especially true for lead sounds. Maybe not for a few string patches & pads.
n8goulet I never regretted getting mine, but it sure was tough to get rid of
Which keyboard was hard to get rid of?
Bring us Vangelis sounds! LOL, super tones!
haha :)
How would you recreate the Yamaha DX7 synths?
Yeah this is so cool!
thank you!
@@retrosound72 I have the cz 1 I'm excited to learn how to program ot to sound this way
impressive!!wowww!!!
thank you :)
do you know if its possible to create that sound on a microkorg?
grettings from chile!
sure. use 2 VCO saw and detune, pitch envelope short decay but 3/4 depth, filter cutoff 80% resonance 0%, slow attack and release times....try it
Sell the MicroKorg and buy a CZ-101...or if you want a more professional take on a CZ get the CZ-1.
Do NOT sell your Microkorg..it's a little beast..and way more capable of analog sounds..well..sounds of any character really..plus..you have a vocoder...CZ:as are still pretty cheap..so get one in addition instead..CZ1 ..3000..and CZ5000 and CZ 101 are the same synths..just without the pressure sensitivity and full size keyboard..same sound engine :-p But with the CZ5000 you get an 8-track sequencer..and it's a hell of a lot of fun :-p
Amazing
Wow. Maybe I can stop drooling over a CS80 I’ll never own and get a CZ-101 instead.
🙌😄
The only time I make comments is when I’m trolling. This is the first time I’m a positive troll. Thank you! My memory card should be here in a few days. And then the world!!!
🎹🌎🎶🖐 Have fun.
Could such be done also with a moog concertmate mg 1?
try it. But I think the result is a bit different
@@retrosound72 ah well
What patch did you initialize to program this? I tried matching your sound but can’t get it right :/
I used the Init patch
@@retrosound72 why didn’t I think of it? lol. Managed to get it right, thanks! Great Sound Designing 🤙🏼
Just got this synth and I followed averything for the first line but I'm confused as what to do with DCO2 DCW2 and DCA2?
Really late reply but I’m just going through setting up these patches. What you need to do is set the line selector to 1+1 which basically copies the first line exactly but then allows you to detune it giving that wide sound. It looks like maybe he is using line 1+2 which means that you would have to manually edit the same parameters into line 2 then with different envelope settings as he mentioned. It’s a little unclear to be honest. But it still sounds really good using line 1+1.
Great tutorial! Thank you!
thank you for watching :)
What is the diference between a cz 101 and cz 1000? I have a cz 1000. Can i get all the sounds/features of a 101? Greetings from Perú
absolut identical. try it.
The difference is:
CZ-1000 has full size keys, CZ-101 has mid-size keys (main difference)
CZ-1000 has membrane buttons vs physical. I sold my CZ-101 and bought
a CZ-1000. If you know how to actually play keyboards, you'll find the full
size keys make a huge difference, and mid size keys would look silly on
stage. However, consider the CZ-101 was a lot cheaper, it made sense for a
of people. Also, the CZ-101 & 1000 speak the same language. Some
software like libarians and patch editors did not work on the other model
CZ synths unless specifically written to be compatible with them. . Another
good reason to keep one of these, and have a later model with more features
if you needed them.
A synth is only as good as your sound collection, unless you make everything from scratch. The CZ's had an excellent collection, and that was it's biggest selling point besides the low cost. Having a computer and MIDI interface, and the know how to use it is essential. Because the CZ's were affordable, easy to purchase (some retail stores and even small music stores sold them), and the CZs were one of the very first popular synths with built-in MIDI, it was an ideal synth for a home computer enthusiast and for those reasons had one of the better sound collection libraries. The DX-7 had huge collections of sounds too, but it was a different animal all together and made totally different types of sounds. The CZ was basically an analog synth made digitally. I had a cheaper Yamaha FB-01 then later got a module DX-7 and now use a soft synth of one.
I later purchased a 2nd CZ-1000 and then bought the ultimate CZ, a CZ-1. Then a 2nd CZ-1.
The sound system is identical in all CZ keyboards, the tones it makes.
CZ-1 adds a 61 keybed with full aftertouch and velocity, more notes polyphonic,
split & layer ability, better LCD screen, etc. The sound is still exactly the same to the human ear. Maybe under a scope converters could be different. Same difference, believe me. Also has a chorus effect.
CZ-5000 lacks the aftertouch (very important especially when using as a MIDI controller for other sound modules) but added a sequencer (I didn't care about that). CZ-3000 was also 61 keys, but lacks aftertouch and maybe the velocity (I forget).
As someone else mentioned, and effects pedals or a multi-effects processor will make a world of difference with any CZ. The same could be said about nearly any synth from this era. In the 80s I bought a digital reverb pedal, a phaser, flanger, chorus and distortion. The reverb I found by far the most useful. Phaser would be next. I used the chorus pedal more on other synths like my Yamaha FM synths to add a Leslie effect to the organ patches. Now a days you can buy a multi-effects processor cheap.
Going the software synth route mostly, my effects pedals are one less thing I need to drag to the gigs and setup. I have all of those effects done in software and they work on all of my software synths. I add a touch a reverb to many sounds, sometimes phase or flange, etc.
When you say DCO2 is identical, are you referring to DCO1 or DCA1?
both
These Casios aren't all that cheap anymore.
But no thousands of dollars ;)
Especially after these two videos, prices are up by 200% :)
Well, that's true. Hey wait. I think maybe you're responsible... >:( Lol, Just kidding.
the CZ virtual instrument emulations sounds pretty good... and comes with easier interface.
But at some point those hardware versions could probably be had for less than the emulation even when there is a sale.
yeah, find a kid which parents decided to gift him Casio instead of Moog Prodigy... oh, wait! you need to find a 35-45 year kiddo :D
Fucking hell... that's insane... You always manage to inspire me. Thanks :)
cool :)
thanks a lot
do you provide this patch for other casio users?
I had a dream I bought an acoustic CS-80 hahaha
:D
Is €280 a good price for a cz101 in almost perfect condition?
it`s ok
awesome video :-)
thank you
Impressive budget tech, from the day I first heard it in ‘86. BUT..I’ve never felt it actually approximates seriously good analog synths..
Phase modulation. It can do almost anything! And my cz101 got Stolen ! Peace 🎶🙏👽🔦🕺✌🏻❤️👍🏻👏🏻🛸Christo
yes very versatile. peace
cool, basses like
спасибо
bravo!
thank you
I miss my CZ-101
;)
Thanks.....
:)
Good!!!
:))
Haha... sounds way better than the deckards dream thing anyway...!
:D
Have you tried the Black Corporation Deckard's Dream?
yes but he sounded worst in comparison to the Casio. :)
wow, for all that $$$$ one would figure it'd be a spot on replica.
not really
SysEx file please!
;-) cristal stable sound technolgy = casio ...here sampling technic
i like my old vltone casio ( stollen in train strasbourg/ lyon 1984 ) maybe dadada= tube...
:)
$200? People around here charge over $400 for justthe cz101. Nevermind the cz1000/3000 etc.
I really like the cz series though, I model many of my nord modular patches after them and phase distortion.
really ? than go the prices higher.
Where? I got my CZ-1 for $300 and $80 shipping. It came with all original manuals,booklets, even the super rare cartridge.(rare because the CZ-1 used a different type of cartridge than all the othe CZ synths.) Anvil carry case, and was in perfect condition. I see the CZ-1s go for around this price and cheaper all the time. The reason the CZ-101 goes for more usually even though way more of this model were made is because it is the minikey small portable version and has no issues fitting in any studio. Where the CZ-1 is a beast and demands your attention and space. Some say the CZ-101 and 1000 sound fatter than the 3000,5000, and 1...but I have never had any but the 1. I will sometime this year get a cz 101 just to see if I notice any difference. The main difference is the 101 (and 1000) are half as powerful as the 3000,5000, and 1. It is more complicated than that but if you wanna compare go read the specs of all models and compare.
The reason that some say that a CZ-1 sounds "thinner" compared with the other models in the CZ range is simple. The CZ-1 is the only CZ model with a velocity and after touch sensitive keyboard. The patches can also be affected by velocity and/ or after touch, affecting many parameters of the patch. In other words, unless you hit the CZ-1 keys with maximum velocity, the patches won't sound exactly the same as the non velocity keyboard CZ's. That's the whole point, the velocity sensitivity adds an extra element of expressiveness to the CZ-1. Bar the velocity, the CZ-1 uses the same sound engine and patch data to build the sound as all the other CZ's, so switch off velocity sensitivity and a CZ-1 will sound exactly the same as an identical patch in a CZ101/ 1000/ 3000/ 5000.
Also agree that prices are yet to go that high. I bought my first CZ-1 in the UK in 2010 for 129GBP, plus 20GBP shipping. When I moved to the USA in 2015, I found a better conditioned CZ-1, also with 2 x RA6 Ram cartridges AND RC10 and RC30 ROM cartridges. All for just $180 plus $40 shipping. Prices are on the rise though, and after this video (and the previous Retrosound video making a CZ101 sound like an Oberheim OBXa), values of CZ's will likely rise further!
+Chas D nice, very lucky find with that CZ-1! By twice as powerful I meant the later CZ models are 16 voice and the older ones are 8 voice. I heard rumors there were two CZ models released for the Japanese market, which were speaker variants of the 3000 and 5000, know anything about that?
Blade Runner
:)
Casio stopped making these hobby kit a long time ago? doesn't sell, pay the bills as calculator, stopwatch, and other computers' stuffs??
You mean the 50000USD
now yes....:D
It seems all the Casio Family have nice bottoms!
yes absolut
Sounds actually nothing at all like the CS80 in Blade Runner.
The Casio CZ is actually capable of sounding like one for that famous lead sound, though.
Arturia CS-80 V3 is cheaper.
The ME80 is even cheaper and said to be quite close to the original. Combined with a Valhalla Vintage for emulation of the 224, it could give you probably the best cost efficient way for replicating the sound. But then it's not hardware, most people seem to despise that they can't twiddle the controls directly, and no, midi controllers don't count. The old discussion "emulation vs original" is as old as emulations exist :-)
;)
midi controllers however rarely have an interface that matches the software or the original. (there was the oscar controller, and the System-8 can be used as a controller for the System-8 virtual instrument).
There are some overlays for the BCR-2000 for software... however, the interface is a bit cramped, to really be user-friendly.
(on the other hand, the memory programmer on the CS-80 was several times worse in terms of cramped layout compared to the BCR-2000, but it had those two voices at proper size on the front).
My V-Synth does that much better.
never :D