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Casio SD Synthesizers

Casio's SD ("Spectrum Dynamic") Synthesizers were a late-1980s line of analog synthesizers featuring a resonant filter. SD synthesis was traditional DCO-analog synthesis, with the main difference being that some of the SD waveforms' harmonic spectrums changed temporally, or dynamically in relation to the amplitude envelope.

SD synthesis is used in seven Casio synthesizers and home keyboards released in 1987 and produced until 1991, when Casio exited the synthesizer market completely and focused solely on pure consumer keyboards. Due to some programming limitations plus Casio's poor marketing, the SD synths never gained wide popularity and are now fairly rare in the second-hand marketplace (which adds to their charm, according to some).

There still exists a small but devoted fanbase who insist that SD synthesis, particularly as expanded in the high-end model HT-6000, was overlooked and highly underrated and today rare.

Background edit

SD Synthesis followed on the heels of the more advanced Phase-Distortion (PD) Synthesis employed in the successful line of Casio CZ synthesizers. When Casio decided to retire the CZ line, they decided to go in two directions: more complex (the VZ "Interactive" Phase Distortion line), and more traditional (SD synthesis, starting with the HZ-600). In turning to SD synthesis Casio meant to create a synthesis engine that was more comprehensible and accessible than Phase Distortion synthesis. Yamaha's then-active lawsuit against Casio's PD synthesis method, which claimed PD synthesis infringed on patents of Yamaha's including their famous frequency modulation synthesis, may also have contributed to Casio's development of SD synthesis to diversify their offering.

The 1987 Casio HZ-600 was the initial model and was considered an entry-level offshoot of the "Z" series of synthesizers that included the CZ and VZ lines. The subsequent SD synthesizers were marketed as advanced home keyboards (i.e., including speakers and programmable accompaniment) launched under the HT prefix (with the notable exception of the non-editable, preset-only Casiotone versions, the MT-600 and CT-630).

SD Synthesis Details edit

SD (Spectrum Dynamic) Synthesis was modeled on traditional DCO-VCF-DCA analog synthesis but used waveforms that included predefined variations over time. The SD sound source is a 4-bit (16-step) digitally controlled oscillator (DCO) that uses waveforms including triangles, sawtooth, squares of different widths, and some unusual pulses, plus various combinations thereof.

The DCO has preprogrammed control of the timbre of the waveform, and some (but not all) of the available waveforms are "moving", meaning that their spectra are designed to change as the DCA envelope progresses. For example, one waveform has an octave-unison effect where the higher harmonics fade in over time. This predefined temporal motion of the harmonic spectrum yields the term "Spectrum Dynamic."

The user has very limited influence over the spectrum dynamic using the DCA envelope, and doing so is something of a trial-and-error process. In effect, each so-called "waveform" of an SD synth consists of 2 layered sub voices with independent preset volume envelopes (that cannot be changed by the user).[citation needed] Thus, some "waveforms" crossfade between timbres without filter sweep to simulate e.g. the brighter attack phase of metallic clangs or picked strings.

Most SD synthesizers use a single DCO (plus a digital noise generator for certain waveforms) per voice, and offer 32 possible waveforms. The top-of-the-line Casio HT-6000 offered 64 possible waveforms, 4 DCOs per voice, velocity, detuning, ring-modulation, and an expanded SD parameter set.

In SD synthesis, an analog voltage-controlled resonant filter (VCF) is used to shape the DCO's waveform (whereas on Casio CZ Synthesizers the phase distortion engine could only emulate a resonant filter). The SD sound is further shaped by a digitally controlled amplitude (DCA) envelope. Both the VCF and DCA are programmed with traditional 4-stage attack/decay/sustain/release (ADSR) curves [whereas the CZ line used sophisticated 8-stage envelopes and also included a pitch envelope].

Finally, like on the CZ's, a low-frequency oscillator (LFO) is programmable to modulate the DCO pitch, but unfortunately it cannot modulate the VCF or DCA. Nearly all of the SD synth parameters had 5-bit precision, allowing a stepwise range of 0-31.

Summary of Models edit

HZ-600 edit

The HZ-600 was the first SD synthesizer, and was the only SD synthesizer built to look like a "professional" synthesizer, i.e., without built-in speakers or auto-accompaniment controls. In contrast to the bulky-looking Casio CZ line, the HZ-600 was deliberately styled after the sleek-looking Roland Alpha Juno 2 right down to the inclusion of an "alpha-dial" programming wheel.

The HZ-600 was a 61-key, 8-note polyphonic basic-MIDI synthesizer without initial- or after-touch, and functionally was essentially an advanced Korg Poly-800. Like the Poly-800, all voices (in each channel) shared a single VCF, meaning the VCF envelope would retrigger when a new note was played, affecting all previous notes still playing.

The HZ-600 included 3 levels of onboard analog chorus, 3 selectable keyboard split points, 3 selectable pitch-bender ranges, a modulation wheel, transpose, and a card slot for the new sleek Casio RA-100 RAM cards, which had 8K of memory. Unlike the CZ series, portamento was not available.[1]

MT-600 edit

The MT-600 was a non-programmable home keyboard variant of the HT-700. While not technically a synthesizer (the tones could not be altered and new sounds could not be created), it used the SD synthesis engine and had the same preset patches as the HZ-600 (arranged in a different order). The case of the MT-600 was smaller than the HZ-600, with only 49 mini-keys, but as a home keyboard it did include stereo speakers and auto-accompaniment. The MT-600 included a pitch-bender, which was unusual for home keyboards at the time. Unlike the HZ-600, the pitch bend range was not selectable. Auto-accompaniment used a fixed bass patch, and the "lower tone" sounds of the HZ-600 for chords. Drums were low-resolution 8-bit PCM samples and resembled an expanded Casio SK-5 drumkit. The MT-600 was a 3-part multitimbral for use as a MIDI sound source.

CT-630 edit

The CT-630 was a non-programmable home keyboard variant of the HT-3000. It had 61 full-size keys, stereo speakers, MIDI THRU, 1/4" stereo output jacks, volume pedal jack, sustain pedal jack and a 3-point splittable keyboard. It included the "Ending" and "Auto Harmonize" features but did not have any pitch bending capability, even through MIDI. It used nearly the same case as the HT-3000, with an unused space for a RAM card slot. Released by Hohner as the PK100.

HT-700 edit

The HT-700 was the user-programmable version of the MT-600 (hence the prefix HT). It included the fully editable SD synthesis of the HZ-600, plus it took the auto-accompaniment of the MT-600 and made it fully editable too (a very rare and powerful feature). Users could fully program their 2-measure patterns consisting of drums, basslines and chord inversions. The fill-in measure was also programmable. The HT-700 had 49 mini-keys and a pitch bender, and looked somewhat similar to the MT-600. Unlike the MT-600, though, it included a programming wheel and a card slot for Casio RA-100 RAM cards. The HT-700 and other HT synths could not store nearly as many patches to a RAM card as the HZ-600, because most of the RAM card capacity was reserved to store accompaniment patterns and chord/operation sequences. The HT-700 was also sold by Hohner in Germany as the 'KS-49 midi' (with a slightly different preset sound set).

 
The Casio HT3000

HT-3000 edit

The HT-3000 was the full-size version of the HT-700. Like the HZ-600 (but in distinction from the MT-600 and HT-700), it had 61 full-size keys, a modulation wheel, a volume-pedal jack, MIDI THRU, and a 3-point splittable keyboard. Versus the HT-700, it also added a few other features such as an "Ending" for auto-rhythms, and "auto-harmonize." The HT-3000 was also sold by Hohner in Germany as the 'KS-61 Midi'.[2]

HT-3500 edit

The HT-3500 was not released in North America. Details are unclear but it is not believed to be substantively different from the HT-3000.

HT-6000 edit

The HT-6000, released in late 1987 but not widely available until late 1988, was an entirely different SD synthesizer which greatly expanded SD as the synthesis engine. While designed as a consumer model, it was far more powerful than the more professional-appearing HZ-600 whose synthesis engine the other HT's utilized.

The HT-6000 introduced for the HT line some of the more high-end features previously only included by Casio in the CZ line, such as ring-modulation, detuning, key-follow, and initial-touch (which, among the CZ's, was only found on most advanced model, the CZ-1). The HT-6000 used an impressive 4 DCOs per voice (vs. 1 on the other SD synths, and 2 on the CZ synths). It had 64 DCO waveforms to choose from (32 basic, 16 with noise [white or metallic], and 16 with ring modulation). It had 8 independent VCF filters (1 per voice, vs. 1 per channel), and added key-follow parameters for both the DCA and VCF. The DCA also added attack and decay curves (acute and obtuse). It also added an independent ADSR envelope for noise.

The 4 DCOs each use the same waveform, VCF and DCA envelopes, but can have separate tunings, velocity response curves, and relative DCA envelope depths. Stacking the oscillators with detunes allowed the creation of flange and chorus effects, fat "super saws", and the creation of dual-note or even triad and 4-note leads. The filter cutoffs could be set to respond to velocity which added some expressiveness. Because each oscillator could have separate tuning and velocity responses, it was also possible to have the pitch change according to pressure, if one of two differently tuned oscillators had an inverse velocity curve. Ring modulation used oscillator 4 to modulate oscillator 3, and allowed the creation of metallic and pulse sounds, lower bass harmonics and even distortion.

Like the HZ-600 but unlike the others, the HT-6000 had a complete parameter list silkscreened on the outer panel, somewhat alleviating the need for a manual. In terms of "home keyboard" features the HT-6000 improved the auto-accompaniment versus the previous HT's by including some additional PCM drum sounds, an additional accompaniment part ("obbligato"), 4 bass patches (versus one), additional chord inversions (including more tonic, suspended and subdominant triads), and the addition of "Intro" and drum and chord "Variation" for auto-rhythms.

The HT-6000 was also sold in Germany by Hohner as the KS-610/TR. The HT-6000 was reviewed in Keyboard Magazine, November 1988, p. 149. If the HT-6000, rather than the HZ-600, had been packaged as the "professional" model, it may have sold much better.

Feature Comparison Matrix edit

Casio SD Synth Features HZ-600 MT-600 CT-630 HT-700 HT-3000 HT-6000
Keys 61 Full 49 Mini 61 Full 49 Mini 61 Full 61 Full
Built-in Speakers No Yes (1W+1W) Yes (2W+2W) Yes (1W+1W) Yes (2W+2W) Yes (2W+2W)
Velocity (Initial Touch) Sensitive No No No No No Yes
Polyphony 8 8 8 8 8 8
Multi-timbral MIDI Channels 2 3 3 3 3 4
Programmable SD Synthesis Yes No No Yes Yes Yes, Expanded
Headphones Jack Front, 1/4" Rear, 1/8" Front, 1/4" Rear, 1/8" Front, 1/4" Front, 1/4"
Volume Pedal/Sustain Jacks Yes, 1/4" Stereo No Yes, 1/4" Stereo Sustain only, 1/4" Yes, 1/4" Stereo Yes, 1/4" Stereo
Line-out Jacks L & R 1/4" None L & R 1/4" L & R RCA L & R 1/4" L & R 1/4"
MIDI Jacks In, Out, Thru In, Out In, Out, Thru In, Out In, Out, Thru In, Out, Thru
Transpose -5 to +6 No No -5 to +6 -5 to +6 -5 to +6
Chorus Analog, 3 levels Analog, no levels Analog, no levels Analog, 3 levels Analog, 3 levels Analog, 3 levels
RAM Card Patch Capacity (Upper/Lower) 120 / 60 None None 20 / 10 20 / 10 20 / 10
Accompaniment Sequencer Memory (Banks x Chords/Operations) None 1x 1304/395 2x 640/198 2x 640/198 2x 640/198 2x 427/198
Pitch Bender Range Selectable (Major 2nd, Minor 3rd, Perfect 5th) Fixed @ Major 2nd None Fixed @ Major 2nd Fixed @ Major 2nd Fixed @ Major 2nd
Modulation Wheel Yes No No No Yes Yes
Programming Wheels 1 None None 1 1 2
Auto-shutoff override Yes No No No No Yes
Keyboard Split 3 split points None 3 split points 2 (only for auto-accompaniment) 3 split points 3 split points
Preset Patches Piano, Harpsichord, Jazz Organ, Brass Ens, Symph Ens, Synth Bells, Magical Wind, Blues Harmonica, Light Harp, Plunk Extend, Elec Piano, Vibraphone, Synth Clavi, Strings, Synth Bass, Synth Celesta, Pearl Drop, Synth Reed, Fantasy, Typhoon Sound. Piano 1, Elec Piano 1, Harpsichord, Vibraphone 1, Marimba, Brass Ens, Strings 1, Jazz Organ, Blues Harmonica, Violin, Synth Ens 1, Light Harp, Synth Vib 1, Synth Celesta, Synth Bass, Synth Reed, Pearl Drop, Magical Wind, Fantasy, Typhoon Sound. Same as MT-600 Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600 Synth Ens 1, Cosmic Dance, String Ens, Brass Ens, Pipe Organ, Piano, Harpsichord, Guitar, Trumpet, Vibraphone, Synth Ens 2, Cathedral, Symphonic Ens, Synth Brass, Jazz Organ, Elec Piano, Harp, Funky Clavi, Flute, Synth Bells
"Internal" Patch Defaults (Rewritable except on the MT-600 and CT-630) Piano 2, Marimba, Pipe Organ, Strings 2, Synth Ens 1, Synth Vib 1, Koto, Double Reed, Clarinet, Miracle, Elec Piano, Vibraphone 2, Violin, Synth Strings, Synth Ens 2, Synth Vib 2, Synth Harp, Slash Reed, Synth Guitar, Explosion Piano 2, Elec Piano 2, Funky Clavi, Vibraphone 2, Koto, Symphonic Ens, Strings 2, Pipe Organ, Clarinet, Double Reed, Synth Ens 2, Synth Strings, Synth Vib 2, Synth Bells, Synth Guitar, Slash Reed, Synth Harp, Miracle, Plunk Extend, Explosion. Same as MT-600 Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600 Synth Ens, Space Fantasy, Chorus, Synth Harp 1, Pipe Organ 2, Piano 2, Harpsichord 2, Harmonica, Synth Reed, Steel Drum, Brass Ens 2, Metallic Sound, Synth Sound, Fantasy, Jazz Organ 2, Synth Celesta, Synth Harp 2, Clarinet, Synth Guitar, Marimba
Auto accompaniment patterns None 20 presets, non-programmable 20 presets, non-programmable 20 presets, 10 internal, +10 card 20 presets, 10 internal, +10 card 20 presets, 10 internal, +10 card
Volume Sliders Master, Lower Tone Master, Accompaniment Master, Accompaniment, Drums Master, Accompaniment, Drums Master, Accompaniment/Lower Tone, Drums Master, Accompaniment/Lower Tone, Drums
Accompaniment Parts 0 (No accompaniment) 2 (Chord, Bass) 2 (Chord, Bass) 2 (Chord, Bass) 2 (Chord, Bass) 3 (Chord, Bass, Obligatto)
Accompaniment Bass Patches 0 (No accompaniment) 1 1 1 1 4 (Wood, Elec, Slap, Synth)
Accompaniment Obligatto Patches 0 (No accompaniment) 0 0 0 0 6
Programmable PCM Percussion Sounds 0 (No accompaniment) No programmable percussion. Preset rhythms use 8 of the HT-700/3000 drums. (bass, snare, rim-shot, elec. toms (hi, low), hi-hat (open, closed), and ride.) Has "Funk" and "Shuffle" presets instead of "Pops 2" and "Electronic Pop" No programmable percussion. Preset rhythms use the 15 HT-700/3000 drums. 15 (bass, snare, rim-shot, elec. toms (hi, low), ride, claps, hi-hat (open, closed), bongos (hi, low), timbales (hi, low), agogos (hi, low), claps) Same as HT-700 18 (same as HT-700/3000 but adds gated snare, timpani, orchestra hit, cowbell, and drops the claps.)
Chord Inversions available for Custom Accompaniment 0 (No accompaniment) 0 (Not programmable) 0 (Not programmable) 8 8 14
Rhythm Intro No (No accompaniment) No No No No Yes
Rhythm Ending No (No accompaniment) No Yes No Yes Yes
Rhythm Variation No (No accompaniment) No No No No Yes
Accompaniment Variation No (No accompaniment) No No No No Yes
Auto-Harmonize No (No accompaniment) No Yes No Yes Yes
DCO Oscillators/Voice 1 1 1 1 1 4 for upper tones, 2 for lower tones
Available DCO Waveforms 32 (Some including noise oscillation) DCO-based presets uneditable. DCO-based presets uneditable. Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600 64 (32 basic, 16 including noise oscillation and 16 including ring modulation)
Programmable LFO Settings Pitch only. Delay, speed, depth, wave (saw up/down, triangle, square, random) None None Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600
Programmable VCF Settings ADSR w/ cutoff frequency, resonance, depth None None Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600 ADSR w/ cutoff frequency, resonance, depth, key-follow, velocity curve
Number of VCF's 1 shared/channel 1 shared/channel 1 shared/channel 1 shared/channel 1 shared/channel 8 independent (1/voice of polyphony)
Programmable DCA Settings ADSR, depth None None Same as HZ-600 Same as HZ-600 ADSR, attack and decay curves (acute or obtuse), key-follow, plus velocity curves and depths for each of 4 oscillators
Independent DCA for Noise Oscillator No No No No No Yes (ADSR)
Detuning No No No No No Yes, higher than fundamental, fine or coarse (but not both together for a given oscillator)
Ring Modulation No No No No No Yes, oscillator 4 can modulate oscillator 3.
"Line Editor" Programming No No No No No Yes: simultaneous side-by-side view of all 4 oscillators' velocity, amplitude or detune, with 4 pairs of increment/decrement buttons.

References edit

  1. ^ Badger, Mark (October 1987). "Casio HZ-600 synthesizer". Sound On Sound. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  2. ^ "Casio HT-3000". Vintage Synth Explorer. Retrieved 15 February 2024.

External links edit

See also edit

casio, synthesizers, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, ad. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message 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 Casio SD Synthesizers news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Casio s SD Spectrum Dynamic Synthesizers were a late 1980s line of analog synthesizers featuring a resonant filter SD synthesis was traditional DCO analog synthesis with the main difference being that some of the SD waveforms harmonic spectrums changed temporally or dynamically in relation to the amplitude envelope SD synthesis is used in seven Casio synthesizers and home keyboards released in 1987 and produced until 1991 when Casio exited the synthesizer market completely and focused solely on pure consumer keyboards Due to some programming limitations plus Casio s poor marketing the SD synths never gained wide popularity and are now fairly rare in the second hand marketplace which adds to their charm according to some There still exists a small but devoted fanbase who insist that SD synthesis particularly as expanded in the high end model HT 6000 was overlooked and highly underrated and today rare Contents 1 Background 2 SD Synthesis Details 3 Summary of Models 3 1 HZ 600 3 2 MT 600 3 3 CT 630 3 4 HT 700 3 5 HT 3000 3 6 HT 3500 3 7 HT 6000 4 Feature Comparison Matrix 5 References 6 External links 7 See alsoBackground editSD Synthesis followed on the heels of the more advanced Phase Distortion PD Synthesis employed in the successful line of Casio CZ synthesizers When Casio decided to retire the CZ line they decided to go in two directions more complex the VZ Interactive Phase Distortion line and more traditional SD synthesis starting with the HZ 600 In turning to SD synthesis Casio meant to create a synthesis engine that was more comprehensible and accessible than Phase Distortion synthesis Yamaha s then active lawsuit against Casio s PD synthesis method which claimed PD synthesis infringed on patents of Yamaha s including their famous frequency modulation synthesis may also have contributed to Casio s development of SD synthesis to diversify their offering The 1987 Casio HZ 600 was the initial model and was considered an entry level offshoot of the Z series of synthesizers that included the CZ and VZ lines The subsequent SD synthesizers were marketed as advanced home keyboards i e including speakers and programmable accompaniment launched under the HT prefix with the notable exception of the non editable preset only Casiotone versions the MT 600 and CT 630 SD Synthesis Details editSD Spectrum Dynamic Synthesis was modeled on traditional DCO VCF DCA analog synthesis but used waveforms that included predefined variations over time The SD sound source is a 4 bit 16 step digitally controlled oscillator DCO that uses waveforms including triangles sawtooth squares of different widths and some unusual pulses plus various combinations thereof The DCO has preprogrammed control of the timbre of the waveform and some but not all of the available waveforms are moving meaning that their spectra are designed to change as the DCA envelope progresses For example one waveform has an octave unison effect where the higher harmonics fade in over time This predefined temporal motion of the harmonic spectrum yields the term Spectrum Dynamic The user has very limited influence over the spectrum dynamic using the DCA envelope and doing so is something of a trial and error process In effect each so called waveform of an SD synth consists of 2 layered sub voices with independent preset volume envelopes that cannot be changed by the user citation needed Thus some waveforms crossfade between timbres without filter sweep to simulate e g the brighter attack phase of metallic clangs or picked strings Most SD synthesizers use a single DCO plus a digital noise generator for certain waveforms per voice and offer 32 possible waveforms The top of the line Casio HT 6000 offered 64 possible waveforms 4 DCOs per voice velocity detuning ring modulation and an expanded SD parameter set In SD synthesis an analog voltage controlled resonant filter VCF is used to shape the DCO s waveform whereas on Casio CZ Synthesizers the phase distortion engine could only emulate a resonant filter The SD sound is further shaped by a digitally controlled amplitude DCA envelope Both the VCF and DCA are programmed with traditional 4 stage attack decay sustain release ADSR curves whereas the CZ line used sophisticated 8 stage envelopes and also included a pitch envelope Finally like on the CZ s a low frequency oscillator LFO is programmable to modulate the DCO pitch but unfortunately it cannot modulate the VCF or DCA Nearly all of the SD synth parameters had 5 bit precision allowing a stepwise range of 0 31 Summary of Models editHZ 600 edit The HZ 600 was the first SD synthesizer and was the only SD synthesizer built to look like a professional synthesizer i e without built in speakers or auto accompaniment controls In contrast to the bulky looking Casio CZ line the HZ 600 was deliberately styled after the sleek looking Roland Alpha Juno 2 right down to the inclusion of an alpha dial programming wheel The HZ 600 was a 61 key 8 note polyphonic basic MIDI synthesizer without initial or after touch and functionally was essentially an advanced Korg Poly 800 Like the Poly 800 all voices in each channel shared a single VCF meaning the VCF envelope would retrigger when a new note was played affecting all previous notes still playing The HZ 600 included 3 levels of onboard analog chorus 3 selectable keyboard split points 3 selectable pitch bender ranges a modulation wheel transpose and a card slot for the new sleek Casio RA 100 RAM cards which had 8K of memory Unlike the CZ series portamento was not available 1 MT 600 edit The MT 600 was a non programmable home keyboard variant of the HT 700 While not technically a synthesizer the tones could not be altered and new sounds could not be created it used the SD synthesis engine and had the same preset patches as the HZ 600 arranged in a different order The case of the MT 600 was smaller than the HZ 600 with only 49 mini keys but as a home keyboard it did include stereo speakers and auto accompaniment The MT 600 included a pitch bender which was unusual for home keyboards at the time Unlike the HZ 600 the pitch bend range was not selectable Auto accompaniment used a fixed bass patch and the lower tone sounds of the HZ 600 for chords Drums were low resolution 8 bit PCM samples and resembled an expanded Casio SK 5 drumkit The MT 600 was a 3 part multitimbral for use as a MIDI sound source nbsp The CT 630 CT 630 edit The CT 630 was a non programmable home keyboard variant of the HT 3000 It had 61 full size keys stereo speakers MIDI THRU 1 4 stereo output jacks volume pedal jack sustain pedal jack and a 3 point splittable keyboard It included the Ending and Auto Harmonize features but did not have any pitch bending capability even through MIDI It used nearly the same case as the HT 3000 with an unused space for a RAM card slot Released by Hohner as the PK100 HT 700 edit The HT 700 was the user programmable version of the MT 600 hence the prefix HT It included the fully editable SD synthesis of the HZ 600 plus it took the auto accompaniment of the MT 600 and made it fully editable too a very rare and powerful feature Users could fully program their 2 measure patterns consisting of drums basslines and chord inversions The fill in measure was also programmable The HT 700 had 49 mini keys and a pitch bender and looked somewhat similar to the MT 600 Unlike the MT 600 though it included a programming wheel and a card slot for Casio RA 100 RAM cards The HT 700 and other HT synths could not store nearly as many patches to a RAM card as the HZ 600 because most of the RAM card capacity was reserved to store accompaniment patterns and chord operation sequences The HT 700 was also sold by Hohner in Germany as the KS 49 midi with a slightly different preset sound set nbsp The Casio HT3000 HT 3000 edit The HT 3000 was the full size version of the HT 700 Like the HZ 600 but in distinction from the MT 600 and HT 700 it had 61 full size keys a modulation wheel a volume pedal jack MIDI THRU and a 3 point splittable keyboard Versus the HT 700 it also added a few other features such as an Ending for auto rhythms and auto harmonize The HT 3000 was also sold by Hohner in Germany as the KS 61 Midi 2 HT 3500 edit The HT 3500 was not released in North America Details are unclear but it is not believed to be substantively different from the HT 3000 HT 6000 edit The HT 6000 released in late 1987 but not widely available until late 1988 was an entirely different SD synthesizer which greatly expanded SD as the synthesis engine While designed as a consumer model it was far more powerful than the more professional appearing HZ 600 whose synthesis engine the other HT s utilized The HT 6000 introduced for the HT line some of the more high end features previously only included by Casio in the CZ line such as ring modulation detuning key follow and initial touch which among the CZ s was only found on most advanced model the CZ 1 The HT 6000 used an impressive 4 DCOs per voice vs 1 on the other SD synths and 2 on the CZ synths It had 64 DCO waveforms to choose from 32 basic 16 with noise white or metallic and 16 with ring modulation It had 8 independent VCF filters 1 per voice vs 1 per channel and added key follow parameters for both the DCA and VCF The DCA also added attack and decay curves acute and obtuse It also added an independent ADSR envelope for noise The 4 DCOs each use the same waveform VCF and DCA envelopes but can have separate tunings velocity response curves and relative DCA envelope depths Stacking the oscillators with detunes allowed the creation of flange and chorus effects fat super saws and the creation of dual note or even triad and 4 note leads The filter cutoffs could be set to respond to velocity which added some expressiveness Because each oscillator could have separate tuning and velocity responses it was also possible to have the pitch change according to pressure if one of two differently tuned oscillators had an inverse velocity curve Ring modulation used oscillator 4 to modulate oscillator 3 and allowed the creation of metallic and pulse sounds lower bass harmonics and even distortion Like the HZ 600 but unlike the others the HT 6000 had a complete parameter list silkscreened on the outer panel somewhat alleviating the need for a manual In terms of home keyboard features the HT 6000 improved the auto accompaniment versus the previous HT s by including some additional PCM drum sounds an additional accompaniment part obbligato 4 bass patches versus one additional chord inversions including more tonic suspended and subdominant triads and the addition of Intro and drum and chord Variation for auto rhythms The HT 6000 was also sold in Germany by Hohner as the KS 610 TR The HT 6000 was reviewed in Keyboard Magazine November 1988 p 149 If the HT 6000 rather than the HZ 600 had been packaged as the professional model it may have sold much better Feature Comparison Matrix editCasio SD Synth Features HZ 600 MT 600 CT 630 HT 700 HT 3000 HT 6000 Keys 61 Full 49 Mini 61 Full 49 Mini 61 Full 61 Full Built in Speakers No Yes 1W 1W Yes 2W 2W Yes 1W 1W Yes 2W 2W Yes 2W 2W Velocity Initial Touch Sensitive No No No No No Yes Polyphony 8 8 8 8 8 8 Multi timbral MIDI Channels 2 3 3 3 3 4 Programmable SD Synthesis Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Expanded Headphones Jack Front 1 4 Rear 1 8 Front 1 4 Rear 1 8 Front 1 4 Front 1 4 Volume Pedal Sustain Jacks Yes 1 4 Stereo No Yes 1 4 Stereo Sustain only 1 4 Yes 1 4 Stereo Yes 1 4 Stereo Line out Jacks L amp R 1 4 None L amp R 1 4 L amp R RCA L amp R 1 4 L amp R 1 4 MIDI Jacks In Out Thru In Out In Out Thru In Out In Out Thru In Out Thru Transpose 5 to 6 No No 5 to 6 5 to 6 5 to 6 Chorus Analog 3 levels Analog no levels Analog no levels Analog 3 levels Analog 3 levels Analog 3 levels RAM Card Patch Capacity Upper Lower 120 60 None None 20 10 20 10 20 10 Accompaniment Sequencer Memory Banks x Chords Operations None 1x 1304 395 2x 640 198 2x 640 198 2x 640 198 2x 427 198 Pitch Bender Range Selectable Major 2nd Minor 3rd Perfect 5th Fixed Major 2nd None Fixed Major 2nd Fixed Major 2nd Fixed Major 2nd Modulation Wheel Yes No No No Yes Yes Programming Wheels 1 None None 1 1 2 Auto shutoff override Yes No No No No Yes Keyboard Split 3 split points None 3 split points 2 only for auto accompaniment 3 split points 3 split points Preset Patches Piano Harpsichord Jazz Organ Brass Ens Symph Ens Synth Bells Magical Wind Blues Harmonica Light Harp Plunk Extend Elec Piano Vibraphone Synth Clavi Strings Synth Bass Synth Celesta Pearl Drop Synth Reed Fantasy Typhoon Sound Piano 1 Elec Piano 1 Harpsichord Vibraphone 1 Marimba Brass Ens Strings 1 Jazz Organ Blues Harmonica Violin Synth Ens 1 Light Harp Synth Vib 1 Synth Celesta Synth Bass Synth Reed Pearl Drop Magical Wind Fantasy Typhoon Sound Same as MT 600 Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 Synth Ens 1 Cosmic Dance String Ens Brass Ens Pipe Organ Piano Harpsichord Guitar Trumpet Vibraphone Synth Ens 2 Cathedral Symphonic Ens Synth Brass Jazz Organ Elec Piano Harp Funky Clavi Flute Synth Bells Internal Patch Defaults Rewritable except on the MT 600 and CT 630 Piano 2 Marimba Pipe Organ Strings 2 Synth Ens 1 Synth Vib 1 Koto Double Reed Clarinet Miracle Elec Piano Vibraphone 2 Violin Synth Strings Synth Ens 2 Synth Vib 2 Synth Harp Slash Reed Synth Guitar Explosion Piano 2 Elec Piano 2 Funky Clavi Vibraphone 2 Koto Symphonic Ens Strings 2 Pipe Organ Clarinet Double Reed Synth Ens 2 Synth Strings Synth Vib 2 Synth Bells Synth Guitar Slash Reed Synth Harp Miracle Plunk Extend Explosion Same as MT 600 Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 Synth Ens Space Fantasy Chorus Synth Harp 1 Pipe Organ 2 Piano 2 Harpsichord 2 Harmonica Synth Reed Steel Drum Brass Ens 2 Metallic Sound Synth Sound Fantasy Jazz Organ 2 Synth Celesta Synth Harp 2 Clarinet Synth Guitar Marimba Auto accompaniment patterns None 20 presets non programmable 20 presets non programmable 20 presets 10 internal 10 card 20 presets 10 internal 10 card 20 presets 10 internal 10 card Volume Sliders Master Lower Tone Master Accompaniment Master Accompaniment Drums Master Accompaniment Drums Master Accompaniment Lower Tone Drums Master Accompaniment Lower Tone Drums Accompaniment Parts 0 No accompaniment 2 Chord Bass 2 Chord Bass 2 Chord Bass 2 Chord Bass 3 Chord Bass Obligatto Accompaniment Bass Patches 0 No accompaniment 1 1 1 1 4 Wood Elec Slap Synth Accompaniment Obligatto Patches 0 No accompaniment 0 0 0 0 6 Programmable PCM Percussion Sounds 0 No accompaniment No programmable percussion Preset rhythms use 8 of the HT 700 3000 drums bass snare rim shot elec toms hi low hi hat open closed and ride Has Funk and Shuffle presets instead of Pops 2 and Electronic Pop No programmable percussion Preset rhythms use the 15 HT 700 3000 drums 15 bass snare rim shot elec toms hi low ride claps hi hat open closed bongos hi low timbales hi low agogos hi low claps Same as HT 700 18 same as HT 700 3000 but adds gated snare timpani orchestra hit cowbell and drops the claps Chord Inversions available for Custom Accompaniment 0 No accompaniment 0 Not programmable 0 Not programmable 8 8 14 Rhythm Intro No No accompaniment No No No No Yes Rhythm Ending No No accompaniment No Yes No Yes Yes Rhythm Variation No No accompaniment No No No No Yes Accompaniment Variation No No accompaniment No No No No Yes Auto Harmonize No No accompaniment No Yes No Yes Yes DCO Oscillators Voice 1 1 1 1 1 4 for upper tones 2 for lower tones Available DCO Waveforms 32 Some including noise oscillation DCO based presets uneditable DCO based presets uneditable Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 64 32 basic 16 including noise oscillation and 16 including ring modulation Programmable LFO Settings Pitch only Delay speed depth wave saw up down triangle square random None None Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 Programmable VCF Settings ADSR w cutoff frequency resonance depth None None Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 ADSR w cutoff frequency resonance depth key follow velocity curve Number of VCF s 1 shared channel 1 shared channel 1 shared channel 1 shared channel 1 shared channel 8 independent 1 voice of polyphony Programmable DCA Settings ADSR depth None None Same as HZ 600 Same as HZ 600 ADSR attack and decay curves acute or obtuse key follow plus velocity curves and depths for each of 4 oscillators Independent DCA for Noise Oscillator No No No No No Yes ADSR Detuning No No No No No Yes higher than fundamental fine or coarse but not both together for a given oscillator Ring Modulation No No No No No Yes oscillator 4 can modulate oscillator 3 Line Editor Programming No No No No No Yes simultaneous side by side view of all 4 oscillators velocity amplitude or detune with 4 pairs of increment decrement buttons References edit Badger Mark October 1987 Casio HZ 600 synthesizer Sound On Sound Retrieved 15 February 2024 Casio HT 3000 Vintage Synth Explorer Retrieved 15 February 2024 External links edithttps web archive org web 20070625101647 http homepage mac com synth seal html ht3000 html Thorough exposition of SD Synthesis http www legoluft de tech bending e casio ht 6000 html Modified HT 6000 amp HT 3000 with many infos amp sounds https www youtube com watch v CNPyeXwFY30 Brief YouTube video of the HT 6000 in action https web archive org web 20070927175102 http www casionz co nz Site Pronto Files user manuals HT3000 20USER 20MANUAL PDF HT 3000 Manual https web archive org web 20070927175117 http www casionz co nz Site Pronto Files user manuals HT6000 20USER 20MANUAL PDF HT 6000 Manual https web archive org web 20070927175132 http www casionz co nz Site Pronto Files user manuals HT700 20USER 20MANUAL PDF HT 700 Manual https web archive org web 20070927175210 http www casionz co nz Site Pronto Files user manuals HZ600 20USER 20MANUAL PDF HZ 600 Manual https web archive org web 20070927175149 http www casionz co nz Site Pronto Files user manuals MT600 20USER 20MANUAL PDF MT 600 Manual http www helfried wildenhain de synphon HT700 htm Some HT 700 sound examples the Hohner KS 49 clone parameter templates and sample patches http reviews ebay co uk Casio HT700 W0QQugidZ10000000001862069 HT 700 eBay Guide Review http www sonicstate com synth reviews casio ht700 cfm HT 700 User Reviews 1 How to create drawbar organs on the HT 6000 https www youtube com watch v BMi6kqhd 1M A very nicely bent MT 600 in action https www youtube com watch v 6PZfE2Je2bM A very nicely bent HT 700 in action http www denhaku com 87 hz600 jpg Japanese ad for the HZ 600 https web archive org web 20100106211639 http buzzmachines com machineinfo php id 119 HT 700 Codec for the BuzzMachines com soft synth https web archive org web 20030724135258 http www users globalnet co uk clutter html synths HT700 html Some HT 700 programming information http weltenschule de TableHooters Hohner KS49midi html Thorough HT 700 Hohner KS 49 review with notes on each preset https soundcloud com elmosexwhistle casioht3000 demo by alex juno permanent dead link Audio demo of some interesting patches for the HT3000 http www polynominal com site studio gear sold casio ht700 index html Ht700 dedicated technical page with demoSee also editCasio Synthesizer Musical instrument Musical keyboard Casio CZ synthesizers Korg Poly 800 Roland Alpha Juno Phase distortion synthesis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Casio SD Synthesizers amp oldid 1207797411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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