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Yamaha DX7

The Yamaha DX7 is a synthesizer manufactured by the Yamaha Corporation from 1983 to 1989. It was the first successful digital synthesizer and is one of the best-selling synthesizers in history, selling more than 200,000 units.

Yamaha DX7
ManufacturerYamaha
DatesMay 1983–1989
Price$1,995 US
£1,495 GBP
¥248,000 JPY
Technical specifications
Polyphony16-voice
TimbralityMonotimbral
Bi-timbral (DX7 II)
Oscillator6 digital sine wave operators per voice, 32 patching algorithms[1]
Synthesis typeDigital linear frequency modulation /
Additive synthesis (alg. #32)
Filternone
Attenuator1 pitch envelope & 6 amplitude generators per voice
Aftertouch expressionYes (channel)
Velocity expressionYes
Storage memory32 patches in RAM (battery backup); front panel ROM/RAM cartridge port
Effectsnone
HardwareYM21280 (OPS) operator chip
YM21290 (EGS) envelope generator
Input/output
Keyboard61-note with velocity
and aftertouch sensitivity
Left-hand controlpitch-bend and modulation wheels
External controlMIDI in/out/thru, input for foot controller x2, input for foot switch x2, input for optional breath controller

In the early 1980s, the synthesizer market was dominated by analog synthesizers. FM synthesis, a means of generating sounds via frequency modulation, was developed by John Chowning at Stanford University, California. FM synthesis created brighter, "glassier" sounds, and could better imitate acoustic sounds such as brass. Yamaha licensed the technology to create the DX7, combining it with very-large-scale integration chips to lower manufacturing costs.

With its complex menus and lack of conventional controls, few learned to program the DX7 in depth. However, its preset sounds became staples of 1980s pop music, used by artists including A-ha, Kenny Loggins, Kool & the Gang, Whitney Houston, Chicago, Phil Collins, Luther Vandross, and Billy Ocean. Its electric piano sound was particularly widely used, especially in power ballads. Producer Brian Eno mastered the programming and it was instrumental to his work in ambient music.

The DX7 was succeeded by FM synthesizers including the DX1, DX21, DX27 and DX100.

Development

By the mid-20th century, frequency modulation (FM), a means of carrying sound, had been understood for decades and was widely used to broadcast radio transmissions.[2] In the 1960s, at Stanford University, California, John Chowning developed FM synthesis, a means of using FM to generate sounds different from analog synthesis. In 1971, to demonstrate its commercial potential, Chowning used FM to emulate acoustic sounds such as organs and brass. Stanford patented the technology and hoped to license it, but was turned down by American companies including Hammond and Wurlitzer.[3] Chowning felt their engineers, who were used to analog synthesis, did not understand FM.[4]

At the time, the Japanese company Yamaha was the world's largest manufacturer of musical instruments but had little market share in the United States.[4] One of their chief engineers visited Stanford and, according to Chowning, "in ten minutes he understood ... I guess Yamaha had already been working in the digital domain, so he knew exactly what I was saying."[4] Yamaha licensed the technology for one year to determine its commercial viability, and in 1973 its organ division began developing a prototype FM monophonic synthesizer. In 1975, Yamaha negotiated exclusive rights for the technology.[3] Roland founder Ikutaro Kakehashi was also interested, but met Chowning six months after Yamaha had agreed to the deal; Kakehashi later said Yamaha were the natural partners in the venture, as they had the resources to make FM synthesis commercially viable.[2]

 
John Chowning, who developed the frequency modulation technology used in the DX7

Yamaha created the first hardware implementation of FM synthesis.[4] The first commercial FM synthesizer was the Yamaha GS1, released in 1980,[5] which was expensive to manufacture due to its integrated circuit chips.[4] At the same time, Yamaha was developing the means to manufacture very-large-scale integration chips; these allowed the DX7 to use only two chips, compared to the GS1's 50.[4] Yamaha also altered the implementation of the FM algorithms in the DX7 for efficiency and speed, producing a sampling rate higher than Stanford's synthesizers. Chowning felt this produced a noticeable "brilliant kind of sound".[4]

Yamaha displayed a prototype of the DX7 in 1982, branded the CSDX in reference to the Yamaha CS range of analog synthesizers.[6] In late 1982, Briton Dave Bristow and American Gary Leuenberger, experts on the Yamaha CS-80, flew to Japan to develop the DX7's voices. They had less than four days to create the DX7's 128 preset patches.[7]

Features

 
The settings buttons include controls for effects such as portamento.

Compared to the "warm" and "fuzzy" sounds of analog synthesizers, the digital DX7 sounds "harsh", "glassy" and "chilly",[8] with a richer, brighter sound.[9] Its preset sounds constitute "struck" and "plucked" sounds with complex transients.[9] Its keyboard spans five octaves,[7] with sixteen-note polyphony, meaning sixteen notes can sound simultaneously. It has 32 sound-generating algorithms,[1] each a different arrangement of its six sine wave operators.[9] The keyboard expression allows for velocity sensitivity and aftertouch.[7] The DX7 was the first synthesizer with a liquid-crystal display, and the first to allow users to name patches.[7]

Sales

The DX7 was the first commercially successful digital synthesizer[10][11][12] and remains one of the bestselling synthesizers in history.[11][13] According to Bristow, Yamaha had hoped the DX7 would sell more than 20,000 units; within a year, orders exceeded 150,000,[7] and it had sold 200,000 units after three years.[14] It was the first synthesizer to sell more than 100,000 units.[7] Yamaha manufactured units on a scale American competitors could not match; by comparison, Moog sold 12,000 Minimoog synthesizers in 11 years, and could not meet demand.[14] The FM patent was for years one of Stanford's highest earning.[15] Chowning received royalties for all of Yamaha's FM synthesizers.[3]

According to Dave Smith, founder of the synthesizer company Sequential, "The synthesizer market was tiny in the late 70s. No one was selling 50,000 of these things. It wasn't until the Yamaha DX7 came out that a company shipped 100,000-plus synths."[16] Smith said the DX7 sold well as it was reasonably priced, had keyboard expression and 16 voices, and importantly was better at emulating acoustic sounds than competing products.[16] Chowning credited the success to the combination of his FM patent with Yamaha's chip technology.[4]

Impact

At the time of release, the DX7 was the first digital synthesizer most musicians had used.[8] It was very different from the analog synthesizers that had dominated the market; according to MusicRadar, its "spiky" and "crystalline" sounds made it "the perfect antidote to a decade of analog waveforms".[17]

"Danger Zone", a 1986 single by Kenny Loggins, uses the DX7 "BASS 1" preset.

With complex submenus displayed on an LCD and no knobs and sliders to adjust the sound, many found the DX7 difficult to program.[18] MusicRadar described its interface as "nearly impenetrable", with "operators, algorithms and unusual envelopes ... accessed through tedious menus and a diminutive display".[17] Rather than create their own sounds, most users used the presets,[8] which became widely used in 1980s pop music.[9] The "BASS 1" preset was used on songs such as "Take On Me" by A-ha, "Danger Zone" by Kenny Loggins, and "Fresh" by Kool & the Gang.[8]

The "E PIANO 1" preset became particularly famous,[8][19] especially for power ballads,[20] and was used by artists including Whitney Houston, Chicago,[20] Phil Collins, Luther Vandross, Billy Ocean[8] and Celine Dion.[21] In 1986, the preset was used in 40% of the number-one singles on the US Billboard Hot 100, 40% of country number ones, and 60% of RnB number ones.[22] The preset imitates a Rhodes piano, prompting some to abandon the Rhodes in favor of the DX7.[23]

A few musicians skilled at programming the DX7 found employment creating sounds for other acts.[24] Brian Eno learned to program the DX7 in depth and used it to create ambient music on his 1983 album Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks.[8] He shared instructions for recreating his patches in a 1987 issue of Keyboard.[18] As a producer, Eno used the DX7 on records by U2 and Coldplay.[8] In later years, the DX sounds came to be seen as dated or clichéd, and interest in FM synthesis declined, with second-hand digital synthesizers selling for less than analog.[8]

Successors

According to Sound on Sound, throughout the mid-1980s, "Yamaha flooded the market with a plethora of low-cost FM synths."[6] In 1987, it released the DX7II, though it did not match its predecessor's success.[7] Further successors included the TX81Z, DX1, DX11, and DX21.[6] Yamaha manufactured reduced versions of the DX sound chip, such as the YM2612, for use in technologies such as the Sega Genesis game console.[25] In 2015, Yamaha released an updated, smaller FM synthesizer, the Reface DX.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b . History, Yamaha Synth 40th Anniversary. Yamaha Corporation. 2014. Archived from the original on October 23, 2014. At that time, a number of Yamaha departments were developing different instruments in parallel, ... the direct forerunner of the DX Series synths was a test model known as the Programmable Algorithm Music Synthesizer (PAMS). In recognition of this fact, the DX7 is identified as a Digital Programmable Algorithm Synthesizer on its top panel. / As its name suggests, the PAMS created sound based on various calculation algorithms—namely, phase modulation, amplitude modulation, additive synthesis, and frequency modulation (FM)—and from the very start, the prototype supported the storing of programs in memory. However, this high level of freedom in sound design came at the price of a huge increase in the number of parameters required, meaning that the PAMS was not yet suitable for commercialization as an instrument that the average user could program. / In order to resolve this issue, the Yamaha developers decided to simplify the synth's tone generator design by having the modulator and carrier envelope generators share common parameters. They also reduced the number of algorithms—or operator combination patterns—to 32.
  2. ^ a b "The History Of Roland: Part 2". Sound on Sound. Retrieved February 5, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c "John Chowning |". www.soundonsound.com. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Darter, Tom. "John Chowning" (PDF). Stanford University.
  5. ^ Curtis Roads (1996). The computer music tutorial. MIT Press. p. 226. ISBN 0-262-68082-3. Retrieved June 5, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c Gordon Reid (September 2001). . Sound on Sound. Archived from the original on September 17, 2011. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Vail, Mark (2014). The Synthesizer. Oxford University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0195394894.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The 14 most important synths in electronic music history – and the musicians who use them". FACT Magazine: Music News, New Music. September 15, 2016. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d Brøvig-Hanssen, Ragnhild; Danielsen, Anne (February 19, 2016). Digital Signatures: The Impact of Digitization on Popular Music Sound. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262034142.
  10. ^ Edmondson, Jacqueline, ed. (2013). Music in American Life: An Encyclopedia of the Songs, Styles, Stars, and Stories that Shaped our Culture [4 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 398. ISBN 9780313393488. In 1967, John Chowning, at Stanford University, accidentally discovered frequency modulation (FM) synthesis when experimenting with extreme vibrato effects in MUSIC-V. ... By 1971 he was able to use FM synthesis to synthesizer musical instrument sounds, and this technique was later used to create the Yamaha DX synthesizer, the first commercially successful digital synthesizer, in the early 1980s.
  11. ^ a b Shepard, Brian K. (2013). Refining Sound: A Practical Guide to Synthesis and Synthesizers. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199376681. The first digital synthesizer to make it into the studios of everyone else, the Yamaha DX7, became one of the most commercially successful synthesizers of all time.
  12. ^ Pinch, T. J.; Bijsterveld, Karin (July 2003). ""Should One Applaud?" Breaches and Boundaries in the Reception of New Technology in Music". Technology and Culture. 44 (3): 536–559. doi:10.1353/tech.2003.0126. S2CID 132403480. By the time the first commercially successful digital instrument, the Yamaha DX7 (lifetime sales of two hundred thousand), appeared in 1983 ... (Note: the above sales number seems about whole DX series)
  13. ^ Holmes, Thom (2008). "Early Computer Music". Electronic and experimental music: technology, music, and culture (3rd ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 257. ISBN 978-0415957816. Retrieved June 4, 2011.
  14. ^ a b "Red Bull Music Academy Daily". daily.redbullmusicacademy.com. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  15. ^ Pinch, Trevor; Trocco, Frank (2004). Analog Days. Harvard University Press.
  16. ^ a b "Dave Smith". KeyboardMag. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  17. ^ a b "The top 10 classic synth presets (and where you can hear them)". MusicRadar. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  18. ^ a b "Sound like Brian Eno with his Yamaha DX7 synth patches from 1987". FACT Magazine: Music News, New Music. May 12, 2017. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  19. ^ "The top 10 classic synth presets (and where you can hear them)". MusicRadar. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  20. ^ a b Simpson, Dave (August 14, 2018). "More synthetic bamboo! The greatest preset sounds in pop music". the Guardian. Retrieved October 19, 2018.
  21. ^ Saxelby, Ruth. "Borne into the 90s [pt.1]". Dummy Mag. Retrieved September 15, 2011.
  22. ^ "Yamaha's DX7 synthesiser changed modern music". The Economist. December 31, 2020.
  23. ^ Verderosa, Tony (2002). The Techno Primer: The Essential Reference for Loop-based Music Styles. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-634-01788-9.
  24. ^ Roger T. Dean, ed. (September 16, 2009). The Oxford Handbook of Computer Music. Oxford University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9780199887132.
  25. ^ Stuart, Keith (February 13, 2020). "Super Sonic: creating the new sound of Sega's hedgehog hit". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  26. ^ Goldman 2015-10-13T19:59:00.285Z, Dan 'JD73' (October 13, 2015). "Yamaha Reface DX review". MusicRadar. Retrieved February 2, 2020.

Further reading

  • "Yamaha DX7IID/FD Synthesizers". Music Technology. March 1987. p. 30. ISSN 0957-6606. OCLC 24835173.

External links

  • "Yamaha DX7 Digital programmable algorithm synthesizer". Yamaha Black Boxes.
  • Lavengood, Megan L. (2021). "The Yamaha DX7 in Synthesizer History".
  • Lavengood, Megan L. (2019). ""What makes it sound '80s?": The Yamaha DX7 Electric Piano Sound" (PDF). Journal of Popular Music Studies. 31 (3): 73–94. doi:10.1525/jpms.2019.313009. S2CID 203055819.
  • Shirriff, Ken (November 2021). "Reverse-engineering the Yamaha DX7 synthesizer's sound chip from die photos".
    • — (November 2021). "The Yamaha DX7 synthesizer's clever exponential circuit, reverse-engineered".
    • — (December 2021). "Part III: Inside the log-sine ROM".
    • — (December 2021). "Part IV: how algorithms are implemented".
    • — (February 2022). "Part V: the output circuitry".
    • — (February 2022). "Part VI: the control registers".
  • US Expired 4554857A, Tetsuo Nishimoto, "Electronic musical instrument capable of varying a tone synthesis operation algorithm", issued 1985-11-26, assigned to Yamaha 


yamaha, synthesizer, manufactured, yamaha, corporation, from, 1983, 1989, first, successful, digital, synthesizer, best, selling, synthesizers, history, selling, more, than, units, manufactureryamahadatesmay, 1983, 1989price, jpytechnical, specificationspolyph. The Yamaha DX7 is a synthesizer manufactured by the Yamaha Corporation from 1983 to 1989 It was the first successful digital synthesizer and is one of the best selling synthesizers in history selling more than 200 000 units Yamaha DX7ManufacturerYamahaDatesMay 1983 1989Price 1 995 US 1 495 GBP 248 000 JPYTechnical specificationsPolyphony16 voiceTimbralityMonotimbralBi timbral DX7 II Oscillator6 digital sine wave operators per voice 32 patching algorithms 1 Synthesis typeDigital linear frequency modulation Additive synthesis alg 32 FilternoneAttenuator1 pitch envelope amp 6 amplitude generators per voiceAftertouch expressionYes channel Velocity expressionYesStorage memory32 patches in RAM battery backup front panel ROM RAM cartridge portEffectsnoneHardwareYM21280 OPS operator chipYM21290 EGS envelope generatorInput outputKeyboard61 note with velocity and aftertouch sensitivityLeft hand controlpitch bend and modulation wheelsExternal controlMIDI in out thru input for foot controller x2 input for foot switch x2 input for optional breath controllerIn the early 1980s the synthesizer market was dominated by analog synthesizers FM synthesis a means of generating sounds via frequency modulation was developed by John Chowning at Stanford University California FM synthesis created brighter glassier sounds and could better imitate acoustic sounds such as brass Yamaha licensed the technology to create the DX7 combining it with very large scale integration chips to lower manufacturing costs With its complex menus and lack of conventional controls few learned to program the DX7 in depth However its preset sounds became staples of 1980s pop music used by artists including A ha Kenny Loggins Kool amp the Gang Whitney Houston Chicago Phil Collins Luther Vandross and Billy Ocean Its electric piano sound was particularly widely used especially in power ballads Producer Brian Eno mastered the programming and it was instrumental to his work in ambient music The DX7 was succeeded by FM synthesizers including the DX1 DX21 DX27 and DX100 Contents 1 Development 2 Features 3 Sales 4 Impact 5 Successors 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDevelopment EditBy the mid 20th century frequency modulation FM a means of carrying sound had been understood for decades and was widely used to broadcast radio transmissions 2 In the 1960s at Stanford University California John Chowning developed FM synthesis a means of using FM to generate sounds different from analog synthesis In 1971 to demonstrate its commercial potential Chowning used FM to emulate acoustic sounds such as organs and brass Stanford patented the technology and hoped to license it but was turned down by American companies including Hammond and Wurlitzer 3 Chowning felt their engineers who were used to analog synthesis did not understand FM 4 At the time the Japanese company Yamaha was the world s largest manufacturer of musical instruments but had little market share in the United States 4 One of their chief engineers visited Stanford and according to Chowning in ten minutes he understood I guess Yamaha had already been working in the digital domain so he knew exactly what I was saying 4 Yamaha licensed the technology for one year to determine its commercial viability and in 1973 its organ division began developing a prototype FM monophonic synthesizer In 1975 Yamaha negotiated exclusive rights for the technology 3 Roland founder Ikutaro Kakehashi was also interested but met Chowning six months after Yamaha had agreed to the deal Kakehashi later said Yamaha were the natural partners in the venture as they had the resources to make FM synthesis commercially viable 2 John Chowning who developed the frequency modulation technology used in the DX7Yamaha created the first hardware implementation of FM synthesis 4 The first commercial FM synthesizer was the Yamaha GS1 released in 1980 5 which was expensive to manufacture due to its integrated circuit chips 4 At the same time Yamaha was developing the means to manufacture very large scale integration chips these allowed the DX7 to use only two chips compared to the GS1 s 50 4 Yamaha also altered the implementation of the FM algorithms in the DX7 for efficiency and speed producing a sampling rate higher than Stanford s synthesizers Chowning felt this produced a noticeable brilliant kind of sound 4 Yamaha displayed a prototype of the DX7 in 1982 branded the CSDX in reference to the Yamaha CS range of analog synthesizers 6 In late 1982 Briton Dave Bristow and American Gary Leuenberger experts on the Yamaha CS 80 flew to Japan to develop the DX7 s voices They had less than four days to create the DX7 s 128 preset patches 7 Features Edit The settings buttons include controls for effects such as portamento Compared to the warm and fuzzy sounds of analog synthesizers the digital DX7 sounds harsh glassy and chilly 8 with a richer brighter sound 9 Its preset sounds constitute struck and plucked sounds with complex transients 9 Its keyboard spans five octaves 7 with sixteen note polyphony meaning sixteen notes can sound simultaneously It has 32 sound generating algorithms 1 each a different arrangement of its six sine wave operators 9 The keyboard expression allows for velocity sensitivity and aftertouch 7 The DX7 was the first synthesizer with a liquid crystal display and the first to allow users to name patches 7 Sales EditThe DX7 was the first commercially successful digital synthesizer 10 11 12 and remains one of the bestselling synthesizers in history 11 13 According to Bristow Yamaha had hoped the DX7 would sell more than 20 000 units within a year orders exceeded 150 000 7 and it had sold 200 000 units after three years 14 It was the first synthesizer to sell more than 100 000 units 7 Yamaha manufactured units on a scale American competitors could not match by comparison Moog sold 12 000 Minimoog synthesizers in 11 years and could not meet demand 14 The FM patent was for years one of Stanford s highest earning 15 Chowning received royalties for all of Yamaha s FM synthesizers 3 According to Dave Smith founder of the synthesizer company Sequential The synthesizer market was tiny in the late 70s No one was selling 50 000 of these things It wasn t until the Yamaha DX7 came out that a company shipped 100 000 plus synths 16 Smith said the DX7 sold well as it was reasonably priced had keyboard expression and 16 voices and importantly was better at emulating acoustic sounds than competing products 16 Chowning credited the success to the combination of his FM patent with Yamaha s chip technology 4 Impact EditAt the time of release the DX7 was the first digital synthesizer most musicians had used 8 It was very different from the analog synthesizers that had dominated the market according to MusicRadar its spiky and crystalline sounds made it the perfect antidote to a decade of analog waveforms 17 source source Danger Zone a 1986 single by Kenny Loggins uses the DX7 BASS 1 preset With complex submenus displayed on an LCD and no knobs and sliders to adjust the sound many found the DX7 difficult to program 18 MusicRadar described its interface as nearly impenetrable with operators algorithms and unusual envelopes accessed through tedious menus and a diminutive display 17 Rather than create their own sounds most users used the presets 8 which became widely used in 1980s pop music 9 The BASS 1 preset was used on songs such as Take On Me by A ha Danger Zone by Kenny Loggins and Fresh by Kool amp the Gang 8 The E PIANO 1 preset became particularly famous 8 19 especially for power ballads 20 and was used by artists including Whitney Houston Chicago 20 Phil Collins Luther Vandross Billy Ocean 8 and Celine Dion 21 In 1986 the preset was used in 40 of the number one singles on the US Billboard Hot 100 40 of country number ones and 60 of RnB number ones 22 The preset imitates a Rhodes piano prompting some to abandon the Rhodes in favor of the DX7 23 A few musicians skilled at programming the DX7 found employment creating sounds for other acts 24 Brian Eno learned to program the DX7 in depth and used it to create ambient music on his 1983 album Apollo Atmospheres and Soundtracks 8 He shared instructions for recreating his patches in a 1987 issue of Keyboard 18 As a producer Eno used the DX7 on records by U2 and Coldplay 8 In later years the DX sounds came to be seen as dated or cliched and interest in FM synthesis declined with second hand digital synthesizers selling for less than analog 8 Successors EditAccording to Sound on Sound throughout the mid 1980s Yamaha flooded the market with a plethora of low cost FM synths 6 In 1987 it released the DX7II though it did not match its predecessor s success 7 Further successors included the TX81Z DX1 DX11 and DX21 6 Yamaha manufactured reduced versions of the DX sound chip such as the YM2612 for use in technologies such as the Sega Genesis game console 25 In 2015 Yamaha released an updated smaller FM synthesizer the Reface DX 26 See also EditYamaha DX1 DX21 DX27 DX100References Edit a b Chapter 2 FM Tone Generators and the Dawn of Home Music Production History Yamaha Synth 40th Anniversary Yamaha Corporation 2014 Archived from the original on October 23 2014 At that time a number of Yamaha departments were developing different instruments in parallel the direct forerunner of the DX Series synths was a test model known as the Programmable Algorithm Music Synthesizer PAMS In recognition of this fact the DX7 is identified as a Digital Programmable Algorithm Synthesizer on its top panel As its name suggests the PAMS created sound based on various calculation algorithms namely phase modulation amplitude modulation additive synthesis and frequency modulation FM and from the very start the prototype supported the storing of programs in memory However this high level of freedom in sound design came at the price of a huge increase in the number of parameters required meaning that the PAMS was not yet suitable for commercialization as an instrument that the average user could program In order to resolve this issue the Yamaha developers decided to simplify the synth s tone generator design by having the modulator and carrier envelope generators share common parameters They also reduced the number of algorithms or operator combination patterns to 32 a b The History Of Roland Part 2 Sound on Sound Retrieved February 5 2020 a b c John Chowning www soundonsound com Retrieved October 19 2018 a b c d e f g h Darter Tom John Chowning PDF Stanford University Curtis Roads 1996 The computer music tutorial MIT Press p 226 ISBN 0 262 68082 3 Retrieved June 5 2011 a b c Gordon Reid September 2001 Sounds of the 80s Part 2 The Yamaha DX1 amp Its Successors Retro Sound on Sound Archived from the original on September 17 2011 Retrieved June 29 2011 a b c d e f g Vail Mark 2014 The Synthesizer Oxford University Press p 59 ISBN 978 0195394894 a b c d e f g h i The 14 most important synths in electronic music history and the musicians who use them FACT Magazine Music News New Music September 15 2016 Retrieved October 19 2018 a b c d Brovig Hanssen Ragnhild Danielsen Anne February 19 2016 Digital Signatures The Impact of Digitization on Popular Music Sound MIT Press ISBN 9780262034142 Edmondson Jacqueline ed 2013 Music in American Life An Encyclopedia of the Songs Styles Stars and Stories that Shaped our Culture 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 398 ISBN 9780313393488 In 1967 John Chowning at Stanford University accidentally discovered frequency modulation FM synthesis when experimenting with extreme vibrato effects in MUSIC V By 1971 he was able to use FM synthesis to synthesizer musical instrument sounds and this technique was later used to create the Yamaha DX synthesizer the first commercially successful digital synthesizer in the early 1980s a b Shepard Brian K 2013 Refining Sound A Practical Guide to Synthesis and Synthesizers Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199376681 The first digital synthesizer to make it into the studios of everyone else the Yamaha DX7 became one of the most commercially successful synthesizers of all time Pinch T J Bijsterveld Karin July 2003 Should One Applaud Breaches and Boundaries in the Reception of New Technology in Music Technology and Culture 44 3 536 559 doi 10 1353 tech 2003 0126 S2CID 132403480 By the time the first commercially successful digital instrument the Yamaha DX7 lifetime sales of two hundred thousand appeared in 1983 Note the above sales number seems about whole DX series Holmes Thom 2008 Early Computer Music Electronic and experimental music technology music and culture 3rd ed Taylor amp Francis p 257 ISBN 978 0415957816 Retrieved June 4 2011 a b Red Bull Music Academy Daily daily redbullmusicacademy com Retrieved October 19 2018 Pinch Trevor Trocco Frank 2004 Analog Days Harvard University Press a b Dave Smith KeyboardMag Retrieved October 20 2018 a b The top 10 classic synth presets and where you can hear them MusicRadar Retrieved October 19 2018 a b Sound like Brian Eno with his Yamaha DX7 synth patches from 1987 FACT Magazine Music News New Music May 12 2017 Retrieved October 19 2018 The top 10 classic synth presets and where you can hear them MusicRadar Retrieved October 19 2018 a b Simpson Dave August 14 2018 More synthetic bamboo The greatest preset sounds in pop music the Guardian Retrieved October 19 2018 Saxelby Ruth Borne into the 90s pt 1 Dummy Mag Retrieved September 15 2011 Yamaha s DX7 synthesiser changed modern music The Economist December 31 2020 Verderosa Tony 2002 The Techno Primer The Essential Reference for Loop based Music Styles Hal Leonard Corporation p 120 ISBN 978 0 634 01788 9 Roger T Dean ed September 16 2009 The Oxford Handbook of Computer Music Oxford University Press p 81 ISBN 9780199887132 Stuart Keith February 13 2020 Super Sonic creating the new sound of Sega s hedgehog hit The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved February 14 2020 Goldman 2015 10 13T19 59 00 285Z Dan JD73 October 13 2015 Yamaha Reface DX review MusicRadar Retrieved February 2 2020 Further reading Edit Yamaha DX7IID FD Synthesizers Music Technology March 1987 p 30 ISSN 0957 6606 OCLC 24835173 External links Edit Yamaha DX7 Digital programmable algorithm synthesizer Yamaha Black Boxes Lavengood Megan L 2021 The Yamaha DX7 in Synthesizer History Lavengood Megan L 2019 What makes it sound 80s The Yamaha DX7 Electric Piano Sound PDF Journal of Popular Music Studies 31 3 73 94 doi 10 1525 jpms 2019 313009 S2CID 203055819 Shirriff Ken November 2021 Reverse engineering the Yamaha DX7 synthesizer s sound chip from die photos November 2021 The Yamaha DX7 synthesizer s clever exponential circuit reverse engineered December 2021 Part III Inside the log sine ROM December 2021 Part IV how algorithms are implemented February 2022 Part V the output circuitry February 2022 Part VI the control registers US Expired 4554857A Tetsuo Nishimoto Electronic musical instrument capable of varying a tone synthesis operation algorithm issued 1985 11 26 assigned to Yamaha Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yamaha DX7 amp oldid 1127285873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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