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The OB-X, introduced in 1979, was available in either 4-, 6-, or 8-voice configurations. The OB-X was succeeded by the OB-Xa in 1980. The first Oberheim product adorned with the blue horizontal pinstripes on black background color scheme that would become the company's signature look, the OB-Xa streamlined manufacturing and troubleshooting by ...
During the Coronavirus pandemic, Julian released a free bank of sounds for the Disco DSP synthesizer OB-Xd. [22] In 2021, Julian was asked to create presets for the Softube Model 84 Polyphonic Synthesizer [23] which is a circuit-modeled emulation of a 1984 six-voice synth. [24]
Oberheim OB-X internal view. The OB-X was the first Oberheim synthesizer based on a single printed circuit board called a "voice card" (still using mostly discrete components) rather than the earlier SEM (Synthesizer Expander Module) used in Oberheim semi-modular systems, which had required multiple modules to achieve polyphony.
Smith released several synthesizers with the Prophet name, including the Pro-One, [27] the Prophet VS, [28] the Prophet '08 [29] and the Prophet-6. [30] They also released samplers, such as the Prophet 2000 and the Prophet 3000. [31] [32] In 2020, Sequential announced a new version of the Prophet-5, the Rev 4.
The Oberheim OB•12 is a Virtual Analog synthesizer, designed and realised by the Italian musical instrument manufacturer Viscount, in production between 2000 and 2005. The synth used Oberheim brand name under license from Gibson , which bought Oberheim rights after the original company went out of business in 1987.
Azzi Fudd poured in 28 points on 6-of-10 shooting from 3-point range, Sarah Strong added 16 points and 13 rebounds and No. 7 UConn steamrolled No. 4 South Carolina 87-58 on Sunday in Columbia, S.C ...
The 30-second clip, set to his 2002 song "Free," includes a Prince quote: "Despite everything, no one can dictate who you are to other people. The truth is, you are either here to enlighten or ...
The OB-Xa was the synthesizer that provided the main part of Van Halen's 1984 single "Jump". [4] Many other artists used the OB-Xa during the 1980s and 1990s, including New Order, [4] The Carpenters, The Police, Queen, Rush, Rod Stewart, Prince, Miles Davis, Simple Minds and Gary Numan.