And by 1979 there was the fairlight...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairlight_CMI


73 Eugene W2HX
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>Speaking of old computerized music playing technology, there are two from the 
>PLATO system at the University of Illinois that are perhaps the earliest of 
>all in their category and not all that well known.

The first of the two is the GSW (Gooch Synthetic Woodwind), which is a four 
voice, 7 levels per voice, square wave synthesizer.  It's fully documented in 
Sherwin's US patent 4,206,675.  That one was attached to the auxiliary device 
port of a PLATO terminal and driven from the host computer, at 1200 bps.  It 
worked quite well for playing music and was widely used for music education.  
It's a very simple device as you can see from the full schematics (which are, 
surprisingly, given in the patent).  That patent was filed in 1977 but the 
invention is somewhat older, perhaps 1975 or 1976.

The followon to that is the GCS (Gooch Cybernetic Synthesizer), unfortunately 
not well documented.  That's a 16 voice programmable waveform (256 words by 16 
bits per voice), more levels (256?), driven as a peripheral off the 8080-based 
"programmable PLATO terminal" from a program running in that terminal.  So the 
musical score level definition of what to play still came from the host, still 
at 1200 bps, but the attack/decay etc. shaping would happen in the terminal.  
That one was a bit of an electrical muddle, with memory, logic, and D/A per 
voice followed by a 16 input combiner.  Getting the analog parts to work right 
was a hairy task with far too many trimpots.  Sherwin vowed that any followup 
would be digital all the way to one final D/A, which of course later became the 
answer in the PC sound cards, but if he did that it was after I left.  The GCS 
was built around 1977.  There were some interesting related pieces of work, 
such as a speed-sensing piano keyboard (so unlike an electronic organ you could 
have dynamics, exactly as on a piano), a music editing system with a score 
printing program to print on a dot matric (electrostatic) printer, and some 
other stuff.

I'm not sure if the GCS is the earliest fully programmable waveform digital 
music synthesizer, but if not it is close.

        paul

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