Ever wondered if a 40HP Eurorack can punch above its weight? The Unperson is back with a mini modular rig that’s all killer, no filler. We’re talking Pamela’s Pro Workout, the Loki analog voice, and the Z5000 effects box—crammed together like a toaster-fight in a phone booth. This isn’t your average monosynth: it’s a street weapon for those who want chaos, modulation, and more FX than sense. Dive in for synth jam chaos, clever patching, and a proper dose of British modular mischief. Spoiler: It’s not cheap, but it slaps.

25. May 2026
SPARKY
The Unperson’s 40HP Mono Modular: A Rave Bunker in a Lunchbox
Archaea Synthesis Loki, Behringer CP-1A, Pamela's Pro Workout, Tiptop Audio Z5000
Tiny Rack, Big Trouble
The Unperson isn’t mucking about—this episode throws us straight into the third round of the Mini Modular series, where a 40HP rack is squeezed for every last drop of sonic power. If you think small means weak, think again: this box is ready to start a riot on your desktop.
The pitch here is clear: a dedicated mono synth, built for maximum punch in minimum space. Forget polite little lead boxes—this setup is all about wringing heavyweight sounds from a rack that barely takes up space on your kitchen table. As the intro teases, there’s a breakdown coming, but it’s clear from the off that this isn’t just a toy.
Meet the Sonic Street Crew
First up, the essentials: Pamela’s Pro Workout, a module so fundamental it might as well be glued into the case. Eight outs, endless gates, LFOs, and envelopes—this is the brains behind the beats, sequencing and modulating like an overcaffeinated octopus.
At the heart sits Loki, a full analog synth voice with more tricks than your average monosynth. Two oscillators, sub, glide, FM, PWM, a filter that bites, and a drive circuit for dirty business. Top it all off with Tiptop Audio’s Z5000—a multi-effects beast with 24 algorithms, from lush reverb to shimmering weirdness. Each piece brings serious muscle, and together they’re a modular street gang.

"And there's an insane amount of features packed into this relatively small monosynth."
© Screenshot/Quote: Theunperson (YouTube)
Monosynth Muscle vs. Wallet Pain

"You very rarely get a monosynth with eight LFOs or eight envelopes or eight sequencers."
© Screenshot/Quote: Theunperson (YouTube)
Let’s get real: this rig will run you around a grand, so it’s not a bargain-bin monosynth. But then again, when was the last time you saw a monosynth that packs in this much modulation and a deep, flexible effects engine?
The Unperson doesn’t sugar-coat it: you’re paying for depth, for flexibility, and for the kind of patching freedom that makes boring preset synths look like children’s toys. If you want one synth to do everything, keep walking; if you want a modular mono that can mutate on command, this setup is dangerously tempting.
Patch Hacking: Maximum Mayhem
Here’s where things get tasty: patch ideas fly fast, with Pamela’s Pro Workout dishing out sequencer lines and wild modulation, while Loki’s oscillators get twisted every which way. The jams show off pitch shifting, harmonising, and straight-up waveform abuse—if you like your synths polite, look away now.
The Z5000 brings the chaos with effects that transform the signal into something much bigger than the sum of the parts. Modulation runs deep, and the randomisation tricks in Pam’s deliver shifting rhythms and evolving melodies. It’s the kind of patching playground where you’ll want to grab your own cables and get messy—seriously, the video’s demos are better seen (and heard) than described.

"Pamela's pro workout has a thing called Euclidean rhythms, which allows you to set a certain amount of triggers over a certain amount of beats."
© Screenshot/Quote: Theunperson (YouTube)
Jams That Hit Harder Than They Should
The Unperson serves up jam after jam, each showing off a totally different side of the setup. From pitch-shifted leads to randomised Euclidean rhythms, this little box keeps spitting out bangers. The ambient finale is lush, proving this setup isn’t all aggression—it’s got depth and subtlety too.
Words can’t do justice to the glitched-out grooves and hazy delays on display. If you want to know what this system really sounds like, you’ll need to check out the jams yourself—trust me, your headphones will thank you.
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