About: Four Voice   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

A groundbreaking analog synthesizer introduced by Oberheim in 1975; it is considered the first polyphonic synth to use voice allocation methods (preceded by the extremely expensive and rare Yamaha GX-1). The Four Voice consisted of four Oberheim SEM expander modules mounted in a case with a scanning keyboard (licensed from E-mu) and circuitry that handled the voice allocation, and a an audio mixer that combined the audio outputs of the four SEMs into a composite audio out. When a key was played, the voice allocation module received a code from the keyboard, and from that it chose a SEM to play the note. It then generated CV/Gate signals to the chosen SEM to play the note. The SEM and scanning keyboard were units that Oberheim already had in production, which allowed them to get the Four Vo

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Four Voice
rdfs:comment
  • A groundbreaking analog synthesizer introduced by Oberheim in 1975; it is considered the first polyphonic synth to use voice allocation methods (preceded by the extremely expensive and rare Yamaha GX-1). The Four Voice consisted of four Oberheim SEM expander modules mounted in a case with a scanning keyboard (licensed from E-mu) and circuitry that handled the voice allocation, and a an audio mixer that combined the audio outputs of the four SEMs into a composite audio out. When a key was played, the voice allocation module received a code from the keyboard, and from that it chose a SEM to play the note. It then generated CV/Gate signals to the chosen SEM to play the note. The SEM and scanning keyboard were units that Oberheim already had in production, which allowed them to get the Four Vo
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • A groundbreaking analog synthesizer introduced by Oberheim in 1975; it is considered the first polyphonic synth to use voice allocation methods (preceded by the extremely expensive and rare Yamaha GX-1). The Four Voice consisted of four Oberheim SEM expander modules mounted in a case with a scanning keyboard (licensed from E-mu) and circuitry that handled the voice allocation, and a an audio mixer that combined the audio outputs of the four SEMs into a composite audio out. When a key was played, the voice allocation module received a code from the keyboard, and from that it chose a SEM to play the note. It then generated CV/Gate signals to the chosen SEM to play the note. The SEM and scanning keyboard were units that Oberheim already had in production, which allowed them to get the Four Voice on the market with minimal additional engineering. The Four Voice had an unusual degree of patching flexibility since each of the SEMs included its own voice parameter controls. However, this also caused a significant problem especially for live performance: in order to change to a different patch, particularly if it was desired that all voices sound the same (which would normally be the case when playing a polyphonic synth), then it was necessary to change the patch controls on all four SEMs, a lengthy and error-prone process. So in 1976, Oberheim introduced a programmer module. The programmer connected to expansion connectors inside the SEMs and used this to inject control voltages for the parameters that were voltage controllable. This gave the programmer control over most (not all) of the parameters of the SEMs. Controls on the programmer duplicated the SEMs' controls and allowed a parameter to be changed on all four SEMs simultaneously with a single knob. Additional, the programmer had patch memory and could store parameter settings for 16 patches. This considerably simplified the task of patching the Four Voice and made it a more practical instrument. The patch memory capability was very advanced for the time. Two variants of the Four Voice were offered. The Two Voice was a stripped-down model with a smaller case that could accommodate two SEMs; it also included a small sequencer. Since the programmer module was built to accommodate eight voices, Oberheim offered an expansion cabinet for the Four Voice that could hold up to four additional SEMs; this later became incorporated into a larger case and named, naturally, the Eight Voice. The series was made up until about 1980, when Oberheim began introducing more integrated polyphonic synths. Because each SEM is a complete monophonic synth in its own right, many of the Four Voice series synths have since been broken up; it is not uncommon for a collector to buy a Four Voice, remove the SEMs, sell them individually, and then scrap the other parts. For this reason, not many complete Four Voice or Eight Voice systems survive, and the remaining ones are highly sought after. However, in 2009, Tom Oberheim formed a new company, TomOberheim.com, and began making new SEMs. And, in 2011, the company introduced the Son of Four Voice (SOFV). This is similar in concept in to the original Four Voice in that it incorporates four SEMs and a programmer module. However, it has no keyboard; the redesigned programmer module accepts MIDI input, and allocates SEMs and generates control voltages based on that.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software