The Waldorf Wave represents a landmark achievement in synthesizer design, emerging from the legacy of PPG's pioneering Wave 2.2 and 2.3 synthesizers. Released in 1994, this professional-grade analog/digital hybrid flagship instrument from Waldorf...
Neuron is a piece of art and scientific achievement of Axel Hartmann. The groundbreaking technology grows from neural networks meaning that the synthesis is based on the analysis of samples after which digital computer models get created and the result...
The Yamaha Motif ES represented in the end of 2003 a next generation evolution of Yamaha's acclaimed Motif workstation synthesizer series, launched approximately two and a half years after the original Motif. Rather than creating an entirely new product...
CS-80 was launched in 1976. The multitimbral instrument with analog subtractive synthesis features 8-voice polyphony as well as 2 oscillators per voice. Two synth layers are available per voice. Settings memory is based on a bank of micropotentiometers....
The Yamaha Motif represents a groundbreaking approach to synth workstation design, being Yamaha's first synthesizer to bear a name rather than a model number. Available in three keyboard configurations (61, 76, and 88 keys), the Motif series pushes the...