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Yamaha GX-1

The Yamaha GX-1, first released as Electone GX-707,[a][3] is an analog polyphonic synthesizer organ developed by Yamaha as a test bed for later consumer synths and Electone series organs for stage and home use. The GX-1 has four synthesizer "ranks" or three manuals, called Solo, Upper, and Lower, plus Pedal, and an analog rhythm machine.[2] The GX-707 first appeared in 1973 as a "theatre model" for use on concert stages, before the GX-1 was publicly released in 1975.[1]

Yamaha GX-1
Yamaha GX-1
ManufacturerYamaha
Dates1973/1975[1] - 1977
Price$60,000
Technical specifications
Polyphony18 voices totally:
Timbrality4
Oscillator
  • Upper and Lower poly sections - 2 per voice
  • Solo section - 1
  • Pedal section - 3
LFO3
Synthesis typeAnalog Subtractive
Filter
  • voltage controlled 2-pole low-pass and high-pass filters per oscillator
  • static band-pass and high-pass filters on sawtooth and square waves only
Attenuator2 envelope generators
Effects2 x spring reverb
Input/output
Keyboard
  • 1 x 61-key, horizontal aftertouch
  • 1 x 61 key
  • 37-key, velocity, vertical and horizontal aftertouch
  • 25 pedals
External controlNone

Overview

 
Yamaha GX-1 manuals

The Solo rank features a 3-octave keyboard with 37 keys[2] that are full width but shorter than standard. Directly above the Solo keyboard runs the Portamento keyboard[2] - a ribbon controller which can be used to play continuously variable pitches roughly corresponding to the Solo keyboard note below. The Portamento keyboard overrides the solo keyboard if used simultaneously. The Solo rank has only a single oscillator,[2] but has a dedicated low-frequency oscillator (LFO), pitch envelope generator and ring modulator.

The Upper and Lower ranks each have a full-sized 5-octave, 61-note keyboard. They are both 8-voice polyphonic, with two oscillators per voice.[2] Each poly rank has a dedicated LFO, and there is a common "random" modulation generator. The Upper rank also has horizontal aftertouch which can be assigned to pitch, volume or filter, and a polyphonic glide function.

The Pedal rank has a 25-note pedalboard. It is monophonic,[2] with three oscillators[citation needed] but no LFO. Performance controls include a "swell" pedal with footswitch, and a spring-loaded knee controller.

All four ranks use a common voice-card design (called a tone generator in Yamaha parlance) to produce their sounds. Each voice card features a voltage controlled oscillator with multiple waveforms, 2-pole high-pass and low-pass voltage controlled filters, and two envelope generators for filter modulation and VCA control. There is also a variable band-pass filtered sawtooth wave, and high-pass filtered square wave on each card. There are a total of 36 voice cards in a GX-1, containing 36 oscillators, 72 envelope generators, and 144 filters. Due to the extensive use of epoxy-potted sub-modules, a complete set of GX-1 voice cards alone weighs more than a Polymoog.

Preset sounds are stored on "tone modules" - small cartridges which each contain 26 fixed value resistor-dividers. These produce voltages which drive the voice cards, each resistor controlling one parameter of the sound. The tone modules are installed in compartments on the top panel of the synth. An optional "tone board" programmer could be inserted in place of a tone module, providing a full set of knobs, switches and sliders to control the parameters of a tone manually. Tones created this way could then be "programmed" onto a variable tone module using the Tone Module Setting Box. The Upper, Lower and Pedal ranks all have a dual-voice structure, where a different tone is assigned to each of the two voice cards per note. A set of hidden "wave motion" controls allows the second tones of the Upper and Lower ranks to be de-tuned. In the Pedal rank, the second tone is doubled on two voice-cards, both of which have a separate de-tune control.

The GX-1 console weighs 300 kg.[2] The pedalboard and stand add 87 kg,[2] and each of its tube-powered[citation needed] speakers, four of which can be connected to the GX-1, weighs 141 kg[4] (Which together equals a total of 951 kg, or 2096 lb).

The GX-1 cost $60,000 (equivalent to $366,000 today)[5] and was premiered in the US in 1973 at the NAMM convention. The exact production number is unknown, but thought to total fewer than 100. At least 13 GX-1s are known to exist outside Japan, the remainder are presumed to have stayed in Japan.

The GX-1 served as a test bed for the development of the Yamaha CS-80 polyphonic synthesizer, which turned out much smaller and more portable (although still considered mighty hefty compared to contemporary synthesizers for live performance).

Popular music

A number of artists used the Yamaha GX-1 extensively in their recordings:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Model GX-707 Electone". Electone Zone.
    It's rumored that when Yamaha realized the model number shared the designation of Boeing 707 aircraft, they changed it to GX-1.[citation needed] Note the basic design of GX-1 followed the Electone EX-42 released in 1970.
  2. ^ Notable uses are the synth bass intro to "Does Your Mother Know" and the string sections of many songs from the "Super Trouper" and "The Visitors" albums such as the opening of "Lay All Your Love On Me".

References

  1. ^ a b . History, Yamaha Synth 40th Anniversary. Yamaha Corporation. 2014. Archived from the original on 2015-07-11. ... Introduced in 1975, the GX-1 was ...", "Why digital technology in an analog synth? ... It was thus clear that new control technology would be required in order to use a limited number of circuits in a more effective manner. ... This type of device was known as a key assigner, and it can rightly be called the predecessor of today's dynamic voice allocation (DVA) technology. Back in the early seventies, when tone generators still relied on analog technology, digital circuitry was already being put to use in these key assigners.", "In 1973, Yamaha completed development work on a prototype codenamed the GX-707. Based on cluster voltage control, this instrument could be regarded as the predecessor of the Electone GX-1. ... As the flagship model in the Electone lineup, however, this prototype was conceived of as a theatre model for use on the concert stage. With a console weighing in excess of 300 kg and a separate board required for editing tones, it was not well suited for sale to the general public, and to this day is still considered a niche instrument.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Yamaha GX-1 Owner's Manual 1974, p. 24, Specifications
  3. ^ "Yamaha Electone GX-1". www.imoose.nl. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
  4. ^ Yamaha GX-1 Owner's Manual 1974, p. 3, The GX-1's High Quality Speaker System—Model TX-II
  5. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d Lundy, Zeth (2007). "III. Experience". Stevie Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 3-iii. ISBN 978-1-4411-7012-5. This confused tiem of transition also coincided with Wonder's privileged acceleration to the cutting edge of synthesizer technology. He was one of the lucky few (along with ELP's Keith Emerson, Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones and ABBA's Benny Andersson, among others) to obrain a Yamaha GX1, a test model synthesizer that had recently been issued in an extremely limited run.
  7. ^ Jenkins 2009, p. 136: At this time, Zimmer was combining analog synths, ...with digital modules such as ..., though his ... modular system remained a feature of his studio for many years, finally having a Yamaha GX1 triple keyboard as played by Keith Emerson posed in front of it.
  8. ^ a b Jenkins 2009, p. 148: Hans-Jurgen Fritz with Triumvirat learned very much towards Keith Emerson's pseudo-classical style, and after an ancertain start on albums such as Mediterranean Tales in 1972, produced some excellent performances, including some on the Yamaha GX1, which was also played by Rick Van Der Linden of the Dutch classical rock band Ekseption.
  9. ^ Jenkins 2019, p. 135: "... so it was something of a surprise when in 1975 the company launched the massive GX1. This headed the company's Electone organ series but was in fact an enormous polyphonic synthesizer. ... despite a launch price of perhaps US $60,000, quickly sold to top artists, such as Stevie Wonder, Abba, John Paul Jones with Led Zeppelin, Richard Wright with Pink Floyd, and less wellknown figures, such as Juergen Fritz with Triumvirat, and the late Rick Vand Der Linden with Ekseption."

Bibliography

  • Guide To Your Yamaha Electone GX-1 (PDF). Hamamatsu, Japan: Nippon Gakki Co. Ltd. [Yamaha Corporation]. 1974.
    Yamaha GX-1 Owner's Manual.
  • Jenkins, Mark (2009). Analog Synthesizers: Understanding, Performing, Buying--From the Legacy of Moog to Software Synthesis. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-136-12278-1.
  • Jenkins, Mark (2019). "3. The birth of analog, the manufactures and the artists / Yamaha". Analog Synthesizers: Understanding, Performing, Buying--From the Legacy of Moog to Software Synthesis. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-429-84437-9.
  • Reid, Gordon (February 2000). . Sound on Sound. Archived from the original on 8 June 2015.
    Gordon Reid's article on the workings of the GX-1.
  • Reid, Gordon (March 2000). . Sound on Sound. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014.
    Gordon Reid's story on how he encountered his very own GX-1.

External links

  • The Electone Museum's GX-1 description, features and photos.
  • Keith Emerson playing the GX-1 in Fanfare for the common man video

yamaha, first, released, electone, analog, polyphonic, synthesizer, organ, developed, yamaha, test, later, consumer, synths, electone, series, organs, stage, home, four, synthesizer, ranks, three, manuals, called, solo, upper, lower, plus, pedal, analog, rhyth. The Yamaha GX 1 first released as Electone GX 707 a 3 is an analog polyphonic synthesizer organ developed by Yamaha as a test bed for later consumer synths and Electone series organs for stage and home use The GX 1 has four synthesizer ranks or three manuals called Solo Upper and Lower plus Pedal and an analog rhythm machine 2 The GX 707 first appeared in 1973 as a theatre model for use on concert stages before the GX 1 was publicly released in 1975 1 Yamaha GX 1Yamaha GX 1ManufacturerYamahaDates1973 1975 1 1977Price 60 000Technical specificationsPolyphony18 voices totally 2 x polyphonic sectionswith 8 note dual osc polyphony per section 2 Solo section single osc monophonic 2 Pedal section with triple osc monophonic 2 Timbrality4OscillatorUpper and Lower poly sections 2 per voice Solo section 1 Pedal section 3LFO3Synthesis typeAnalog SubtractiveFiltervoltage controlled 2 pole low pass and high pass filters per oscillator static band pass and high pass filters on sawtooth and square waves onlyAttenuator2 envelope generatorsEffects2 x spring reverbInput outputKeyboard1 x 61 key horizontal aftertouch 1 x 61 key 37 key velocity vertical and horizontal aftertouch 25 pedalsExternal controlNone Contents 1 Overview 2 Popular music 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksOverview EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Yamaha GX 1 manuals The Solo rank features a 3 octave keyboard with 37 keys 2 that are full width but shorter than standard Directly above the Solo keyboard runs the Portamento keyboard 2 a ribbon controller which can be used to play continuously variable pitches roughly corresponding to the Solo keyboard note below The Portamento keyboard overrides the solo keyboard if used simultaneously The Solo rank has only a single oscillator 2 but has a dedicated low frequency oscillator LFO pitch envelope generator and ring modulator The Upper and Lower ranks each have a full sized 5 octave 61 note keyboard They are both 8 voice polyphonic with two oscillators per voice 2 Each poly rank has a dedicated LFO and there is a common random modulation generator The Upper rank also has horizontal aftertouch which can be assigned to pitch volume or filter and a polyphonic glide function The Pedal rank has a 25 note pedalboard It is monophonic 2 with three oscillators citation needed but no LFO Performance controls include a swell pedal with footswitch and a spring loaded knee controller All four ranks use a common voice card design called a tone generator in Yamaha parlance to produce their sounds Each voice card features a voltage controlled oscillator with multiple waveforms 2 pole high pass and low pass voltage controlled filters and two envelope generators for filter modulation and VCA control There is also a variable band pass filtered sawtooth wave and high pass filtered square wave on each card There are a total of 36 voice cards in a GX 1 containing 36 oscillators 72 envelope generators and 144 filters Due to the extensive use of epoxy potted sub modules a complete set of GX 1 voice cards alone weighs more than a Polymoog Preset sounds are stored on tone modules small cartridges which each contain 26 fixed value resistor dividers These produce voltages which drive the voice cards each resistor controlling one parameter of the sound The tone modules are installed in compartments on the top panel of the synth An optional tone board programmer could be inserted in place of a tone module providing a full set of knobs switches and sliders to control the parameters of a tone manually Tones created this way could then be programmed onto a variable tone module using the Tone Module Setting Box The Upper Lower and Pedal ranks all have a dual voice structure where a different tone is assigned to each of the two voice cards per note A set of hidden wave motion controls allows the second tones of the Upper and Lower ranks to be de tuned In the Pedal rank the second tone is doubled on two voice cards both of which have a separate de tune control The GX 1 console weighs 300 kg 2 The pedalboard and stand add 87 kg 2 and each of its tube powered citation needed speakers four of which can be connected to the GX 1 weighs 141 kg 4 Which together equals a total of 951 kg or 2096 lb The GX 1 cost 60 000 equivalent to 366 000 today 5 and was premiered in the US in 1973 at the NAMM convention The exact production number is unknown but thought to total fewer than 100 At least 13 GX 1s are known to exist outside Japan the remainder are presumed to have stayed in Japan The GX 1 served as a test bed for the development of the Yamaha CS 80 polyphonic synthesizer which turned out much smaller and more portable although still considered mighty hefty compared to contemporary synthesizers for live performance Popular music EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A number of artists used the Yamaha GX 1 extensively in their recordings Paul Davis used this synth extensively in his studio and it s on display at his home in Meridian Ms Keith Emerson 6 of Emerson Lake amp Palmer in their albums Works Volume 1 Works Volume 2 Love Beach and In Concert as well as various soundtrack projects in the late 1970s and early 1980s including their eponymous Emerson Lake amp Powell album as well as in the concert film of their 1977 Works Orchestral tour and in the music videos for Fanfare for the Common Man filmed at The Montreal Olympic Stadium in winter Touch and Go and Black Moon Emerson described touring with the GX 1 as a roadie s nightmare because of its 600 lb mass John Paul Jones 6 of Led Zeppelin used a GX 1 on their 1979 album In Through the Out Door Jones also used it on Led Zeppelin s 1979 concerts at Knebworth He later sold his to Keith Emerson Stevie Wonder 6 is said to have bought two one of which is on display at Madame Tussauds in Las Vegas He referred to the GX 1 as the Dream Machine because of its three keyboards that allowed him to layer different sounds simultaneously and allowed him to create lush and very convincing orchestral sounds Wonder used the GX 1 in particular on his 1976 album Songs in the Key of Life and his 1979 soundtrack album Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants Benny Andersson 6 of ABBA used a Yamaha GX 1 on several ABBA tracks as well as on tour b He still keeps that at his Riksmixningsverket studio in Stockholm along with many other old synthesizers and keyboards Hans Zimmer 7 bought one of Keith Emerson s old GX 1s Hans Jurgen Fritz 8 of Triumvirat a German progressive rock trio influenced by Emerson Lake amp Palmer Rick van der Linden 8 of Ekseption whose solo album GX1 was played entirely on it Richard Wright 9 of Pink Floyd allegedly owned one for a brief time but it did not make an appearance on any recordings It can be seen pictured in the album sleeve of Is There Anybody Out There The Wall Live 1980 81 Richard D James of The Tuss and Aphex Twin made a track named GX1 solo which was entirely composed with the Yamaha GX 1 Richard acquired the GX 1 from Mickie Most s estate after Most s death Anoushiravan Rohani purchased a GX 1 in the mid 1970s and still has it today The late Venezuelan organist and pianist Tulio Enrique Leon changed from a model C 3 Hammond organ to GX 1 in 1973 He used that instrument until his last recording in 1980 See also EditElectoneNotes Edit Model GX 707 Electone Electone Zone It s rumored that when Yamaha realized the model number shared the designation of Boeing 707 aircraft they changed it to GX 1 citation needed Note the basic design of GX 1 followed the Electone EX 42 released in 1970 Notable uses are the synth bass intro to Does Your Mother Know and the string sections of many songs from the Super Trouper and The Visitors albums such as the opening of Lay All Your Love On Me References Edit a b Chapter 1 Origins of the Yamaha Synthesizer History Yamaha Synth 40th Anniversary Yamaha Corporation 2014 Archived from the original on 2015 07 11 Introduced in 1975 the GX 1 was Why digital technology in an analog synth It was thus clear that new control technology would be required in order to use a limited number of circuits in a more effective manner This type of device was known as a key assigner and it can rightly be called the predecessor of today s dynamic voice allocation DVA technology Back in the early seventies when tone generators still relied on analog technology digital circuitry was already being put to use in these key assigners In 1973 Yamaha completed development work on a prototype codenamed the GX 707 Based on cluster voltage control this instrument could be regarded as the predecessor of the Electone GX 1 As the flagship model in the Electone lineup however this prototype was conceived of as a theatre model for use on the concert stage With a console weighing in excess of 300 kg and a separate board required for editing tones it was not well suited for sale to the general public and to this day is still considered a niche instrument a b c d e f g h i j k Yamaha GX 1 Owner s Manual 1974 p 24 Specifications Yamaha Electone GX 1 www imoose nl Retrieved 2020 08 03 Yamaha GX 1 Owner s Manual 1974 p 3 The GX 1 s High Quality Speaker System Model TX II 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 a b c d Lundy Zeth 2007 III Experience Stevie Wonder s Songs in the Key of Life Bloomsbury Publishing p 3 iii ISBN 978 1 4411 7012 5 This confused tiem of transition also coincided with Wonder s privileged acceleration to the cutting edge of synthesizer technology He was one of the lucky few along with ELP s Keith Emerson Led Zeppelin s John Paul Jones and ABBA s Benny Andersson among others to obrain a Yamaha GX1 a test model synthesizer that had recently been issued in an extremely limited run Jenkins 2009 p 136 At this time Zimmer was combining analog synths with digital modules such as though his modular system remained a feature of his studio for many years finally having a Yamaha GX1 triple keyboard as played by Keith Emerson posed in front of it a b Jenkins 2009 p 148 Hans Jurgen Fritz with Triumvirat learned very much towards Keith Emerson s pseudo classical style and after an ancertain start on albums such asMediterranean Talesin 1972 produced some excellent performances including some on the Yamaha GX1 which was also played by Rick Van Der Linden of the Dutch classical rock band Ekseption Jenkins 2019 p 135 so it was something of a surprise when in 1975 the company launched the massive GX1 This headed the company s Electone organ series but was in fact an enormous polyphonic synthesizer despite a launch price of perhaps US 60 000 quickly sold to top artists such as Stevie Wonder Abba John Paul Jones with Led Zeppelin Richard Wright with Pink Floyd and less wellknown figures such as Juergen Fritz with Triumvirat and the late Rick Vand Der Linden with Ekseption Bibliography EditGuide To Your Yamaha Electone GX 1 PDF Hamamatsu Japan Nippon Gakki Co Ltd Yamaha Corporation 1974 Yamaha GX 1 Owner s Manual Jenkins Mark 2009 Analog Synthesizers Understanding Performing Buying From the Legacy of Moog to Software Synthesis Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 12278 1 Jenkins Mark 2019 3 The birth of analog the manufactures and the artists Yamaha Analog Synthesizers Understanding Performing Buying From the Legacy of Moog to Software Synthesis Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 429 84437 9 Reid Gordon February 2000 Yamaha GX1 Synthesizer Part 1 Sound on Sound Archived from the original on 8 June 2015 Gordon Reid s article on the workings of the GX 1 Reid Gordon March 2000 Yamaha GX1 Synthesizer Part 2 Sound on Sound Archived from the original on 21 December 2014 Gordon Reid s story on how he encountered his very own GX 1 External links EditThe Electone Museum s GX 1 description features and photos Keith Emerson playing the GX 1 in Fanfare for the common man video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yamaha GX 1 amp oldid 1146043017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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