Arturia MatrixBrute

FM VERDICT
9.6
It oozes personality and
can go from a warm/twisted
monosynth to dirty/ambient
chord machine and powerful
sequencer – mind blown!
ARPEGGIATOR No modern day synth
is complete without an arpeggiator!
The MatrixBrute’s has four modes: up,
down, up/down and random and you
can add as many steps as you like via
the keyboard. It sends/receives MIDI
and CV/Gate too.
EXTERNAL INPUT Plug in any
external sound source and process it
through the signal path/FX. There’s
also an envelope/gate follower that
triggers the envelopes/fi lters in time
with your playing. Try plugging in a
guitar/drum machine for endless fun!
INTERFACING There are 12 CV
inputs and outputs for interfacing
with other CV equipped gear which
is nicely comprehensive. There’s also
Gate in/out and Sync in/out, MIDI In/
Out/Thru, two expression pedal inputs
and a sustain pedal input.
ANALOGUE EFFECTS The effects are
all analogue and beautifully enhance
(or destroy) the MatrixBrute’s sounds.
The effects can be matrix-modulated,
sync’d to the sequencer/int/ext clock
and you can control parameters in real
time or over MIDI.
onboard drive or ‘Brute’ factor. I love
the fact you can add character/drive
at so many points in the signal path!
The MB has also retained the
other Brute’s versatile waveshaping
for each of the waves, so Ultrasaw for
the sawtooth, PWM for the square
and Metalizer for the triangle, all of
which can of course be modulated via
the matrix. There’s a lot of power
available when combining the waves/
waveshaping together and then
modulating things and it’s an
absolute pleasure to get lost in the
possibilities. Some folks have been
worried that the MB can only do more
edgy sounds but rest assured it can
do smooth, warm and woody too; just
be sure not to add any drive or Brute
Factor (though driving the mixer
levels adds some lovely thickening/
saturation without getting too gritty).
Getting back to the mixer, the
design is very fl exible and you can
add more character by pushing the
oscillator levels. You can level
volumes then route all three VCOs
(plus noise and external sources)
through the Steiner or ladder fi lter (or
both together) in series or parallel (for
wildly different sonics) by simply
hitting each oscillator’s Filter button.
Filter 1 is a diode-base Steiner fi lter
which has LP/HP/BP and notch
modes and 2/4-pole slopes; it has a
more edgy/less linear/wilder sound
compared to Filter 2 and has a more
vocal-like/human quality. In 24dB
Steiner mode, the MB reminds me a
lot of my Korg MS-20 (but fatter!)
and has a similar throaty distortion/
overdrive when pushed.
Filter 2 is a modifi ed Moog-style
ladder fi lter that retains low-end at
high resonance settings. It also has
LP/HP/BP modes and 2/4-pole slopes
but to my ears (and when comparing
to my Moog Source and Voyager) it’s
defi nitely rawer and more textured. It
has some Moogy character but it’s its
own thing (an asset, not a downside).
I also love the big bi-polar global fi lter
cutoff dial so you can sweep both
lters simultaneously relative to their
individual cutoff settings, plus each
lter has a drive control for thickening
or gently saturating the sound and the
infamous Brute control for bolstering
or destroying. As you can see, there’s
a lot of versatility here and what
seems like an almost infi nite palette
of combinations/colours/sweet-spots
(and that’s without using any
modulation)! Despite all this
awesome power, the MB remains
surprisingly intuitive, (though it would
be nice if the display showed the
value of every pot when turned and
displayed a dot to show the stored
value like the Prophet-6).
There’s also a lot on offer
performance control-wise besides the
matrix. Legato, Glide, Legato-Glide,
Mono, Duo/Split and 3-note
Paraphonic modes are also available.
Yes – you can play standard leads but
also 3-note chords with envelope
articulation (and the MB sounds great
in this mode). Plus in Duo/Split mode
you can run the arpeggiator to the left
of the user-defi nable split-point and a
lead to the right. Add in the four
Macro knobs that can be assigned to
multiple destinations simultaneously
in the matrix and you get the picture
– uber fl exible!
Talking of modulation, the MB is a
powerhouse! For more ‘out there’
sounds, VCO1 can be modulated by
VCO2, VCO3 can modulate 1 or 2,
VCO3 can modulate VCF1 or 2 and
noise can modulate VCO1 or VCF1
(all bi-polar too); there are also three
envelopes (they’re snappy enough,
although not as punchy as a
Minimoog/Voyager). Env1 goes to the
lter(s), 2 to the VCA and 3 is freely
assignable via the matrix. The
aforementioned three LFOs go nicely
fast into audio range/overdrive and are
all MIDI-syncable too. Once you’ve
designed your sound and basic
modulation, hop over to the brilliantly
designed matrix (see left) to go in
deep with mod routings, then design
a simple or complex sequence and/or
arpeggiation and send the info out
over MIDI or CV/Gate. To top things
off, you have fi ve unique modulatable
bucket-brigade delay-based analogue
effects which sound wonderful
blended with the VCOs (mono/stereo
delays, chorus, fl anger and reverb).
If there’s any synth that deserves
the title of most well-featured
analogue monosynth then this is it!
It’s rock-solid, capable of a genuinely
mind-blowing array of sounds and it’s
so versatile you could spend years
with it and not exhaust the
possibilities. At an RRP of £1,879
(£1,659 street currently) it’s a
signifi cant outlay but still seems like
a bargain considering the features
and its competition. Arturia have
really made something special here.
Future classic? Absolutely!
ARPEGGIATOR
No modern day synth
is complete without an arpeggiator!
EXTERNAL INPUT
Plug in any
INTERFACING
There are 12 CV
inputs and outputs for interfacing
ANALOGUE EFFECTS
The effects are
all analogue and beautifully enhance
ARPEGGIATOR
No modern day synth
EXTERNAL INPUT
Plug in any
INTERFACING
There are 12 CV
ANALOGUE EFFECTS
The effects are
Arturia MatrixBrute | Reviews
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FMU315.rev_arturia.indd 81 26/01/2017 11:46