Sonic State shared this video, celebrating the 30th anniversary of their launching in 1995.
The web was a very different place in 1995 – before Youtube, before Facebook, before Twitter/X and before MySpace. Sonic State launched in the early days of the Web and quickly established itself as an important destination for anyone interested in instruments and recording.
Back then, key destinations for musicians included Sonic State and a handful of popular web forums. If you’re old school, you might remember visiting the Harmony Central forum or Yahoo Groups to discuss music gear, and Sonic State to see what’s new.
There was a lot less to talk about then, because the analog renaissance had not happened yet and making music ‘in the box’ using standard computers wasn’t really even a thing yet. Propellerhead came out with ReBirth a few years later.
Synthesizers.com had not launched yet and it would be a year before Doepfer introduced the first Eurorack modules. So very few musicians had any experience with modular gear, outside of a small number of systems in studios and universities.
This changed very quickly as adoption of the World Wide Web took off. The Web became accessible to the general public in 1993, and by the late 90s it was world wide phenomena.
In the late 90s, money started pouring into Web startups, which led to the ‘dotcom boom’. It was the 90’s version of today’s AI hype. The Web buzz led to massive adoption by people living in industrialized nations. A lot of money was invested in dumb ideas for websites, and this led to the stock market spiking higher than it had ever gone before.
Then, reality kicked in. People discovered that the technology ‘hype curve’ was a real thing, investors started expecting web startups to actually make money, and Web-first companies started tanking. The stock market crashed on March 10, 2000 and, by 2002, the NASDAQ index had lost a whopping 78% of its value.
Through all of this, Sonic State kept going and kept getting better at what they do. They were joined by sites like Synthtopia, Matrixsynth and other sites that were run by people that understood the potential of web publishing and the importance of ‘Internet speed’.
These early music gear sites were joined by sites from publishers like Keyboard, Electronic Musician and Future Music, who published the most important print magazines of the day. The magazines all did a great job of publishing monthly issues, with gear news, interviews and tutorials. Keyboard magazine even had the synth nerd version of a pinup of the month – with a prominently positioned foldout of the most drool-worthy new synth.
Unfortunately for these magazines and their readers, though, the publishers never seemed to fully commit to the Web, because print was where they made most of their money. They all seemed to stick to publishing news on a print timetable – so they’d publish most of their gear news on the day that they released their print magazine, often weeks after it was covered at Sonic State, Synthtopia and other sites and forums.
As a result, the audience for Sonic State and other early music gear sites grew at a fantastic rate. They were moving at ‘Internet speed’ and they were immediately available to anyone in the world that had a Web browser.
30 years later – Sonic State is still one of the most important sites for music gear news and insight, and has established a reputation as one the most trusted destinations in the world for electronic musicians. And those print magazine websites? Not so much.
“Do You Even PWM, Bro?”

Along the way, Nick Batt established himself not only as the face of Sonic State, but one of the most trusted music gear experts in the world. Beyond the memes, Nick Batt’s thorough, articulate and fair reviews of music gear have long been ‘must watch’ content for electronic musicians.
While Sonic State is recognized the most for their reviews and streaming videos, their biggest impact over the last 30 years may be in helping to create a worldwide audience for electronic music gear.
Back in 1995, the audience for synths and electronic music gear was pretty small. Instruments were expensive, and we were lucky to get a dozen new synths a year. If you wanted modular gear, you probably had to DIY it. By establishing a worldwide audience for gear news, Sonic State helped grow the audience of people that actually bought gear. This led to the renaissance of analog gear, the explosion of modular synthesis and today’s ‘golden age’ of synths.
I’ve personally been a huge fan of Sonic State for all this time – as a reader, as a staff writer for a couple of years, and as an industry colleague. It’s been great to see what Andy McCreeth and Nick Batt have done with the site. They deserve to be recognized on their ‘pearl’ anniversary – for having the vision for what an Web music news site could be, and the intelligence and execution to turn that vision into a successful business that’s lasted three decades.
Congratulations to Sonic State on its milestone.
Nothing but love for Sonicstate…
Nick, and all the sonic gang who have passed through the gates of sonic towers, have both created and cultivated a community of music tech loving fans worldwide.
Sonic talk, with all its’ wonderful guests over such a long time. has been a huge source of both knowledge and joy in my life. The world is better place for their hard work and endeavours.
Respect, love, and thanks to all of them.
^^^ This.
Couldn’t agree more.
The whole Sonicstate team are awesome.
I always come away feeling like I’ve learned something after watching Sonic talk.
They especially kept me inspired and sane during COVID lockdown.
Brilliant bunch.
Pulse Width Modulation!!!
Pulse Width Modulation!!!
Pulse Width Modulation!!!
Also a big fan of SonicState. And Nick Batt’s “play us out” compositions/demos are gems.
“And those print magazine websites? Not so much”
I’m still sad that Future plc shut down Computer Music and Future Music magazines (the latter after 30 years?!) last year. At least Sound on Sound is still around.
I had no idea that our own Synthhead once wrote for SonicState.
Thank you so much Nick, for all the times you helped those of us newbies get off to a fresh clean start with your reviews.
Sonic State! My first; all those years ago. Congrats, Nick Batt. You’ve come a long way. Thank you for all the useful reviews.
Pulse Width Modulation!!!
Congratulations Sonicstate, to still be relevant and so beloved after 30 years shows just how good they are at delivering gear coverage. Real trailblazers
Love watching Nick, Gaz, Maths., Paulie and the rest of the gang!
Happy 30th birthday guys! Rock & Roll!!!!
I like that little picture of Nick. How many times have we all made that face when something went south with a “ZZZZAP?” He’s a major synth bro.
Wow. What a run, this makes me feel old but happy. Steering the ship through such a volatile industry with poise and purpose is quite a thing.
Nick is the number one best, that’s all.
Boy, am I gonna get hate for this, but Sonicstate is a bit dated, isn’t it? There are product announcements, some weird jams and talks of gear heads and the reviews are a bit… yeah… like you’d do them for a print magazine in the early 200s. A few tutorials on actually making music would be great, but that’s just me. Just look at the website and the YouTube play counts and you’ll notice they only live by their fading reputation. Now, please start hating: Nick’s not my cup of tea, tbh. OKish presenter with a bit of a bland opinion on everything, innit?
I think that’s exactly why (some) people like it. Myself included.
It’s not click bait, in your face and overly stylised like most things.
It’s understated and honest.
It’s a breath of fresh air in today’s world of “synthflueners” (I detest that word) and click baity videos that are solely about generating views.
Sonic State for me is all about watching other people who are really passionate about electronic music (or just music) doing their thing and enjoying it.
Personally for me their enthusiasm and passion sometimes inspires me.
I might be tired after a hard day at work, or have things going on in my life, then I watch a Sonic Talk and I feel inspired to have have a jam, noodle on the keyboard, play the ukulele, bang a drum etc that I wouldn’t have done otherwise.
That alone is worthy of praise.
I do agree that tutorials, or how tos, would be nice. However, there are plenty of other people doing stuff like that on YouTube.
Music Radar has lots of stuff like that if you’re interested.
Now that Computer Music is no more, Music Rader has a lot of their archived material online. Some of it is definitely worth checking out.
However, it is very much in that print magazine format that you don’t seen to be keen on. Though there are videos too.
Check it out, or don’t.
Either way, have fun making whatever sounds you want to make, in whatever way you choose to make them.
I’ll bite, You are totally entitled to your opinion, but did you need to express it here now? It’s like showing up at a birthday party and announcing that the honoree is boring and ugly. WTF? That jerk gets thrown out and never invited back.
But what if the honoree is donald trump ?