Categories
Digital Polyphonic Synthesizer Synthesizer

Yamaha DX7

Digital programmable algorithm synthesizer

The most famous synthesizer of the 1980s.

Its electric piano became a standard sound in ballads and “smooth jazz” genres.  Its bass was the standard bass sound, typically played in bouncy octaves.  Its crystalline timbres were such a departure from the world of analog, that this synth was a super-hit for Yamaha in 1983, and spanned a long family of FM-based products.

The DX7 came out in 1983, sporting the new MIDI interface.  The high quality of its digital sounds, velocity + aftertouch, the expandability, the thoroughly professional look, and the complicated programming interface, made the DX7 and FM synthesis take off in a way the was unknown before for synthesizers.  Thousands of units were sold, and thousands of records have that distinct DX7 sound (especially for the electric piano, the bass, marimba and glassy, crystal-type sounds).

The DX7 was also the first synth that originated a huge “patch creation” business.  Since it was cumbersome to edit, many programming houses were established, ready to feed the hunger for new sounds that players all over the world craved.  Today, there are literally thousands of sounds available for the DX7.

Bottom line:  together with D-50 and M1, the synthesizer of the ’80s

Yamaha DX7 audio demos

Factory internal presets (ROM-1 A MASTER GROUP)

ROM 1-B KEYBOARD AND PLUCKED SOUNDS GROUP

ROM 2-A ORCHESTRAL & PERCUSSIVE SOUNDS GROUP

ROM 2-B SYNTH, COMPLEX & EFFECTS SOUNDS GROUP

ROM 3-A MASTER GROUP

ROM 3-B KEYBOARD & PLUCKED SOUNDS GROUP

ROM 4-A ORCHESTRAL & PERCUSSIVE SOUNDS GROUP

ROM 4-B COMPLEX SOUND & EFFECTS GROUP

Yamaha DX7 photos

Yamaha DX7 patches

Don’t forget to press FUNCTION (SPACE) and then Nr. 8 to switch from UNAVAIL to AVAIL when loading patches from your sequencer, or the DX7 won’t receive the MIDI sysex.

Yamaha DX7 manuals

Yamaha DX7 specs

  • trademark FM digital sound;
  • velocity and aftertouch make this keyboard very expressive;
  • hundreds (even thousands) of sounds available on the Internet;
  • still a workhorse after 20+ years
Year of release1983
Polyphony16
Sound generation methodFM
Preset memories32 + expandable via cartridges
MIDIin, out, thru
Sound expansion capabilitiescartridges
Sequencerno
Arpeggiatorno
Effectsno
Velocityyes
Aftertouchyes
AccessoriesROM cartridge x 2 (64 voices x 2); music stand
Dimensions101.8cm (W) x 10.2cm (H) x 32.9cm (D)
(40″ x 4″ x 13″)
Weight14.2 kg (31.2 lbs)

Yamaha DX7 links

www.yamaha.com

Categories
Desktop Analog Monophonic Synthesizer Synthesizer

Futureretro 777

Futuretro 777 top left
Futuretro 777 front

Desktop analog monophonic synthesizer inspired by the TB-303, with added functions and capabilities.

Two pictures and one audio demo submitted by a reader:

Manual and documents from the company website:

Factory sysex files from the company website:

Specs:

Year of release1998
OscillatorsTwo, analog
PolyphonyMonophonic
Effectsn/a
SequencerYes, pattern
MIDIIn, Out
Dimensions18″ width, 9″ depth, 3″ height
Weight5 lbs.
Power12 volt AC input, 1 amp or 1000 mA
OSV3.10 is the latest OS for the 777

Categories
Rack Sampler Sampler

Yamaha A4000

Digital professional sampler

The successor to the A3000.  The A4000 (and its bigger brother, the A5000) is an exquisite-sounding sampler.  It’s truly a powerhouse and comes with a very large library of sounds on CD-ROMs.  This line of samplers came out in 1999, just before the soft synth and soft sampler craze started.  The on-board effects in particular, make this machine very unique, and its “sonic character” is warm, imparting some sort of “analogness” to sounds sampled into it.

This sampler was embraced by the dance community – especially because features like loop divide, and the numerous great-sounding effects make it especially adept to House, Dance, Techno and Trance.

Yamaha A4000 audio demos

The Yamaha A4000 comes with four demo floppy disks, and several CD-ROMs full of sounds:

Demonstration floppy disk 1 ”A4000-A5000”
Demonstration floppy disk 2 ”Rainkiss”
Demonstration floppy disk 3 ”A-Dream”
Demonstration floppy disk 4 ”CheckMe!”

Piano / Keyboards (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-101)

Guitar / Bass (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-102)

Brass / Wind Instruments (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-103)

Strings / Choir (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-104)

Real Drums (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-105)

World / Latin Instruments (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-106)

Syntraxx / Loops (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-201)

DJ / Producer Tool Kit (from the included Factory CD-ROM PSLCD-202)

Standards – Yamaha Professional Studio Library

The A4000 also comes with a CD containing software and the rest of the tracks are high-quality samples taken from popular sample CDs, from noted sample manufacturer AMG.

Yamaha A4000 photos

Yamaha A4000 manuals

Yamaha A4000 specs

  • Powerful synth engine and FX;
  • Vast library of sounds included
  • Easy to use once learned the OS;
  • Expansion capability
Year of release:1999
Sound generation method:sampling
Polyphony:64-voice
Tone generation methodAWM2
Sampling frequency44.1, 22.05, 11.025 kHz, 5.5125 kHz (mono and stereo)
Responds to velocity:yes
Aftertouchyes
MIDI:in, out, thru
Sound expansion capabilities:yes – via CD-ROMs, hard drives etc.
Sequencer:Real-time recording and playback
Effects:yes
Controls:rotary knobs
Dimensions:Two-space rackmount unit
W 480 mm x D 461 mm x H 90 mm (18-7/8” x 18-1/8” x 3-9/16”)
Weight: 8.0 kg (17lbs 10oz)

Categories
DAW Music Software Software Software Sequencer

Sony Acid Music 2.0

Music software

Sony Acid Music 2.0 was one of the products of the second version of the classic program “Acid” by Sound Forge (later Sony, now Magix) – one of the first sequencers / DAWs in which it was possible to “paint” patterns and notes and “stretch & loop” while maintaining the pitch.

Sony Acid Music 2.0 audio demos

Dance

Rock

Sony Acid Music 2.0 specs

Year of release1999
Sample categoriesDance, Rock
Number of samples