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Distorted output from an Akai S950 sampler

Mmmm, chips. Barely 20 minutes into using my newly-purchased S950, the sound became extremely, digitally-ish distorted. So before I start crying, it's a good chance to whip the top off the thing and see what we've got in the grey box. Mmm, circuit board porn.

...and it's a lot busier in here than I expected; the weight of the box (almost 11kg according to the manual) should have been a clue here. But then this thing did come out in 1988 - my (also broken...) E-MU ESI 2000 is virtually empty by comparison.

So you can see the power supply on the left, with a large heatsink. There's at least two big main circuit boards, the lower one hidden by top one, which I'm guessing is the voice board, because of the eight identical columns of chips, one for each voice. I imagine the main out is on the right-hand side somewhere. Underneath this I imagine we have some sort of CPU board. There's a large trapdoor underneath for adding two 750KB expansion cards. If your S950 says 512 Kwords on bootup, it's unexpanded - 1024 Kwords equals 1.5MB, 1536 Kwords means it's fully expanded to 2.25MB. 

I was hoping that there was some sort of loose connection rather than a blown opamp or power supply problem, which I'd be rubbish at fixing and tricky to track down. There are wires connecting the circuitboard to the audio out board - waggling and pushing the wires down into the socket the wires in this area (top-right as you look at the picture above) fixed the problem.

So I've not had a great chance to play around with it, but here's a not-particularly indicative scratchy loop of a TR-606 and Boss handclap, with heavy spring reverb, sampled at 5KHz, sat next to an MS20 bassline recorded straight into Ableton Live. 

  
(download)

Filed under  //   akai   electronics   music   s950   sampler  
Posted October 12, 2009
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Cybraphon - bloody genius "autonomous emotional robot band" thing

It's so good, I hope this lives forever. Just to explain what this mad device is  - it's the Cybraphon - a sort of band-in-a-box, patterned after 19th Century mechanical bands, which responds to what people say about it on the internet. The happier it gets, the more happy the music it plays, and vice versa.

I hope it inspires other artists to play around with what I'm guessing it's based on, which is the Arduino - an "open-source electronics prototyping platform" - essentially a circuitboard you plug into your computer over USB, with digital outs and analogue ins, meaning that you can attach all kinds of sensors and output devices.

I've got a couple of these from when I was intending to build a 128 sized Arduinome - and I will get round to it eventually, honest. I got one
of them out the other day and managed to make a couple of LEDs attached to the digital outs flash on and off, such geeky fun.

I should say that the Cybraphon is by the Edinburgh-based art collective FOUND and you can see it at the Inspace Gallery (Google Map link) as part of the Edinburgh Arts Festival, until 5th September 2009.

Filed under  //   arduino   art   diy   electronics   music   video  
Posted August 13, 2009
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Selected Radiophonic Works - three hour special on BBC Radio 7

More Radiophonic noise for you, via my dad who keeps on eye on such things, in the form of Selected Radiophonic Works, a 3 hour special on the Radiophonic Workshop, presented by Richard Coles. 


It includes the usual blatherings from Coldcut, Inferno Revisited - "a sonic drama set in the ruins of Hell", The Dreams - Delia Derbyshire and Barry Bermange combining cut-up voices with shit-scary tape electronics, Electric Tunesmiths - a documentary about the Workshop and its staff, an episode of the Goon Show, and Relativity - an "exploration in sound of Einstein's celebrated theory of relativity".

 

It's up on the BBC iPlayer until Saturday 27th December.

Filed under  //   bbc   electronics   music   radiophonicworkshop  
Posted December 21, 2008
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