Vangelis Heaven and a Wasp nest
There are 10 vintage Yamaha synths, including a mighty CS-80. All the Yamaha CS synths have something different to offer. Very few people have had the chance to compare them side-by-side. We also have the quirky and unique-sounding Wasp family of synths from EDP. We’re lucky enough to have 4 variants plus the rare Caterpillar voice controller keyboard (to stack 4 Wasp voices in unison) and the Spider sequencer. And lots more.

Yamaha CS-30
1977. Top of the line Mono of its time. Very flexible architecture and cross-modulation abilities, capable of weird and wonderful sounds. Has sequencer and external audio input. Slightly mind-bending to program.
EDP Spider
1978. Sequencer with 256 steps or 84 real-time notes. It connects to the EDP synths using a pre-MIDI interface or to non-EDP synths with Gate and CV out and has Sync in.

Black Corporation Deckard's Dream
2018. Eight voice poly module. The best modern attempt at recreating the mighty CS-80. It sounds incredibly close but with 386 presets, more stable tuning and reverb and delay effects.

EDP Caterpillar
1980. Three octave master keyboard. It connects to other EDP keyboards via its own pre-MIDI interface. Use it to create a rarely heard four voice poly by connecting up our 3 Wasps and Gnat.

EDP Wasp Deluxe
1979. Mono. Pinnacle of Waspness. Basically a Wasp but with a 3-octave proper keyboard, an oscillator mixer, external audio input and larger built-in speaker. Try running other synths through the Wasp filter.

Alexis HR-16
1987. Sample-based 16 voice drum machine with 49 drum sounds and onboard sequencer.

Electro Harmonic Mini-Synth
1980. Mono. This thing may look like a novelty and weigh as much as a paper plane, but its bass rips. Comes with built-in speaker.

EDP Wasp
1978. Mono. The filter on the Wasp has a recognisable sound all of its own, making it ideal for distinctive bass and leads. The membrane keyboard can be a pain, but we have the Caterpillar and MIDI to control it.

Yamaha DX7
1982. Six voice polyphonic six operator FM synth. Metallic, glassy, percussive. This synth literally changed synth history, ushering the era of digital synthesis and smashing the value of analog synths at the time.

Yamaha CS-20M
1979. Mono. Great-sounding CS synth with 8 memory locations. Like the CS-80 it has a third sine wave VCO which is great to add bottom end back in when using the high pass filter.

Yamaha FS1R
1998. Higely underrated synth. Eight operator FM synthesis (vs DX7 six) with Formant Shaping Synthesis, which mimics the sounds of human speech. 32 voices and onboard FX.

Yamaha SY-2
1975. Mono. One of Yamaha’s first portable synths with VCOs derived from the GX1. Unmistakably Yamaha, with those high and low pass filters.

Yamaha CS-30L
1977. Mono. Same sound and architecture as the CS30 without the sequencer but with lovely chrome legs, a knob to control both filters at once and LEDs on the envelopes. Slightly easier to program.

Yamaha CS-70M
1981. Six voice poly. Yamaha’s update to the CS80. Underrated. Has that CS80 sound but with 30 presets and ability to record to magnetic card, split keyboard, band pass filter and sequencer. But no ribbon or poly aftertouch.

Yamaha CS-80
1977. Considered the pinnacle of eight voice polys. A true performance synth with poly aftertouch and ribbon.

EDP Wasp Special
1981. Mono. Classier version of the Wasp with internal power supply but no built-in speaker.

EDP Gnat Special
1982. Mono. Single oscillator, single low pass filter version of the Wasp made by Wasp Synthesizers Oxford licensed from EDP.

Yamaha TX-816
1984. Eight DX7s in one unit, each with 16 note polyphony and 6 operators. Try stacking the classic DX7 electric piano sound with a bit of detune and panning on each TF1 module. Pure 1980s nostalgia.
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Synths+ Drum Machines and Sequencers
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EffectsHardware outboard and Pedals
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AudioMixers, Converters and Monitoring
YAMAHA SYNTHS
- CS-15
- CS-20m
- CS-30
- CS-30L
- CS-70m
- CS-80
- DX7 (M)
- FS-1R (M)
- SY-2
- TX-816 (M)
ELECTRONIC DREAM PLANT (EDP) SYNTHS
- Caterpillar
- Gnat
- Wasp
- Wasp Deluxe (M)
- Wasp Special
OTHER SYNTHS AND KEYBOARDS
- Electro Harmonix Mini-Synthesizer
- Black Corporation Deckard’s Dream (M)
DRUM MACHINES
- Alesis HR-16 (M)
SEQUENCERS
- EDP Spider
M=Midified
OUTBOARD FX
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AMS DMX15-80S
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AMS DMX Chorus Controller
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AMS RMX16
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Black Corporation Deckard’s Dream Effects Expander
GUITAR PEDAL INTERFACE
- Radial Engineering EXTC-SA
PATCHBAYS (96 I/O)
- 3 x Black Lion Audio PBR TRS
- 1 x Black Lion PBR TRS-BT (with bluetooth receiver)
ANALOG MIXER
-
Speck x.sum – 16 stereo in and 2 stereo out
TUNER
- Korg Pitch Black X Pro
AUDIO CONVERTER(S)
- Metric Halo LIO-8/4p Mk IV (8 analog I/O)
- Metric Halo LIO-8 Mk IV (8 analog I/O)
STEREO PASSIVE DI
- Radial Engineering JDI Duplex
HEADPHONES
- Sennheiser HD300 PRO or Beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO
MONITORS
- Genelec 8330As







