The Pro-800 is a clone of the popular 1982 retro classic Sequential Circuits Prophet-600. In favour of the compact, rack-mountable case,
The two assertive oscillators, each based on a CEM3340 chip, each have sawtooth, triangle and square waveforms and pulse width controls. Oscillator A can be synchronized to oscillator B. Both VCOs are combined in the mixer, here you also find the noise generator. The nice basic sound is processed with a characterful 24dB
Poly-Mod is composed of the sources Filter Envelope and Oscillator B and is applicable to the frequency of Oscillator A and the
The LFO provides a total of six waveforms of two sets each and is finally dosed via the modulation wheel of a connected MIDI keyboard. The frequency and pulse width of the oscillators A and B as well as
The two ADSR envelopes are permanently assigned to filter and VCA. Thanks to a total of 400 memory locations, no sound idea is lost anymore.
The ingeniously simple sequencer gives access to two patterns, each of which can be up to 400(!) steps long; rests can also be programmed. The notes for this are played via a connected MIDI keyboard. After input, the patterns can be transposed with the keyboard. The arpeggiator primarily offers the playback modes Up, Down, Up & Down, Assign and Random. Synchronization to other equipment is done via the analogue clock input or MIDI/USB.
I’ve always wanted to own this synth but the original was just not affordable for me. The version by behringer is an impressive synthesizer with eight-voice polyphony. Its analog sound exploration possibilities are astounding, and it's incredibly inspiring. What's mind-boggling is that Behringer manages to offer all this at an affordable price. It's a synth that invites creativity and defies expectations! 🎹🔊
Easy to handle, big sound, robust, elegant and for a very ridiculous amount of €. Not to mention the presets capability. The only negative point would be these damn menus, and poorness of the behringer app.