The Casio CZ-101 is a synthesizer released by Casio in 1984. It was one of the first affordable digital synthesizers and was notable for its 8-voice polyphony and its use of phase distortion synthesis. It was popular in the 1980s and 1990s for its unique sound and its affordability.
The Access Virus TI represents a groundbreaking evolution in synthesizer design, bridging the divide between hardware and software instruments through what Access calls "Total Integration" (hence the TI designation). Released in October 2005 after...
In 1978 in order to consolidate the company’s position on the market Sequential Circuits released Prophet-10. Basically the synthesizer is two combined Prophet-5 units. The architecture of the synthesizer is not changed at all, the only difference is in...
The Korg PolySix is a polyphonic analog synthesizer released by Korg in 1981. It was one of the first synthesizers to feature programmable memory, allowing users to store and recall their own sounds. The PolySix also featured a built-in chorus effect, as...
The Korg EX-8000 is a hybrid digital-analog synthesizer module released by Korg in 1987. It is an 8-voice polyphonic rackmount and desktop synthesizer with digital oscillators and delay effects but analog LPF and VCA. The EX-8000 was designed to be...