Join us at Studio Bell, home of the National Music Centre, for Synth Soundbath, a new monthly series exploring the intersection of wellness and music technology.
Part immersive listening session, part interpretive learning experience, this program invites participants to experience sound as both a creative and sensory force. Held on the last Sunday of each month, each session spotlights a different synthesizer from NMC’s collection.
Often associated with experimental music rather than wellness practices, synthesizers offer a unique lens into the science of sound and the body’s response to vibration, expanding how we listen, feel, and understand music’s role in well-being.
This session highlights the ARP 2600, one of the most influential semi-modular synthesizers ever built, originally released in 1971. Designed as a self-contained system with patchable routing, it bridges the gap between fixed architecture synths and fully modular setups, making deep sound design more immediate and hands-on. Its built-in spring reverb and characterful oscillators helped define the sonic vocabulary of early electronic music, from tight, punchy leads to unstable, drifting textures that feel almost alive in motion.
Guests are encouraged to bring a yoga mat, blanket, or anything that helps them get comfortable as they settle in.