I love the sound of a classic Moog as much as anyone, but I think its most interesting current instruments are its lineup of desktop semi-modular synths. The Mother-32, DFAM, Subharmonicon, and Spectravox often include some traditional Moog DNA but with a more experimental approach. They’re designed to be explored and prodded, not just played. The Labyrinth is no different. In some ways it might be the most un-Moog synth the company has ever made. That’s also what makes it so exciting.
Labyrinth is built around an eight-step, two-track generative sequencer, meaning you don’t program it manually. Instead, you put some guide rails up, and the machine does the rest. You can pick a scale, tell it how many octaves to cover, turn on and off steps, and decide the track length, but the actual note selection is done semi-randomly.
The two sequencer tracks run in parallel and, if you set them to different lengths (say one the full eight steps and the other five), you can create melodies that change as they fall in and out of sync. There is also a “corrupt” knob next to the two sequencer tracks which you can turn to introduce even more randomness. This makes the Labyrinth an excellent happy-accident machine.
Stepping Out
The Labyrinth is actually a very capable performance instrument, despite the audible chaos. Because you can force the sequencer to stick to a particular scale and sync it to other gear via MIDI or analog clock, you can make it fit seamlessly in the confines of a song. Plus, if you do stumble across something you like, you can hold down the buffer button to save the sequence exactly as is. This then gives you the opportunity to experiment by shifting bits (steps in the sequencer) around and turning up the corruption, knowing you can come back to that happy accident you stumbled upon just by tapping buffer again. This can make Labyrinth a valuable improvisation tool.
Perhaps the most surprising thing about Labyrinth is that it completely chucks the familiar Moog oscillator and filter setup. Instead of the typical square and saw wave you’d find on most other Moog instruments, the Labyrinth has a single sine oscillator and a single triangle oscillator. This means the core sound of Labyrinth is much more mellow and less sharp-edged than your typical Moog. Except that there is a wave folder and a ring modulation circuit which can add some admirable roughness. You can even get some metallic clangs if you crank the FM (frequency modulation) knob. Somehow the Labyrinth is both softer and more abrasive than most other Moog synths.