|
|
 |
The Return of an Analog Synth Classic Alpharetta GA
In contrast to most second comings of great analog synth names, the SEM is almost identical to the original. In fact, the external cosmetics are changed far more than the innards.
Ken Stanton Music St
1-770-993-8334 627 Holcomb Bridge Rd Roswell, GA 1-770-993-8334 627 Holcomb Bridge Rd Roswell, GA 30076
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: Miller S Music
1-770-455-3596 4978A Buford Hwy Chamblee, GA 1-770-455-3596 4978A Buford Hwy Chamblee, GA 30341
Types of Instruments Sold Acoustic Piano, Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Organs, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: Ken Stanton Music, Inc
1-770-427-2491 119 Cobb Parkway North, Ste A Marietta, GA 1-770-427-2491 119 Cobb Parkway North, Ste A Marietta, GA 30062
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: New School Of Music
1-678-482-2884 4125 Buford Dr Buford, GA 1-678-482-2884 4125 Buford Dr Buford, GA 30518
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Organs, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music
Data Provided by: Jennings Music
1-770-425-2560 2511 Canton Rd Marietta, GA 1-770-425-2560 2511 Canton Rd Marietta, GA 30066
Types of Instruments Sold Acoustic Piano, Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music
Data Provided by: Galaxy Music Center
1-770-879-8381 6150 Georgia Hwy 400 Cumming, GA 1-770-879-8381 6150 Georgia Hwy 400 Cumming, GA 30028
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: Draisen Edwards Music Center
1-770-971-9755 4880 Lower Roswell Rd Marietta, GA 1-770-971-9755 4880 Lower Roswell Rd Marietta, GA 30068
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: Ken Stanton Music
1-770-427-2491 119 Cobb Pkwy N Marietta, GA 1-770-427-2491 119 Cobb Pkwy N Marietta, GA 30062
Types of Instruments Sold Digital Piano, Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by: Classic Winds
1-770-924-0559 2394 Shallowford Rd Marietta, GA 1-770-924-0559 2394 Shallowford Rd Marietta, GA 30066
Types of Instruments Sold Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Sound Reinforcement, Recording Equipment, Guitars & Fretted Instruments, Print Music
Data Provided by: R & R Music
1-404-376-4197 2549 Porter Dr Lawrenceville, GA 1-404-376-4197 2549 Porter Dr Lawrenceville, GA 30044
Types of Instruments Sold Electronic Keyboard, Band & Orchestral, Drums & Percussion, Recording Equipment, DJ Equipment
Data Provided by:
Data Provided by:
In 1974, Tom Oberheim released the first Synthesizer Expander Module, or SEM. Players loved this easy-to-use, ballsysounding synth, and its unique multimode filter gave it a distinctive sound. The SEM went on to become the basis for some of the world’s first polyphonic synths, such as the Oberheim Two-, Four-, and Eight-Voice, which were essentially multiple SEMs in the same cabinet as a keyboard. Beginning in the late ’70s, these gave way to more compact analog polysynths (the Oberheim OB-Xa behind Paul Shaffer on page 28 among them) but analog tone nuts still hunt for original SEMs. Much to their delight, Tom has now reissued it. HANDS-ON - You get 33 patch points on 1/8" mini jacks. The SEM is compatible with all one-volt-per-octave analog synths, transforming the SEM into a powerful synth expander module, hence the name!
- Large coarse tuning knobs for each oscillator offer a five-octave range; small pots above fine-tune over a range of about a major third.
- Unique multimode filter operates in lowpass and highpass modes and is continuously variable between modes with a knob — at 12 o’clock it’s a notch filter. Slide switch activates bandpass mode.
- These knobs combine the oscillator waveform and mixer functions found in separate sections on other synths: Center is off, left makes the sawtooth louder, right does the same for the pulse wave.
- Slide switch bypasses the VCA. Translation: infinite sustain. This also lets users run external audio inputs through the filter without triggering the envelopes — handy.
THE SIMILARITY STARTS HERE In contrast to most second comings of great analog synth names, the SEM is almost identical to the original. In fact, the external cosmetics are changed far more than the innards. Tom tells us that just one component was changed from the original design due to lack of availability, and it doesn’t affect the sound. He kept the wedge-shaped beige case, and even the knobs are the same parts as on the originals. Some details have changed: two separate tuning knobs work better than the original’s touchy concentric arrangement. The biggest difference is the 33-jack patch panel. Since “bringing out” patch points is a common mod on originals, Oberheim took it one more step — a large step — providing fantastic flexibility for interfacing with other analog gear. Modular and Moogerfooger maniacs rejoice! MIDI AND THE SEM The SEM’s extensive control voltage I/O is a boon for serious fans of analog, but what if you want to just wail on it from your MIDI keyboard? Tom Oberheim will soon release the SEM MIDI edition. This replaces the SEM’s left-side patch panel with a nicely outfitted MIDI-to-CV converter, and adds rear-panel MIDI jacks. Along with standard note on/off reception, there’s an auxiliary CV that you can control with your choice of velocity, mod wheel, or other continuous controllers. The aux CV destinations include oscillator frequen... Click here to read the rest of the article from Keyboard Magazine
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Keybord Magazine is a trademark of New Bay Media, LLC. All material published on www.keyboardmag.com
is copyrighted @2009 by New Bay Media, LLC. All rights reserved |
|
|
|
|
|