
Recreating a Casio from the ’80s might leave some scratching their heads (it’s a far cry from an EMS Synthi after-all), but Casio were really onto something with their phase distortion CZ series synths, and became a cult classic that was low on price and big on sound - sitting somewhere between an FM synth and analogue synth in timbre. The Synthi V will be at home amongst fellow ’60s/’70s oddities, the Buchla Easel V and (Moog) Modular V within V Collection. Made famous by the intro to Pink Floyd’s classic On The Run, Synthi V features 3 oscillators, an 18db/oct resonant filter and a spring reverb - but most notable is its Battleship inspired pin modulation matrix, that provides a hands on interface for experimental routings.

I think it’s fair to say, owning an original hardware Synthi is probably out of reach of most of us synth nerds. Tristan got hands on with the new instruments this week, check out his video demo overview below:

Updates include a full update to Analog Lab and an overhaul of the Hammond B3 organ, as well as 800 new presets for the othe pre-existing instruments.

Now up to 24 seperate synthesiser/keys instruments, V Collection adds recreations of the Casio CZ series phase distortion synthesisers, the legendary Mellotron and the bizarre British semi-modular EMS Synthi AKS synth. Arturia have just announced the new edition of their software instrument suite, V Collection 7, adding 3 new instruments and a range of updates to their existing stable.
