
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
Xpantastic ! - New Oberheim XPander Group

Sequential Circuits Studio 440

Rare sampling drum machine with analog filters by Sequential Circuits. More on VSE.
via Matt
Secret of the Ancient Sampler on YouTube
Part 1 (audio comes it at 1:21)
Part 2
The Mellotron of course. Amazing to see how it actually plays in the first clip.
Via Tim. YouTube by btpro.
Part 2
The Mellotron of course. Amazing to see how it actually plays in the first clip.
Via Tim. YouTube by btpro.
The Polyphone & Hugh Le Caine

Above the keyboard were several control devices that were typical of synthesizers at the time: low frequency oscillators, envelope generators, and filters, all of which could influence aspects of the overall sound produced by the instrument. Below the instrument was a pressure-sensitive pedal keyboard that controlled other aspects of the overall sound. The instrument provided extremely comprehensive resources and was potentially a very powerful tool; however, it was difficult to learn to play, a problem it shared with most synthesizers."
Title link takes you The Polyphone page on the Canada Science and Technology Museum website. Make sure to check out some of the other interesting bits while there.

"Canadian scientist and composer Hugh Le Caine (1914-1977) has been called one of the "heroes" of electronic music. He was brought up in Port Arthur (now Thunder Bay) in northwestern Ontario. At an early age he began building musical instruments and experimenting with electronic devices. In his youth he imagined "beautiful sounds" that he believed could be realized through new electronic inventions."
"At home he continued to pursue his interest in electronic music and sound generation. He established a personal studio in 1945, where he began to work independently on the design of electronic musical instruments such as the Electronic Sackbut, a sophisticated monophonic performance instrument now recognized as the first voltage-controlled synthesizer. Le Caine later developed voltage-control systems for a wide variety of applications."
"Perhaps the most important aspect of Le Caine's designs for his instruments was the "playability" that he took care to build into them. His fixation with "beautiful sound" led him repeatedly to design electronic instruments capable of producing a nuance-filled expression typical of the orchestral tradition. He had an acute sense of what performers needed if they were to be able to create the performance gestures that he believed formed the essence of music.
Touch sensitivity was an essential ingredient in this, and was used in keyboards, mixers, and other components, applied mechanically, electronically, and through light sensitivity. Le Caine's designs were so advanced in this respect that some of the features that he developed found their way into commercial designs only in the late 1980s."

via Frederic.
Update via slabman in the comments: "He did some pretty amazing stuff with the technology of the day - some of it still unmatched. For example, the Sackbut has a touch sensitive 2D timbral mixer control that balances various overtones & waveforms. Made the sound very controllable & dynamic, but also made the instrument more difficult to master. It's interesting to think of how there's a kind of Bell curve of synthesizer technology: one one end you have the laboratory instrument type approach (Buchla, Serge); at the other end, you have people inventing new instruments like the Sackbut & Theremin. Commercial gear mostly occupies the bump in the middle of the curve. It would be great to see some more activity at that 'new instrument' end."
The MAESTRO - Russian Poly Analog

Polyphony - 4 voices
Oscillators - 1
Preset sounds - 20 (sorted on category), registers 2',4',8',16'
Filter - 2-pole resonant lowpass 12dB/oct
Pitch - tuning, chorus
Modulation - vibrato depth, frequency
Amplifier - release, volume
Arpeggiator/tremolo - rate, up/down, single/double, note memory
Control - joystick pitch/modulation depth (X-Y)
Outs - line, phones(jack)
Weight - about 12kg
more on ruskeys
via frederic
Blevin Blectum

"Blevin Blectum, a local here is on it and here is a shot of her at last Year's SFEMF , there's a laptop running Live in 1 pizza box and I think a mixer in the other, the horse head is off the chart" Love the shoes as well.
Title link takes you to her site.

"I got this off of Blevin's site which also included a link to SFEMF archives with also some Zeena Parkins pictures -
see this link for more, actually there are some good shots of Zeena's harp , looks like guitar pickups on one side and some sort of ribbon controller on the other ..I don't see any MIDI output so I guess its just a harp"
"an as yet unreleased goody!" from Moog?
Someone in the comments of this post was surpised that no one caught a mention to "an unreleased goody!" from Moog Music in the following excerpt:
"Some time in November or December of 2004, Bob was introduced to Cyril Lance. As Winter NAMM was fast approaching, Bob kept telling me, 'I really want you to meet Cyril.' I just could not find the time until February, 2005. In the meantime, Bob had given Cyril a test project to work on (an as yet unreleased goody!). Needless to say Bob was very excited about what he saw – schematics, prototype, and (most importantly) thought process were all eerily similar to Bob’s way of working. Since then we have been truly blessed to have Cyril with us. He has poured his guts and all of his considerable brains into the Little Phatty; a project that would not have been possible without his efforts."
I completely missed this assuming that the reference was to the Little Phatty and the unreleased goody comment was a reflection of that point in time, but if that were the case it would have been worded differently [an unreleased goody at that point in time!]. Hmm... BTW, cheers to Cyril. Keep that torch burning.
"Some time in November or December of 2004, Bob was introduced to Cyril Lance. As Winter NAMM was fast approaching, Bob kept telling me, 'I really want you to meet Cyril.' I just could not find the time until February, 2005. In the meantime, Bob had given Cyril a test project to work on (an as yet unreleased goody!). Needless to say Bob was very excited about what he saw – schematics, prototype, and (most importantly) thought process were all eerily similar to Bob’s way of working. Since then we have been truly blessed to have Cyril with us. He has poured his guts and all of his considerable brains into the Little Phatty; a project that would not have been possible without his efforts."
I completely missed this assuming that the reference was to the Little Phatty and the unreleased goody comment was a reflection of that point in time, but if that were the case it would have been worded differently [an unreleased goody at that point in time!]. Hmm... BTW, cheers to Cyril. Keep that torch burning.
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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