Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Informative Articles

Entertainers On The Rebound
Everyone who starts in TV, radio or theatre eventually wants to make their way to Hollywood. This isn't new; we've all seen transitions from the music industry, including J-Lo, Britney Spears, Beoncee Knowles, John Mayer, Bon Jovi, Madonna, Witney...

JFK's UFO Encounter
This sighting was spectacular because it involved a U.S. President, but it was also typical of many that occur in the Cape Cod area of Massachusetts each year. Nearby Martha's Vineyard is also a place where UFOs are often seen. Over the years I...

Mayfield: Remixed -The Curtis Mayfield Collection
Artist: Curtis Mayfield Title: Mayfield: Remixed -The Curtis Mayfield Collection Genre: Soul-Funk-R & B Label: Rhino Records- http://www.rhino.com Website: http://www.rhino.com/store/ProductDetail.lasso?Number=79542 Curtis Mayfield left...

Media Player Shootout
Whether you call them media players, jukeboxes, mp3 apps, music managers, or whatever - we all need a proggy to listen to our digital music with sowe decided that it was time to publish the Online Music Blog Media Player Shootout . For the sake...

Music Business Lessons From The Village People
Just saw Can't Stop the Music, which is the Village People's big screen debut... What a great movie. Lots of inside jokes, a good "time capsule" of disco culture, and a great lesson on the music business. The movie wasn't entirely true, but the...

 
Google
History of the Synthesizer - A Brief Look Back



The synthesizer was a long time in the making. The history of the synthesizer is one that goes back long before electricity - many of early composers conceived of the concept, but could never put it into practice. In fact, it would take the invention of the silicon chip to make synthesizers possible.





The first synthesizers were very crude in their abilities. They date back well over 50 years. They were wired manually to create a given sound. They consisted of an oscillator, or tone generators, in one of three basic waveforms. These were sawtooth, square, or sine waves. This signal was then passed through several other modules to alter the initial tone. These first synthesizers were not triggered by a keyboard like they are today and they were abstract in their uses.





It didn't take long for many rock musicians in the 60's and 70's to realize the benefits of these instruments. Many companies were formed in these days. For example, Moog, Arp, and Oberheim were some of the manufacturers that would produce the first synthesizers. Most of these first models were only able to produce one note at a time. In 1978, the first polyphonic units were created. They were still typically analog in their design and had a very distinct sound.





Dates To Know:





1940's and 1950's: A variety of different automated electronic musical controllers were


built.





1950: RCA produces an experimental device that synthesizes voice and music.





1958: Daphne Oram from BBC Radiophoic Workshop produces the Oramics technique.





1960's: Real time synthesizers were designed but were mainly used in studios. They were simply too large.





1964: The Moog Synthesizer was the first to be displayed at Audio Engineering Society Convention. Four years later, it was a hot product.





1967: The album Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn, & Jones, Ltd became the first album to hit number one with a synthesizer used on it. It was from The Monkees'.





1970: The first synthesizer with a built in keyboard was designed by Moog.





Synthesizers enjoyed many innovations over the course of the following few years. They would become self contained and then movable, allowing them to be used throughout the home and recording studios. The synthesizer has continued to evolve and is widely used today.



About the author:

Don Lair is the owner of Digital Piano Reviews, a resource for keyboard musicians. If you own a digital keyboard, you are encouraged to write a review of the instrument.