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  2. PPG Wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PPG_Wave

    PPG Wave 2.2 front panel PPG's Wave series represents an evolution of its predecessor by combining its digital sound engine with analog VCAs and 24db per octave VCFs, featuring 8-voice polyphony; and by replacing its nontraditional series of push buttons and sliders with a control panel consisting of an LCD and a more familiar arrangement of knobs.

  3. E-mu Emulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Emulator

    E-mu also released the E-Synth in both rack and keyboard form, with both models including a 16 MB sound ROM and an optional 16 MB "Dance" factory-installed sound ROM that would be accessible immediately upon startup of the unit. The E-Synth Keyboard was the final Emulator keyboard model to be produced. [citation needed]

  4. Minimoog Voyager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimoog_Voyager

    Left-hand control. pitch bend and mod wheels. External control. MIDI, 14 CV/Gate inputs. The Minimoog Voyager or Voyager is a monophonic analog synthesizer, designed by Robert Moog and released in 2002 [1] by Moog Music. The Voyager was modeled after the classic Minimoog synthesizer that was popular in the 1970s, and is meant to be a successor ...

  5. Waldorf Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldorf_Music

    Waldorf Music is a German synthesizer company. They are best known for the Microwave wavetable synthesizer and Blofeld virtual analogue synthesizer. WAVE (1993) atop yellow Q (1999). MicroQ keyboard (2001) left. Waldorf XTk (1999) above Waldorf Q+ (2002, with some special made multiple memory card expansion)

  6. Synth1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synth1

    Synth1 is a software synthesizer designed by KVR user Daichi (Real name: Ichiro Toda 戸田一郎 [1] ). It was originally designed as an emulation of the Nord Lead 2 synthesizer, and has since become a unique Virtual Studio Technology instrument and one of the most downloaded VST plug-ins of all time. The software used to be a DirectX ...

  7. Deep Note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Note

    The authors quote synthesizer builder Tom Oberheim as saying that the original analog form is much richer than the "digital perfection" evident in the sound logo so familiar to cinema-goers. Original score Score for 'Deep Note' In 2018, THX released an image of the original 30-voice score, with notes. Lawsuit

  8. The Midnight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Midnight

    Origins. The band was formed as a result of Lyle and McEwan meeting during a co-writing workshop in 2012 in North Hollywood, CA. Inspired in part by the score for Drive, and the retro synth genre growing around its release, the pair wrote two singles, "WeMoveForward" and "Gloria", that would be released two years later in 2014 as part of their debut EP titled Days of Thunder.

  9. McCartney II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCartney_II

    McCartney II. McCartney II is the second solo studio album by the English musician Paul McCartney, released on 16 May 1980. It was recorded by McCartney at his home studio in the summer of 1979, shortly before the dissolution of his band Wings in 1981. Like his debut solo studio album, McCartney (1970), he performed all the instruments himself.