Behringer 2600 Blue Marvin

Semi-Modular Analogue Synthesiser

Image Behringer 2600 Blue Marvin

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Latest User Reviews

1 year ago

Couldn't be happier!

This is truly a classic with plenty sweetspots, that can do everything from thundering techno to sci-fi sounddesign. If I could have only one synth – it would be this one.

2 years ago

For the money an amazing semimodular.

I was lookin for something that was very hands on and allowed for a lot of tweaking on the fly. When i first saw the 2600 by behringer I was a bit skeptical about the quality, but upon getting my hands on it I have to say, even if it doesn,t sound like the original (not that I would know, having never touched the original), it sounds very nice. For me it was more about getting the hands on experience from a synth and that you can get from it for sure.

Only real negatives i can say is that the reverb can get noisy pretty fast (but for the price and it being a real spring reverb, i guess some cutbacks have to be made somewhere) and the faders feel a bit flimsy.

But if taken good care of, i am sure it will last for a very long time.

Overall can reccomend, maybe even as an entry point into the modular world.

2 years ago

GET A CHROMATIC TUNER!

This thing is awesome for old school ambient.

It's like an all-in-one modular system with everything you need to make awesome modular sound.

Great and very fun for sound design but quite involved for musical uses.

It's a clone of an ARP 2600, but I actually like it more than the official one.

I can't say if it has a 100% accurate reproduction of the original ARP 2600 oscillator sounds, but I honestly don't care.

Some videos show the Behringer sounding identical to the ARP, others sound clearly different. I think that it may come to each individual unit in the end (of both the ARP and the Behringer), and you can calibrate the Behringer yourself using a multi-meter and an oscilloscope if you are in search of absolute accuracy, since there are screws for that accessible from the front (no disassembly required) and the software guides you through the process.

I can however attest that the "feel" of the generated sounds is the same though.

You get that unmistakably very old school synth sound I personally love.

Compared to other modern clones, the Behringer has the advantage of having an added LFO and portamento feature built-in (which on the original was an add-on in the keyboard and is missing in the official modern ARP release!) and time multipliers for the ADSR envelopes.

That being said, you will need a chromatic tuner or another synth to tune it to by ear, because, out of the box, these ARP clones lack any way to visually know if they are in tune or not with other gear. It's like a classical instrument in that regard. And since temperature will make its pitch change, you will need to tune it each time you want to play it. So, yeah, get a chromatic tuner, you will need it. Korg makes very cheap ones. (a guitar tuner can work, if you already have one, but with a chromatic one you can tune each oscillator to a different note and makes chords)

The Blue Marvin and Grey Meany editions have better quality condensers for the filters (I don't really hear much of a difference but it's nice to have) and a real spring reverb instead of an emulated one on the black and orange edition.

Also, the LEDs in the front face are single color versus the black and orange edition's multicolored "Christmas tree" LEDs.

The spring reverb sounds very nice, although the emulated reverb on the black and orange sounds nice too, but they do sound different.

The real spring reverb sounds brighter and very reminiscent of the old days. (but keep in mind that back in the day, professional musicians didn't use the built-in ARP 2600 spring reverb for recordings, using instead much more expensive and big studio grade reverbs)

The real spring reverb is much noisier than the digital emulation though, so keep that in mind.

I opted for the Blue Marvin over the others because of the better quality components, the real spring reverb (since I already have digital reverbs anyway) and because I like the blue and orange color scheme.

Is it worth the price difference against the Behringer 2600 black and orange?

Since it's not a big price difference, for me it is. But I don't think you are really missing much if you get the black and orange version instead, unless you really want the spring reverb over an emulation.

Against the Grey Meany though, the difference is only the color scheme.

3 years ago

ARP the herald Angel 😇 sings

Here’s a great opportunity for a working stiff to own a piece of synthesizer history at a price that doesn’t break the bank.

3 years ago

A first blue friend in my music journey :-)

Blue Marvin! This is my first ever synth i got, and i did never regret it! :-)

So much options to create own sounds wrapped into a stylish blue thing!

Solid amount of modules with all these inputs and outputs, a dream for me!

Always when i am looking at this synth, it calls me to play on it :-)

Much love, my first ever synth <3

3 years ago

Great sound and interface!

This is an excellent clone that offers the classic sounds with hardware tweaks for easier integration into modern studios.

Highly recommend bundling this item with a patch cable kit. I purchased "the sssnake DD1060" alongside this synthesizer.

4 years ago

Amazing..

I've never played an original 2600, but dreamed of owning one since I started playing synthesizers 20 years ago. All I can say is that this is a VERY beautiful instrument. Sounds incredible, very solid build, and playing it is pure joy. Of course, these things are subjective, but something about the format of the 2600 in particular is very special. For me it is an ideal mix of an open and closed system. If you have more modular, you will have a very good time. If you don't, you'll still have a very good time. And if you're looking to get into modular synthesizers, this is arguably the best place to start.

I'm not sure how to even do pros/cons. It is a (seemingly) faithful clone of an incredible and difficult to find synth, for a very good price.

Oh, and the spring reverb sounds great!

Read all reviews >>

Technical Data

  • Manufactured by Behringer
  • Released in 2021
  • Average price : $633
  • Special edition with blue front plate and selected components
  • Monophonic
  • 3 VCOs with adjustable pulse width
  • Oscillator 1 with outputs for sawtooth and pulse
  • Oscillators 2 and 3 with switchable oscillator synchronisation and outputs for triangle, sawtooth, sine, and pulse
  • Low pass filter with resonance and 2 switchable filter characteristics
  • Noise generator
  • Ring modulator
  • Sample & hold step
  • Preamp and Envelope follower for external signals
  • Voltage processor
  • ADSR envelopes
  • AR envelopes
  • Stereo VCA with adjustable panorama
  • Mixable mechanical spring reverb
  • Extensive modulation options are possible for oscillators and filters via predefined signal path and free wiring of all sections via patch cables (3.5 mm jack)
  • Stereo line output: 2x 6.3 mm jack
  • Stereo headphone output: 3.5 mm jack
  • Footswitch input for interval latch and portamento : 6.3 mm jack
  • MIDI In/Thru
  • USB-B port (MIDI)
  • Format: 19" / 8 U
  • Dimensions : 482mm x 356mm x 108mm
  • Weight : 5.1kg
  • Colour: Blue
  • Includes external power supply (12 V DC, 2000 mA)
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