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Akai

Akai (Japanese: 赤井, pronounced [a̠ka̠i]) is a Hong Kong manufacturer of consumer electronics. It was founded as Akai Electric Company Ltd in Tokyo, Japan, in 1946.

Akai
Company typeManufacturer
IndustryElectronics
Foundedas Akai Electric Company Ltd, Tokyo, Japan
(1946; 78 years ago (1946))
HeadquartersHong Kong
ProductsHi-fi equipment
ParentGrande Holdings (1999–present)
inMusic Brands (Akai Professional)
Websiteakaipro.com
akai.com

Following the controversial collapse of the original business in 2000,[1] the Akai brand is now owned by Grande Holdings in Hong Kong which distributes various electronic products such as LED TV, washing machines, clothes dryers, air conditioners and smart phones, through collaborations with other electronics companies bearing relevant expertise.

The "Akai Professional" electronic instrument division was spun off in 1999[2] and remains under separate ownership[3] from that of the main "Akai" brand.

Corporate history edit

Akai was founded by Masukichi Akai and his son, Saburo Akai (who died in 1973[4]) as Akai Electric Company Ltd. (赤井電機株式会社, Akai Denki Kabushiki Gaisha), a Japanese manufacturer in 1929[4][5][6] or 1946.[note 1]

The company's business eventually became discombobulated and it left the audio industry in 1991. At its peak in the late 1990s, Akai Holdings employed 100,000 workers and had annual sales of HK$40 billion (US$5.2 billion). The company filed for insolvency in November 2000, owing creditors US$1.1B.[1] It emerged that ownership of Akai Holdings had somehow passed in 1999 to Grande Holdings, a company founded by Akai's chairman James Ting. The liquidators claimed that Ting had stolen over US$800m from the company with the assistance of accountants Ernst & Young who had tampered with audit documents going back to 1994.[7] Ting was imprisoned for false accounting in 2005,[7] and E&Y paid $200m to settle the negligence case out of court in September 2009.[8] In a separate lawsuit, a former E&Y partner, Christopher Ho, made a "substantial payment" to Akai creditors in his role as chairman of Grande Holdings.[1]

The "Akai Professional" division specialising in electronic instruments became a separate business in 1999.[2] It was bought in 2005 by businessman Jack O'Donnell (later becoming a part of his inMusic Brands group)[3] and is no longer associated with the main "Akai" brand.

History edit

Historical products edit

 
Stack of historical AKAI machines

Akai's products included reel-to-reel audiotape recorders (such as the GX series), tuners (top level AT, mid level TR and TT series), audio cassette decks (top level GX and TFL, mid level TC, HX and CS series), amplifiers (AM and TA series), microphones, receivers, turntables, video recorders and loudspeakers.

 
Tape recorder GX-630D

Many Akai products were sold under the name Roberts in the US[citation needed], as well as A&D in Japan (from 1987 after a partnership with Mitsubishi Electric), Tensai and Transonic Strato in Western Europe[citation needed]. During the late 1960s, Akai adopted Tandberg's cross-field recording technologies (using an extra tape head) to enhance high frequency recording and switched to the increasingly reliable Glass and crystal (X'tal) (GX) ferrite heads a few years later[citation needed]. The company's most popular products[citation needed] were the GX-630D, GX-635D, GX-747/GX-747DBX and GX-77 open-reel recorders (latter featuring an auto-loading function), the three-head, closed-loop GX-F95, GX-90, GX-F91, GX-R99 cassette decks, and the AM-U61, AM-U7 and AM-93 stereo amplifiers.

Akai manufactured and badged most of its imported hi-fi products with the Tensai brand (named after the Swiss audio and electronics distributor Tensai International[citation needed]). Tensai International was Akai's exclusive distributor for the Swiss and Western European markets until 1988.

Akai limited its consumer hi-fi product line in the United States and Europe towards the end of the 20th century[citation needed].

Introduction of the on-screen display edit

Akai produced consumer video cassette recorders (VCR) during the 1980s. The Akai VS-2 was the first VCR with an on-screen display,[9] originally named the Interactive Monitor System. By displaying the information directly on the television screen, this innovation eliminated the need for the user to be physically near the VCR to program recording, read the tape counter, or perform other common features. Within a few years, all competing manufacturers had adopted on-screen display technology in their own products.

Akai Professional edit

In 1984,[2] a new division of the company[10] was formed to focus on the manufacture and sale of electronic instruments, and was called Akai Professional.

 
Akai's portable studio, Akai MG-1214 unit

The first product released by the new subsidiary was the MG1212, a 12 channel, 12 track recorder.[11] This innovative device used a special VHS-like cartridge (a MK-20), and was good for 10 minutes of continuous 12 track recording (19 cm per second) or 20 minutes at half speed (9.5 cm per second). One track (14) was permanently dedicated to recording absolute time, and another one for synchronization such as SMPTE or MTC. Each channel strip included dbx type-1 noise reduction and semi-parametric equalizers (with fixed bandwidths). The unit also had innovations like an electronic 2 bus system, a 12 stereo channel patch bay and auto punch in and out, among others. The unique transport design and noise reduction gave these units a recording quality rivaling that of more expensive 16 track machines using 1" tape. The MG-1212 was later replaced by the MG-1214, which improved the transport mechanism and overall performance.

AX series analog synthesizers edit

 
AX80

Other early products included the Akai AX80 8-voice analog synthesizer in 1984,[11] followed by AX60 and AX73 6-voice analog synthesizers ca.1986.[12][13] The AX-60 borrowed many ideas from the Roland Juno series, but used voltage controlled analog oscillators (VCO) as a sound source as opposed to Roland's more common digitally controlled analog oscillators (DCO), and also allowed the performer to "split" the keyboard (using different timbres for different ranges of keys). The AX-60 also had the ability to interface with Akai's early samplers through a serial cable, using 12-bit samples as an additional oscillator.[14]

Digital Samplers (S, X, Z series) edit

 
S612

The S612 12-bit digital sampler in 1985, was the first in a series of (relatively) affordable samplers already in 19-inch studio-rack format but in black color.[11] It held only a single sample at a time, which was loaded into memory via a separate disk drive utilizing Quick Disk 2.8-inch floppy disks. The maximum sample time at the highest quality sampling rate (32 kHz) was one second.

 
S6000 remote
 
S900
 
Z4

The introduction of a "professional" range of digital samplers began with the 12-bit S900 in 1986,[11] followed by the X7000 keyboard sampler in 1986,[15] and the S700 rack-mount version in 1987.[11] Unlike the single-sample S612, however, they allowed the use of six active samples at once, had a built-in disk drive and could be extended with six individual outputs via cable and a flash memory extension which added another six samples to the memory for multisample playback. The S700/X7000 sampler series were light-grey colored, which didn't change throughout the whole "professional" range of Akai samplers.

The 16-bit Akai S1000 series followed in 1988, adding the option to read CD-ROMs and write to hard disks via SCSI. This range was superseded by the S3000 series in 1993, with optional built-in CD-ROM drive, followed by the S5000 and S6000. Additional releases of note were the Z4 and Z8 24-bit 96 kHz samplers.[11]

Sampler Models[16]

  • S612 - 1985
  • X7000 - Keyboard Sampler - 1986
  • S700 - 1987
  • S900 - 1986
  • X3700 - Keyboard Sampler - 1986
  • S950 - 1988
  • S1000 - 1988
  • S1000KB - Keyboard Sampler - 1988
  • S1000PB - Playback only device - 1988
  • S1100 - 1992
  • S01 - 1993
  • S2000 - 1995
  • S2800 - 1992
  • S20 - Drum Machine-styled device - 1997
  • S3000 - 1993
  • S3000XL
  • S3200 - 1996
  • S3200XL - 1996
  • S5000 - 1998
  • S6000 - 1999
  • Z4 - 2002
  • Z8 - 2002

MPC edit

 
MPC2000
 
MPC60

Akai also produced several Digital MIDI sequencers and digital synthesizers such as the MPC range, a line of integrated drum machines, MIDI sequencers, samplers and direct-to-disk recorders.

New ownership of Akai Professional edit

In December 1999, one year before the application of the Civil Rehabilitation Act [ja] to Akai Electric Company Ltd., the brand of its musical instrument division, Akai Professional was acquired by a company of the United States. The new company was dubbed "Akai Professional Musical Instrument Corporation".[2] (AKAI professional M.I.) was established in the same year, however it was bankrupted in 2005.[10]

In 2004, following a US distribution deal, the Akai Professional Musical Instrument division was acquired by Jack O'Donnell, owner of Numark Industries and Alesis. In 2012, inMusic Brands was formed as a parent company for O'Donnell's companies, including Akai Professional.

Current products edit

In early 2003, Grande Holdings began undergoing a re-exposure of Akai's brands by marketing various audio visual products manufactured by Samsung. In the same year, Grande began to distribute Akai home appliances such as air conditioners, vacuum cleaners, and refrigerators. In the 2010s, it began to distribute Akai smart phones in collaboration with some Chinese smart phone manufacturers such as Gionee, in India and other countries.

Video edit

Mobile sound edit

  • Amplifiers
  • Cassette receivers
  • CD changers
  • CD receivers
  • DVD changers
  • DVD receivers
  • Car Audio – DVD players
  • Car Audio – Speakers
  • Car Audio – TFT monitors

Home appliances edit

Audio edit

  • Stereo rack systems
  • Mini systems
  • Micro music [17]
  • Retro radios
  • Sound boxes
  • Portable music players
  • Tape Decks
  • Portable DAT Recorder/Player (Blue colored body, Webshop DirectOrder only, OEM from JVC/Victor)
  • Portable MD Recorder/Player (Blue color Body, Webshop DirectOrder only, OEM from JVC/Victor)

Digital edit

Television edit

Akai Professional products edit

 
Logo of Akai Professional
 
Akai Synthstation 25

Synthesizers edit

  • AX60 (c.1986) – discontinued
  • AX73 (c.1986) – discontinued
  • AX80 (1984) – discontinued
  • VX90 (c.1986) – rack-mount version of AX73, discontinued
  • VX600 (c.1988) – 3-octave keyboard synthesizer with EWI connection jack, discontinued
  • Akai SG01v (c.1996) – desktop sound module,[18] discontinued
  • MINIAK[19] – discontinued
  • S612[20] (1985) – discontinued
  • S900[21] (1986) – discontinued
  • X3700 (c.1986) – discontinued
  • X7000[22] (c.1986) – discontinued
  • S700[23] (1987) – discontinued
  • S950[24] – discontinued
  • S1000 (1988)[25] – discontinued
  • S1100[26] (1990) – discontinued
  • S01[27] (1992) – discontinued
  • S2800[28] (1992) – discontinued
  • S3000[28] (1992) – discontinued
  • S3200 (1992) – discontinued
  • CD3000[29] (1993) – discontinued
  • REMIX16 (1995) – table-top phrase sampler, discontinued
  • S2000 (1995)[30] – discontinued
  • S3000XL (1995) – discontinued
  • S3200XL – discontinued
  • S20 (c.1997)[31] – discontinued
  • CD3000XL (c.1997)[32] – discontinued
  • S5000 (c.1999)[33] – discontinued
  • S6000 (c.1999)[33] – discontinued
  • Z4[34] (2002) – discontinued
  • Z8[34] (2002) – discontinued
  • MPX8
  • MPX16[35]
  • MPC Key 61

Music Production Center edit

  • MPC60 (1987) – MIDI Production Centre,[36] discontinued
  • MPC60II – (1991) – discontinued
  • MPC3000 (1993) – discontinued
  • MPC3000LE (1999) – discontinued
  • MPC2000[37] (1997) – discontinued
  • MPC2000XL (2000) – discontinued
  • MPC4000 (2002)[38] – discontinued
  • MPC1000 (2003) – discontinued
  • MPC500[39] (2006) – discontinued
  • MPC2500[40] (2005) – discontinued
  • MPC5000[41][42] (2008) – discontinued
  • MPC Renaissance[43] (2012) – discontinued
  • MPC Studio[44] (2012) – Discontinued
  • MPC Element (2013) – Discontinued
  • MPC Touch[45] (2015)
  • MPC Studio Black (2016)
  • MPC Live[46] (2017)
  • MPC X[47] (2017)
  • MPC Force (2019)
  • MPC One (2020)
  • MPC Live ll (2020)
  • MPC Studio II (2021)
  • MPC Key 61 (2022)
  • MPC One+ (2023)

Computer audio interfaces edit

  • EIE (2011)
  • EIE PRO[48] (2011)

Drum machines edit

  • MR16 (c.1985)
  • XE-8 1U rack mounted,[49][50] Acoustic drum sound from S-1000 library, discontinued
  • XR10,[51] discontinued Table Top Playback Sampler incl XE-8 Sound with Dance Sample Sounds 16-bit, discontinued
  • XR20[52] (2008) Made by Alesis
  • Rhythm Wolf (c.2015) Tabletop analogue drum machine with bass synth[53]
  • Tom Cat

Electronic wind instruments edit

  • EVI1000 (1987) – Electronic Valve Instruments, discontinued
  • EWI1000[54] (1987) – Electronic Wind Instrument, discontinued
  • EWV2000[54] – Electronic Wind Instrument sound module, discontinued
  • EWI4000S (2005)
  • EWI-USB (2008)
  • EWI5000 (2014)
  • EWI SOLO (2020)

Effects units / Utilities edit

  • EX90R – Reverb,[55] discontinued
  • ME10D – MIDI digital delay,[56] discontinued
  • ME15F – MIDI dynamic controller,[56] discontinued
  • ME20A – MIDI sequencer arpeggiator,[56] discontinued
  • ME25S – MIDI note separator,[57] discontinued
  • ME30P – MIDI 4×8 patchbay,[57][58] discontinued
  • ME35T – Audio/MIDI trigger, discontinued
  • ME80P – MIDI 8×10 patchbay, discontinued
  • MB76 – Programmable mix bay,[59] discontinued
  • PEQ6 – Programmable equaliser,[59] discontinued
  • DP88 (1993) – digital audio patchbay, discontinued
  • AR900 (1986–89) – 16-bit MIDI Digital Reverb, discontinued
  • MFC42 (2001) – filter bank, discontinued
  • HV10 Harmony generator (2002)
  • VST Plug-ins (2002)

Guitar pedals edit

  • Analog Delay
  • Blues Overdrive
  • Chorus
  • Compressor
  • Deep Impact Synth
  • Deluxe Distortion
  • Drive3 Distortion
  • Drive3 Fuzz
  • Drive3 Overdrive
  • E2 Head Rush
  • Flanger
  • Phase Shifter

iPod/iPad Keyboard Controllers edit

  • SynthStation25
  • SynthStation49
  • AkaiMPC Fly (2012)

MIDI Sequencers edit

  • MS08 (c.1985) – discontinued
  • ASQ10[60] (c.1986/7) – discontinued

Standalone Multi-track Audio Recorders edit

  • MG614 (c.1983?) – discontinued
  • MG1212 (1984) – discontinued
  • MG1214 (c.1985) – discontinued
  • DR1200/DL1200 (1988) – discontinued
  • DD1000 (1990) – discontinued
  • DD/DL1500 (1994) – 16-track DAW, discontinued
  • DD8 (1996) – discontinued
  • DD8plus (1998) – discontinued
  • DR4D (1993) – discontinued
  • DR8 (1994) – discontinued
  • DR16 (1995) – discontinued
  • DPS12[61] (1997) – discontinued
  • DPS16 (1999) – discontinued
  • DPS24 (2002)[62] – discontinued
  • DPS24MKII – discontinued
  • RE32 (1999) – controller for DD/DR series, discontinued

Studio Monitor Speakers edit

  • RPM3
  • RPM8 – discontinued
  • 50x

USB MIDI / MIDI controllers edit

  • APC20[63]
  • APC40[64]
  • APC40 MkII[65]
  • EWI-USB
  • LPD8 (2009)[66]
  • LPK25 (2009)[66]
  • MPD16 (2002) – discontinued
  • MPD18 – discontinued
  • MPD24[67] (2006) – discontinued
  • MPD26 (2010)
  • MPD32 (2008)
  • MPK25[68] (2009)
  • MPK49[69] (2007)
  • MPK49 V2 (2007)
  • MPK61 (2009)
  • MPK88 (2009)
  • MPK Mini[70]
  • MPK Mini Play (comes packed with 128 sounds and its own built-in speaker)[71]
  • MPK Mini MK II (2014)
  • MPK Mini MK III (2020)
  • MPK225 (2014)
  • MPK249 (2014)
  • MPK261 (2014)
  • MAX25 (2014)
  • MAX49[72] (2014)
  • MX73 MIDI Master Keyboard[73] – discontinued
  • MX76 MIDI Master Keyboard[74] (1987) – discontinued

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although reliable sources are not yet found, according to the several sources (kotobank.jp, ja:Akai Professional), Masukichi Akai established Akai Press Industry in 1923, then his son, Saburo Akai established Akai Electric Company Ltd. in 1946, and Masukichi served as the president of both.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Duce, John; Tan, Andrea (2009-10-05). . Bloomberg. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22.
  2. ^ a b c d . AKAI professional M.I. Corp. c. 1999. Archived from the original on 2013-05-03. Akai Professional entered the electronic musical instrument world in 1984 with one purpose – to give artists the tools they need to express and explore new musical ideas.", "In 1999, Akai Professional Musical Instruments Corporation (APMI) was formed.
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2023-05-24. In 2005 [..] O'Donnell purchased [..] Akai Professional, one of the world's most influential manufacturers of music production gear
  4. ^ a b "Akai Electric Company Ltd". Reel to Reel Tape Recorder Manufacturers. Museum of Magnetic Sound Recording. Retrieved 2013-07-02.
  5. ^ "About Akai". akai.com. Akai. Retrieved 2013-07-02.
  6. ^ . adt-digital.com. Akai. Archived from the original on 2013-08-10. Retrieved 2013-07-02.
  7. ^ a b Rovnick, Naomi; Lo, Clifford (2009-09-30). "Raids, arrest as fraud police probe Akai files". South China Morning Post.
  8. ^ Rovnick, Naomi (2010-01-27). "Ernst & Young pays up to settle negligence claim". South China Morning Post.
  9. ^ "Stylish Akai VS-2 appeal". The Sydney Morning Herald. 1983-04-24.
  10. ^ a b [Akai Professional M.I. entered bankrupt proceedings.]. 神奈川新聞 (in Japanese). 2005-12-07. Archived from the original on 2006-01-12. 民間信用調査会社の帝国データバンク横浜支店によると、音響機器製造のアカイプロフェッショナルエムアイ(横浜市都筑区北山田、駿河道生社長、従業員十七人)は七日までに、東京地裁から破産手続き開始決定を受けた。... 同社は一九九九年十二月、赤井電機(東京都)の電子楽器部門のブランドを買収した米国系企業が、製造・販売目的で設立した。 [Abstract: according to the private credit research company, Teikoku Databank Yokohama branch, by the 7th (December 2005), Akai Professional M.I. received a bankruptcy proceedings decision by the Tokyo District Court. ... Akai Professional M.I. was established in December 1999 to focus on the manufacture and sale of electronic musical instruments, by a company of the United States who acquired the brand(s) of musical instrument division of Akai Electric Company Ltd.]
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  71. ^ MPK Mini Play
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Further reading edit

  • "Akai S20 sampler". Future Music. No. 56. Future Publishing. May 1997. p. 20. ISSN 0967-0378. OCLC 1032779031.

External links edit

  • at the Wayback Machine
  • Collection of Akai Vintage Cassette decks and other brands.

akai, people, named, name, fruit, pronounced, sigh, acai, berry, açaí, palm, means, color, japanese, language, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, mat. For people named Akai see Akai name For the fruit pronounced AH SIGH EE Acai berry see Acai palm Akai means the color red in the Japanese language This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Akai news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Akai Japanese 赤井 pronounced a ka i is a Hong Kong manufacturer of consumer electronics It was founded as Akai Electric Company Ltd in Tokyo Japan in 1946 AkaiCompany typeManufacturerIndustryElectronicsFoundedas Akai Electric Company Ltd Tokyo Japan 1946 78 years ago 1946 HeadquartersHong KongProductsHi fi equipmentParentGrande Holdings 1999 present inMusic Brands Akai Professional Websiteakaipro wbr com akai comFollowing the controversial collapse of the original business in 2000 1 the Akai brand is now owned by Grande Holdings in Hong Kong which distributes various electronic products such as LED TV washing machines clothes dryers air conditioners and smart phones through collaborations with other electronics companies bearing relevant expertise The Akai Professional electronic instrument division was spun off in 1999 2 and remains under separate ownership 3 from that of the main Akai brand Contents 1 Corporate history 2 History 2 1 Historical products 2 1 1 Introduction of the on screen display 2 2 Akai Professional 2 2 1 AX series analog synthesizers 2 2 2 Digital Samplers S X Z series 2 2 3 MPC 2 2 4 New ownership of Akai Professional 3 Current products 3 1 Video 3 2 Mobile sound 3 3 Home appliances 3 4 Audio 3 5 Digital 3 6 Television 3 7 Akai Professional products 3 7 1 Synthesizers 3 7 2 Music Production Center 3 7 3 Computer audio interfaces 3 7 4 Drum machines 3 7 5 Electronic wind instruments 3 7 6 Effects units Utilities 3 7 7 Guitar pedals 3 7 8 iPod iPad Keyboard Controllers 3 7 9 MIDI Sequencers 3 7 10 Standalone Multi track Audio Recorders 3 7 11 Studio Monitor Speakers 3 7 12 USB MIDI MIDI controllers 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCorporate history editAkai was founded by Masukichi Akai and his son Saburo Akai who died in 1973 4 as Akai Electric Company Ltd 赤井電機株式会社 Akai Denki Kabushiki Gaisha a Japanese manufacturer in 1929 4 5 6 or 1946 note 1 The company s business eventually became discombobulated and it left the audio industry in 1991 At its peak in the late 1990s Akai Holdings employed 100 000 workers and had annual sales of HK 40 billion US 5 2 billion The company filed for insolvency in November 2000 owing creditors US 1 1B 1 It emerged that ownership of Akai Holdings had somehow passed in 1999 to Grande Holdings a company founded by Akai s chairman James Ting The liquidators claimed that Ting had stolen over US 800m from the company with the assistance of accountants Ernst amp Young who had tampered with audit documents going back to 1994 7 Ting was imprisoned for false accounting in 2005 7 and E amp Y paid 200m to settle the negligence case out of court in September 2009 8 In a separate lawsuit a former E amp Y partner Christopher Ho made a substantial payment to Akai creditors in his role as chairman of Grande Holdings 1 The Akai Professional division specialising in electronic instruments became a separate business in 1999 2 It was bought in 2005 by businessman Jack O Donnell later becoming a part of his inMusic Brands group 3 and is no longer associated with the main Akai brand History editHistorical products edit nbsp Stack of historical AKAI machinesAkai s products included reel to reel audiotape recorders such as the GX series tuners top level AT mid level TR and TT series audio cassette decks top level GX and TFL mid level TC HX and CS series amplifiers AM and TA series microphones receivers turntables video recorders and loudspeakers nbsp Tape recorder GX 630DMany Akai products were sold under the name Roberts in the US citation needed as well as A amp D in Japan from 1987 after a partnership with Mitsubishi Electric Tensai and Transonic Strato in Western Europe citation needed During the late 1960s Akai adopted Tandberg s cross field recording technologies using an extra tape head to enhance high frequency recording and switched to the increasingly reliable Glass and crystal X tal GX ferrite heads a few years later citation needed The company s most popular products citation needed were the GX 630D GX 635D GX 747 GX 747DBX and GX 77 open reel recorders latter featuring an auto loading function the three head closed loop GX F95 GX 90 GX F91 GX R99 cassette decks and the AM U61 AM U7 and AM 93 stereo amplifiers Akai manufactured and badged most of its imported hi fi products with the Tensai brand named after the Swiss audio and electronics distributor Tensai International citation needed Tensai International was Akai s exclusive distributor for the Swiss and Western European markets until 1988 Akai limited its consumer hi fi product line in the United States and Europe towards the end of the 20th century citation needed Introduction of the on screen display edit Akai produced consumer video cassette recorders VCR during the 1980s The Akai VS 2 was the first VCR with an on screen display 9 originally named the Interactive Monitor System By displaying the information directly on the television screen this innovation eliminated the need for the user to be physically near the VCR to program recording read the tape counter or perform other common features Within a few years all competing manufacturers had adopted on screen display technology in their own products Akai Professional edit For the present day owners of the Akai Professional brand for music related products now under entirely separate ownership from the Akai consumer electronics brand see inMusic Brands This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1984 2 a new division of the company 10 was formed to focus on the manufacture and sale of electronic instruments and was called Akai Professional nbsp Akai s portable studio Akai MG 1214 unit The first product released by the new subsidiary was the MG1212 a 12 channel 12 track recorder 11 This innovative device used a special VHS like cartridge a MK 20 and was good for 10 minutes of continuous 12 track recording 19 cm per second or 20 minutes at half speed 9 5 cm per second One track 14 was permanently dedicated to recording absolute time and another one for synchronization such as SMPTE or MTC Each channel strip included dbx type 1 noise reduction and semi parametric equalizers with fixed bandwidths The unit also had innovations like an electronic 2 bus system a 12 stereo channel patch bay and auto punch in and out among others The unique transport design and noise reduction gave these units a recording quality rivaling that of more expensive 16 track machines using 1 tape The MG 1212 was later replaced by the MG 1214 which improved the transport mechanism and overall performance AX series analog synthesizers edit nbsp AX80 Main articles Akai AX80 and Akai AX60 Other early products included the Akai AX80 8 voice analog synthesizer in 1984 11 followed by AX60 and AX73 6 voice analog synthesizers ca 1986 12 13 The AX 60 borrowed many ideas from the Roland Juno series but used voltage controlled analog oscillators VCO as a sound source as opposed to Roland s more common digitally controlled analog oscillators DCO and also allowed the performer to split the keyboard using different timbres for different ranges of keys The AX 60 also had the ability to interface with Akai s early samplers through a serial cable using 12 bit samples as an additional oscillator 14 Digital Samplers S X Z series edit nbsp S612 See also Sampler musical instrument Akai The S612 12 bit digital sampler in 1985 was the first in a series of relatively affordable samplers already in 19 inch studio rack format but in black color 11 It held only a single sample at a time which was loaded into memory via a separate disk drive utilizing Quick Disk 2 8 inch floppy disks The maximum sample time at the highest quality sampling rate 32 kHz was one second nbsp S6000 remote nbsp S900 nbsp Z4 The introduction of a professional range of digital samplers began with the 12 bit S900 in 1986 11 followed by the X7000 keyboard sampler in 1986 15 and the S700 rack mount version in 1987 11 Unlike the single sample S612 however they allowed the use of six active samples at once had a built in disk drive and could be extended with six individual outputs via cable and a flash memory extension which added another six samples to the memory for multisample playback The S700 X7000 sampler series were light grey colored which didn t change throughout the whole professional range of Akai samplers The 16 bit Akai S1000 series followed in 1988 adding the option to read CD ROMs and write to hard disks via SCSI This range was superseded by the S3000 series in 1993 with optional built in CD ROM drive followed by the S5000 and S6000 Additional releases of note were the Z4 and Z8 24 bit 96 kHz samplers 11 Sampler Models 16 S612 1985 X7000 Keyboard Sampler 1986 S700 1987 S900 1986 X3700 Keyboard Sampler 1986 S950 1988 S1000 1988 S1000KB Keyboard Sampler 1988 S1000PB Playback only device 1988 S1100 1992 S01 1993 S2000 1995 S2800 1992 S20 Drum Machine styled device 1997 S3000 1993 S3000XL S3200 1996 S3200XL 1996 S5000 1998 S6000 1999 Z4 2002 Z8 2002MPC edit nbsp MPC2000 nbsp MPC60 Main article Akai MPC Akai also produced several Digital MIDI sequencers and digital synthesizers such as the MPC range a line of integrated drum machines MIDI sequencers samplers and direct to disk recorders New ownership of Akai Professional edit In December 1999 one year before the application of the Civil Rehabilitation Act ja to Akai Electric Company Ltd the brand of its musical instrument division Akai Professional was acquired by a company of the United States The new company was dubbed Akai Professional Musical Instrument Corporation 2 AKAI professional M I was established in the same year however it was bankrupted in 2005 10 In 2004 following a US distribution deal the Akai Professional Musical Instrument division was acquired by Jack O Donnell owner of Numark Industries and Alesis In 2012 inMusic Brands was formed as a parent company for O Donnell s companies including Akai Professional Current products editIn early 2003 Grande Holdings began undergoing a re exposure of Akai s brands by marketing various audio visual products manufactured by Samsung In the same year Grande began to distribute Akai home appliances such as air conditioners vacuum cleaners and refrigerators In the 2010s it began to distribute Akai smart phones in collaboration with some Chinese smart phone manufacturers such as Gionee in India and other countries Video edit AV receivers Portable DVD players DVD players DVD recorders Home theatre systems Home theatre Speakers VCD players VCRsMobile sound edit Amplifiers Cassette receivers CD changers CD receivers DVD changers DVD receivers Car Audio DVD players Car Audio Speakers Car Audio TFT monitorsHome appliances edit Air conditioners Air coolers Air purifiers Chest freezers Dishwashers Heaters Ice makers Microwave ovens Refrigerators Showcases Vacuum cleaners Washing machines Water dispensers Wine cellarsAudio edit Stereo rack systems Mini systems Micro music 17 Retro radios Sound boxes Portable music players Tape Decks Portable DAT Recorder Player Blue colored body Webshop DirectOrder only OEM from JVC Victor Portable MD Recorder Player Blue color Body Webshop DirectOrder only OEM from JVC Victor Digital edit Wireless Surround Sound Systems Bluetooth MP3 player Mobile phones Smart phonesTelevision edit Color televisions LCD televisions Plasma television Set top boxesAkai Professional products edit nbsp Logo of Akai Professional nbsp Akai Synthstation 25Synthesizers edit AX60 c 1986 discontinued AX73 c 1986 discontinued AX80 1984 discontinued VX90 c 1986 rack mount version of AX73 discontinued VX600 c 1988 3 octave keyboard synthesizer with EWI connection jack discontinued Akai SG01v c 1996 desktop sound module 18 discontinued MINIAK 19 discontinued S612 20 1985 discontinued S900 21 1986 discontinued X3700 c 1986 discontinued X7000 22 c 1986 discontinued S700 23 1987 discontinued S950 24 discontinued S1000 1988 25 discontinued S1100 26 1990 discontinued S01 27 1992 discontinued S2800 28 1992 discontinued S3000 28 1992 discontinued S3200 1992 discontinued CD3000 29 1993 discontinued REMIX16 1995 table top phrase sampler discontinued S2000 1995 30 discontinued S3000XL 1995 discontinued S3200XL discontinued S20 c 1997 31 discontinued CD3000XL c 1997 32 discontinued S5000 c 1999 33 discontinued S6000 c 1999 33 discontinued Z4 34 2002 discontinued Z8 34 2002 discontinued MPX8 MPX16 35 MPC Key 61Music Production Center edit Main article Akai MPC MPC60 1987 MIDI Production Centre 36 discontinued MPC60II 1991 discontinued MPC3000 1993 discontinued MPC3000LE 1999 discontinued MPC2000 37 1997 discontinued MPC2000XL 2000 discontinued MPC4000 2002 38 discontinued MPC1000 2003 discontinued MPC500 39 2006 discontinued MPC2500 40 2005 discontinued MPC5000 41 42 2008 discontinued MPC Renaissance 43 2012 discontinued MPC Studio 44 2012 Discontinued MPC Element 2013 Discontinued MPC Touch 45 2015 MPC Studio Black 2016 MPC Live 46 2017 MPC X 47 2017 MPC Force 2019 MPC One 2020 MPC Live ll 2020 MPC Studio II 2021 MPC Key 61 2022 MPC One 2023 Computer audio interfaces edit EIE 2011 EIE PRO 48 2011 Drum machines edit MR16 c 1985 XE 8 1U rack mounted 49 50 Acoustic drum sound from S 1000 library discontinued XR10 51 discontinued Table Top Playback Sampler incl XE 8 Sound with Dance Sample Sounds 16 bit discontinued XR20 52 2008 Made by Alesis Rhythm Wolf c 2015 Tabletop analogue drum machine with bass synth 53 Tom CatElectronic wind instruments edit EVI1000 1987 Electronic Valve Instruments discontinued EWI1000 54 1987 Electronic Wind Instrument discontinued EWV2000 54 Electronic Wind Instrument sound module discontinued EWI4000S 2005 EWI USB 2008 EWI5000 2014 EWI SOLO 2020 Effects units Utilities edit EX90R Reverb 55 discontinued ME10D MIDI digital delay 56 discontinued ME15F MIDI dynamic controller 56 discontinued ME20A MIDI sequencer arpeggiator 56 discontinued ME25S MIDI note separator 57 discontinued ME30P MIDI 4 8 patchbay 57 58 discontinued ME35T Audio MIDI trigger discontinued ME80P MIDI 8 10 patchbay discontinued MB76 Programmable mix bay 59 discontinued PEQ6 Programmable equaliser 59 discontinued DP88 1993 digital audio patchbay discontinued AR900 1986 89 16 bit MIDI Digital Reverb discontinued MFC42 2001 filter bank discontinued HV10 Harmony generator 2002 VST Plug ins 2002 Guitar pedals edit Analog Delay Blues Overdrive Chorus Compressor Deep Impact Synth Deluxe Distortion Drive3 Distortion Drive3 Fuzz Drive3 Overdrive E2 Head Rush Flanger Phase ShifteriPod iPad Keyboard Controllers edit SynthStation25 SynthStation49 AkaiMPC Fly 2012 MIDI Sequencers edit MS08 c 1985 discontinued ASQ10 60 c 1986 7 discontinuedStandalone Multi track Audio Recorders edit MG614 c 1983 discontinued MG1212 1984 discontinued MG1214 c 1985 discontinued DR1200 DL1200 1988 discontinued DD1000 1990 discontinued DD DL1500 1994 16 track DAW discontinued DD8 1996 discontinued DD8plus 1998 discontinued DR4D 1993 discontinued DR8 1994 discontinued DR16 1995 discontinued DPS12 61 1997 discontinued DPS16 1999 discontinued DPS24 2002 62 discontinued DPS24MKII discontinued RE32 1999 controller for DD DR series discontinuedStudio Monitor Speakers edit RPM3 RPM8 discontinued 50xUSB MIDI MIDI controllers edit APC20 63 APC40 64 APC40 MkII 65 EWI USB LPD8 2009 66 LPK25 2009 66 MPD16 2002 discontinued MPD18 discontinued MPD24 67 2006 discontinued MPD26 2010 MPD32 2008 MPK25 68 2009 MPK49 69 2007 MPK49 V2 2007 MPK61 2009 MPK88 2009 MPK Mini 70 MPK Mini Play comes packed with 128 sounds and its own built in speaker 71 MPK Mini MK II 2014 MPK Mini MK III 2020 MPK225 2014 MPK249 2014 MPK261 2014 MAX25 2014 MAX49 72 2014 MX73 MIDI Master Keyboard 73 discontinued MX76 MIDI Master Keyboard 74 1987 discontinuedSee also edit nbsp Companies portal1 4 inch Akai VTRs Akai VK videocassette format VTRs List of phonograph manufacturersNotes edit Although reliable sources are not yet found according to the several sources kotobank jp ja Akai Professional Masukichi Akai established Akai Press Industry in 1923 then his son Saburo Akai established Akai Electric Company Ltd in 1946 and Masukichi served as the president of both References edit a b c Duce John Tan Andrea 2009 10 05 Akai Liquidator to Receive Payment in Settlement With Grande Bloomberg Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 a b c d Akai Professional Akai Digital Company History AKAI professional M I Corp c 1999 Archived from the original on 2013 05 03 Akai Professional entered the electronic musical instrument world in 1984 with one purpose to give artists the tools they need to express and explore new musical ideas In 1999 Akai Professional Musical Instruments Corporation APMI was formed a b About inMusic and Jack O Donnell Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2023 05 24 In 2005 O Donnell purchased Akai Professional one of the world s most influential manufacturers of music production gear a b Akai Electric Company Ltd Reel to Reel Tape Recorder Manufacturers Museum of Magnetic Sound Recording Retrieved 2013 07 02 About Akai akai com Akai Retrieved 2013 07 02 Akai History adt digital com Akai Archived from the original on 2013 08 10 Retrieved 2013 07 02 a b Rovnick Naomi Lo Clifford 2009 09 30 Raids arrest as fraud police probe Akai files South China Morning Post Rovnick Naomi 2010 01 27 Ernst amp Young pays up to settle negligence claim South China Morning Post Stylish Akai VS 2 appeal The Sydney Morning Herald 1983 04 24 a b アカイプロフェッショナルエムアイが破産手続き開始 Akai Professional M I entered bankrupt proceedings 神奈川新聞 in Japanese 2005 12 07 Archived from the original on 2006 01 12 民間信用調査会社の帝国データバンク横浜支店によると 音響機器製造のアカイプロフェッショナルエムアイ 横浜市都筑区北山田 駿河道生社長 従業員十七人 は七日までに 東京地裁から破産手続き開始決定を受けた 同社は一九九九年十二月 赤井電機 東京都 の電子楽器部門のブランドを買収した米国系企業が 製造 販売目的で設立した Abstract according to the private credit research company Teikoku Databank Yokohama branch by the 7th December 2005 Akai Professional M I received a bankruptcy proceedings decision by the Tokyo District Court Akai Professional M I was established in December 1999 to focus on the manufacture and sale of electronic musical instruments by a company of the United States who acquired the brand s of musical instrument division of Akai Electric Company Ltd a b c d e f Akai Professional Akai Digital Product History Akai Professional M I c 1999 Archived from the original on 2012 01 30 Akai AX60 vintage synth explorer Akai AX73 vintage synth explorer Akai Professional AX73 VX90 AX60 Archive Products AKAI Professional M I Corp 1999 2005 Archived from the original on 2013 07 28 archived on HollowSun com The AX73 was a simple analogue synthesiser based around the Curtis CEM 3394 chips Internally the AX60 had the same voice architecture as the AX73 and VX90 Common to all models in the range however was a proprietary 13 pin DIN socket that allowed you to connect an S900 for processing through the synths analogue filters Akai X7000 vintage synth explorer Akai Synthesizers Encyclotronic Retrieved 2020 10 06 permanent dead link Tape dec Akai SG01v Sound On Sound February 1996 Archived from the original on 2015 06 06 Akai Miniak Sound On Sound May 2010 Archived from the original on 2015 06 07 Sampling The Japanese Way Sound on Sound December 1985 pp 34 8 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai S900 Revisited Sound on Sound October 1987 p 40 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai X7000 Sampling Keyboard Sound on Sound January 1987 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai S700 Sound on Sound March 2001 Archived from the original on 2015 10 17 Akai S950 Digital Sampler Music Technology January 1989 pp 50 52 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Akai S1000 Sound on Sound November 1988 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai S1100 Sound on Sound December 1990 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai S01 Sampler Sound on Sound November 1992 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 a b Akai S3000 and S2800 Samplers Sound on Sound March 1993 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai CD3000 Sound on Sound September 1993 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai S2000 Sound on Sound November 1995 Archived from the original on 2015 06 08 Akai S20 Sound on Sound July 1997 Archived from the original on 2015 09 19 Akai CD3000XL Sound on Sound January 1997 Archived from the original on 2015 06 08 a b White Paul January 1999 Akai S5000 amp S6000 Sound on Sound Archived from the original on 2006 05 23 Retrieved 2011 05 16 a b Akai Z Series Sound on Sound July 2002 Archived from the original on 2015 10 17 Akai MPX16 Sound on Sound May 2015 Retrieved 2018 06 26 Akai MPC60 Music Technology April 1988 pp 40 44 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Akai MPC2000 Sound on Sound April 1997 Archived from the original on 2015 06 07 Akai MPC 4000 Sound on Sound September 2002 Archived from the original on 2015 04 05 Akai MPC500 Sound on Sound May 2007 Archived from the original on 2015 06 07 Akai MPC2500 Sound on Sound January 2007 Archived from the original on 2015 06 13 Akai MPC5000 Future Music No 203 Future Publishing ISSN 0967 0378 OCLC 1032779031 Akai MPC5000 Sound on Sound December 2008 Archived from the original on 2015 06 06 Akai MPC Renaissance Sound on Sound February 2013 Archived from the original on 2015 04 05 Akai MPC Studio Sound on Sound June 2013 Archived from the original on 2015 06 07 Akai MPC Touch Sound on Sound September 2016 Retrieved 2018 06 26 Akai MPC Live Sound on Sound April 2017 Retrieved 2018 06 26 Akai MPCX Sound on Sound September 2017 Retrieved 2018 06 26 Akai EIE Pro Sound on Sound May 2012 Archived from the original on 2015 06 08 Akai XE8 Drum Box Sound on Sound December 1988 pp 42 4 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai XE8 Music Technology Vol 3 no 5 April 1989 p 84 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Akai XR10 Music Technology June 1990 pp 42 6 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Akai XR20 Sound on Sound July 2008 Archived from the original on 2015 06 08 Akai Rhythm Wolf Sound on Sound March 2015 Retrieved 2018 06 26 a b Akai EWI 2000 amp EWV 2000 Music Technology April 1988 pp 33 5 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Akai EX90R Music Technology March 1988 pp 32 3 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 a b c Akai MIDI Effects Sound on Sound February 1986 pp 14 15 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 a b Taking Notes Music Technology September 1986 pp 32 6 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Patching Up Sound on Sound July 1986 pp 30 1 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 a b Effective Automators Sound on Sound March 1988 pp 14 15 64 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai ASQ 10 Sequencer Sound on Sound May 1988 pp 49 53 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Akai DPS12 Sound on Sound March 1998 Archived from the original on 2015 06 07 Akai DPS24 Sound on Sound May 2002 Archived from the original on 2014 09 14 Akai APC20 Sound on Sound August 2010 Archived from the original on 2014 09 15 Akai APC40 Sound on Sound September 2009 Archived from the original on 2015 06 06 Akai APC40 MkII Sound on Sound April 2015 Retrieved 2018 06 26 a b Akai LPD8 amp LPK25 Sound on Sound March 2010 Archived from the original on 2015 06 08 Akai MPD24 Sound on Sound September 2007 Archived from the original on 2014 09 15 Akai MPK25 Sound on Sound October 2009 Archived from the original on 2015 06 08 Akai MPK49 Sound on Sound February 2008 Archived from the original on 2015 06 07 Akai MPK Mini Sound on Sound March 2011 Archived from the original on 2015 06 06 MPK Mini Play Akai Max49 Sound on Sound July 2013 Archived from the original on 2015 06 06 Akai MX73 Music Technology December 1986 p 30 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Akai MX76 Music Technology May 1989 pp 82 3 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 Further reading edit Akai S20 sampler Future Music No 56 Future Publishing May 1997 p 20 ISSN 0967 0378 OCLC 1032779031 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Akai Archive index at the Wayback Machine Vintage Cassette Decks Collection of Akai Vintage Cassette decks and other brands Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Akai amp oldid 1192094634, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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