Which was the "first" digital synth made?
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- KVRist
- 43 posts since 10 Jun, 2007
Dicy / pointless question Alert!
Who put out the first digital synth ?
I bet the first to have digital signal processing were hybrids, a sort of combination analog-digital,
So which were the first ones to come out ?
Synclavier? CMI Fairlight? korg? yamaha?
Thanks !
Who put out the first digital synth ?
I bet the first to have digital signal processing were hybrids, a sort of combination analog-digital,
So which were the first ones to come out ?
Synclavier? CMI Fairlight? korg? yamaha?
Thanks !
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
That isn't as straightforward as one might think. The first digital "synth" (That i know of) was the Music I program for IBM 704 mainframe done in 1957!
http://www.music.psu.edu/Faculty%20Page ... _labs.html
Then it's kind of a sliding scale. Suddenly you have real time computers. Then you have early prototypes. Then you may have some synths that were only built in 2-3 units. So it's hard to say.
The first one is probably the Synclavier. The first one was released in 1975 but if anyone actually bought it i don't know.
PPG was early with digital as well. The 1020 was released in 1976. It had digital oscillators.
I believe the Buchla 500 had digital oscillators. Released in 1976. They made 3 in total!
http://www.music.psu.edu/Faculty%20Page ... _labs.html
Then it's kind of a sliding scale. Suddenly you have real time computers. Then you have early prototypes. Then you may have some synths that were only built in 2-3 units. So it's hard to say.
The first one is probably the Synclavier. The first one was released in 1975 but if anyone actually bought it i don't know.
PPG was early with digital as well. The 1020 was released in 1976. It had digital oscillators.
I believe the Buchla 500 had digital oscillators. Released in 1976. They made 3 in total!
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- KVRist
- 87 posts since 7 Jan, 2005
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
That is very very wrong i'm afraid.Not even close.Feng wrote:I think I've read somewhere that it was the Yamaha DX7
The first affordable digital synth maybe.
- KVRAF
- 16869 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
The answer to that is partially in your recent FM thread, the link to the SOS article Shamann posted:
When I think of hybrids I think of synths that employ DCO's: analog oscillators controlled digitally. Roland's Juno-60 (1982) was probably one of the first, but manufacturers at that time were racing each other in competition and innovation, copying concepts 'n all...
There's some great info on www.vintagesynth.com, although you'll have to browse through a lot of manufacturers and models to reconstruct the exact timeline.
But the 1975 Synclavier was probably the first real digital instrument to be used outside the laboratory. The Fairlight CMI came in 1978, although it's predecessor the Quasar I also came out in 1975. All those did additive synthesis, so it could be done completely digitally.a gentleman by the name of Max Matthews began experimenting with digital computers, to see whether they could become a viable means for generating audio signals. Matthews was far ahead of his time, if only because he realised that -- unlike the primitive analogue signal generators of the time -- computer-generated digital audio could be consistent and controllable. In 1957 he wrote a program called MUSIC I, programmed in assembly code for an IBM 704 mainframe computer. You may think this unremarkable, but you should realise that the 704 was a vacuum-tube (valve) computer utterly incapable of executing the program in real time.
Understandably, MUSIC I was only capable of generating very basic sounds (it had a single triangle-wave digital oscillator) but Matthews continued his developments and, in 1958, wrote MUSIC II. This had four triangle oscillators and was capable of much more interesting sounds. Inevitably, MUSIC III followed. Completed in 1960, Matthews wrote the program for a more advanced (transistor) mainframe called the IBM 7094. Then there was MUSIC IV (1962), MUSIC IVF (written in 1965 by a man named Arthur Roberts) and MUSIC IV BF (1966/67).
When I think of hybrids I think of synths that employ DCO's: analog oscillators controlled digitally. Roland's Juno-60 (1982) was probably one of the first, but manufacturers at that time were racing each other in competition and innovation, copying concepts 'n all...
There's some great info on www.vintagesynth.com, although you'll have to browse through a lot of manufacturers and models to reconstruct the exact timeline.
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
The RMI Harmonic Synthesizer was released in 1974. Used on Jean Meichel Jarres Oxygen.
That has to be the first digital synth that Joe Public could buy with relative ease.
That has to be the first digital synth that Joe Public could buy with relative ease.
- Banned
- 1376 posts since 23 Jun, 2007 from france
- KVRAF
- 16869 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
Nope, it isn't. The DX7 came out in 1983. Digital synths existed previously...dupont wrote:Isn't it the DX7 ?
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. 
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
My MusicCalc is served over https!!
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 43 posts since 10 Jun, 2007
It was the first affordable (as was pointed out) digital synth using FM synthesis.Feng wrote:I think I've read somewhere that it was the Yamaha DX7
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
Do you guys even read the thread before answering ?
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 43 posts since 10 Jun, 2007
I've spending some time at the vintage synth explorer, it's one of the better sites on the subject, and I love the wood frame on the sides of that site.BertKoor wrote:..
There's some great info on www.vintagesynth.com, although you'll have to browse through a lot of manufacturers and models to reconstruct the exact timeline.
Thanks a lot for the link to the SOS article!
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 43 posts since 10 Jun, 2007
That's a great link. Thanks a lot also for the synths you mentioned. I'll check out more infos about them.jupiter8 wrote:That isn't as straightforward as one might think. The first digital "synth" (That i know of) was the Music I program for IBM 704 mainframe done in 1957!![]()
http://www.music.psu.edu/Faculty%20Page ... _labs.html
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- KVRAF
- 12235 posts since 18 Aug, 2003
I did. You said "probably." I said definitively that it was the first commercially available digital synth (emphasis on commercial). Don't be so cagey with your language if you want to give an authoritative answer.jupiter8 wrote:Do you guys even read the thread before answering ?
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
I said probably to leave the field open for something even older than the RMI.We've already established the Synclavier was released in 75 and the RMI was released in 74. So that one isn't older.It is in fact released one year after.Like 75 is the year that came after 74 ended.shamann wrote:I did. You said "probably." I said definitively that it was the first commercially available digital synth (emphasis on commercial). Don't be so cagey with your language if you want to give an authoritative answer.jupiter8 wrote:Do you guys even read the thread before answering ?
But that does'nt mean that there could be one older still.So in that light i thought that answering Synclavier was'nt too bright.
And don't even get me started on the second genius who suggested the DX7.