Archive for May, 2025

Love Synthesizers Intros First Love Synth


At Superbooth 2025, Love Synthesizers introduced the First Love – a compact instrument that fits in a backpack, has a battery option, built-in speakers, headphone output and a 4×4 live looper.

They say it’s “Perfect for sound-designing and composing, wherever you want to be.”

Features:

  • 4 Parts Multitimbral
  • Flexible Modulation
  • 2x Stereo/4x Mono Ouput
  • Riff Arpeggiator
  • Microtonal Tuner
  • Multiple Effects, including reverb, delay & chorus
  • 4×4 looper
  • Sync In/Out
  • Polyphonic
  • MIDI In/Thru
  • Patch Sharing
  • USB-C & Wireless connectivity
  • Headphone Out
  • Battery Option
  • Built-in Speaker

First Love is available to pre-order, priced at €419,00.

FRAKnoise Melancholytron Synthesizer Explores The Essense Of Melancholic Sounds


One of the more unusual introductions at Superbooth 2025 was the FRAKnoise Melancholytron – a new instrument designed to let you explore melancholic sounds.

“Can you build a synthesizer that always sounds melancholic?” asks developer A//ard Krijger. “Yes. I did it. Even a happy melody can still sound melancholic on this one.”

Here’s what FRAKnoise shared about the Melancholytron:

“The Melancholytron is a book with illustrated melancholic stories. When you buy the book it comes with a synthesizer developed by A//ard Krijger, Joran Jessurun and Edwin van den Oetelaar.

This instrument produces melancholic sounds, that fit the stories, or any melancholic music you want to make with it. Suitable for film-, game- or any kind of music that needs a touch of melancholy.”

The Melancholytron is expected to be available June 28, 2025. Details on pricing and availability are to be announced.

Synthesizers.com Now Part Of SynthCube


SynthCube has announced that they’ve acquired Synthesizers.com – the company behind the modern Moog format modular synth standard.

SynthCube has an online business, in addition to their physical store in Waltham, MA. They already have an active Moog format business, featuring designs from Frequency Cdentral, Hexinverter, Synthetic Sound Labs and others. They also offer a wide range of DIY options.

The addition of Synthesizers.com’s line, though, promises to massively expand the range of options that they offer for Moog format modules.

They shared the news via ModWiggler forum:

“We are happy to announce here that Synthesizers.com will be joining our portfolio of synthCube brands here just outside of Boston. We spent the weekend packing all of the assets, inventory, demo units etc into trucks and will be taking the next few weeks to get everything set up again in our shop.

We owe much gratitude to Roger Arrick for the initial effort to design and start the company in the first place, to James Allen and others who took on Dotcom when Roger passed it along to them, and to the most recent owners for their stewardship of Dotcom in the interim.

If you’re a designer / maker of dotcom/MU 5U modules, we hope that this helps re-energize interest in your products too… frankly, the more options that customers have, the better for those customers and for the format itself. Part of how we will measure success is NOT by how many makers we put out of business, rather it will be how many makers will now grow faster, and how many new makers might come in and create more dotcom/MU 5U innovations?

We’ll post more details about future plans here and in other channels when we have some time, and we look forward to hearing your feedback, ideas, and suggestions on how best to inspire and support the current generations of Dotcom users and how to improve the products and solutions for the next generation as well.

We know Dotcom/5U won’t ever be as popular as Eurorack, and that’s OK; BUT we are equally confident that there will always be a place for high quality, large format, serious synth instruments and modules and 5U will be around for the long haul. How does that saying go? ‘We liked the product so much we bought the company.’

Monika and Chris”

Details are still to come at the SynthCube and Synthesizers.com sites.