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Monday, April 27, 2009

Discover The Most Popular Synths From The 70's - Vintage

By Charlie Warner

Lets work backward in time to take a look at the most famous synths to ever hit the market.

Numerous individuals wanted those spectacular sounds of the 1970/80s back. The problem was the price involved to purchase and preserve those old machines. And then luckily in 1995 along came the Access Virus. It comprised of lots of patch storage, effects and a vocoder. This truly was a new digital based virtual based analogue synthesizer.

Although first introduced in 1992 the Roland JV series came to be recognized. These're the Roland workstation series of semi synths. It all started with the JV-80 and 90. Then progressed onto the JV 1080 and JV 2080. What these produced were brilliant in regards to extremely exact and entirely believable real instrument samples. It tested to be a ultimate money-saver for musicians. No longer did they require to depend on real instruments. They're paced with expansion alternatives and polyphony so the JV series worked its way into the XV series that you see on the market today.

The most well sold synth ever known was the Korg M1 in 1988. This special synth was a semi-workstation synth. The price, sound and look of it pictures how much effort the maker put in. As a great traditional subtractive synthesizer sound, the A1 synthesis technique made this possible. When you blend this with the sixteen voice polyphony and the numerous built-in effects and sequencer, you had it all. Theres zero questions as to why this synth was so famous.

Some of you would be very familiar with the Roland D-50 from 1987, as it is still utilised today. It has a lot of polyphony and can be heard on a couple of the records of the 1980/90s. The new LA synthesis architecture never became a favourite item, but it fit in well with the 8 bit form of PCM sampling. It provided for special sounds that had never been experienced before.

In 1984, hope surfaced for those devotees of synthesiser that can just not afford to be required in the past. This was brought about because of the Roland Juno-106. It allowed hybrid DCO based synthesis technology to be used by musicians who had never had the opportunity in the past. Its limited to a single filter and oscillator, it had an essential chorus effect and sounds from the 80s that made it into a very popular item. - 18418

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