Monday, May 29, 2006
Electronic Ballet with Sound Beam
Via Alex Theakston on AH:
"the one we had [EMS Sound Beam] was a bit more advanced, with a control box and a separate beam device. in the first half of the video (not the upbeat last bit) it's triggering a virus, and we set up a constrained range of notes that could be triggered along the length of the beam. theres a CS5 in the mix too, and a speak n spell."
If you listen closely at the beginning you will hear that she is playing the sound beam with her movements and they are playing accompaniment.
Update: It's not an EMS Soundbeam but actually one of these.
Update: Alex pointed out that the Soundbeam logo is the same as the EMS. Interesting, I wonder what the history is. According to the EMS History page the sound beem was designed by Richard Monkhouse (Digital & Video design:1972 - 1975), however it was not manufactured until after Edward Williams took over the assests in 1984. According the site, EMS (London) folded in 1979, their assets were bought by Datanomics who owned them from 1980 to 1984, followed by Edward Williams when the Soundbeam was made.
Bluezone

Riday T-91 Midi Controller - New Flickr Shot

Riday T-91
Midi Controller
Invented by Rick Riday,
the T-91 is a midi controller that uses his patented "unified keyboard" design. This design allows for identical fingering patterns for all 12 scales (12 major scales, 12 minor, 12 blues, etc.)
via Sameli.
Updates via the comments:
Via Carbon111:
"Its too bad but I don't think they ever went into production. I contacted Rick about twenty years ago and he sent me some promotional material...I think I've still got it somewhere."
Via divbyzero:
"Riday's patent sheds some light on the details of the keyboard. It's isometric like the Janko (Chromatone) and Hayden (Thummer), which makes transposition simple and shortens the learning curve compared to other nonstandard keyboards.
However, his choice of isometric offsets (go up by a half-step as you move one key to the right; go down by a whole step as you move up a row and half a key to the right) is a little odd. In particular, going down in pitch as you move up in row feels quite backwards. At least half-steps are on adjacent keys, unlike the Hayden.
I've posted this before, but I'll mention it again... my little free program qwertymidi is great for testing out experimental keyboard layouts like these."
Casio ck200 - New Flickr Shot
flickr by floorvan.
"Probably one of the rarest boomboxes, this Casio surfaced briefly in 1985. It was their second effort to create a crossover musical intstrument / entertainment system, preceeded by their KX-101 a year earlier."
via Sameli.
Nova Edition Studio Electronics SE-1X

"THE NEW SE-1X NE...Innovative NEW LOOK!...Limited Edition with NEW Amp Overdrive for Saturated "Fuzz", Ultra fast ADSR for ultimate SNAP, Expanded wide range Filters, NEW added SINE WAVE GENERATOR for more BOOM, and Custom Scroggins Techno Sounds Bank... "
Interesting. This appears to be a Nova Music edition. Check out the Nova Music logo. I wonder how often manufacturers have done this. Studio Electronics does offer custom paint designs and mods so I guess this wouldn't be too difficult to do.
Chroma Polaris Demo
Title link takes you to a demo of the Chroma Polaris by memo on VSE, also saved here for posterity. I'm surprised at how much this actually sounds like a Rhodes Chroma. The character is there.
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© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH