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  2. Look Mum No Computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look_Mum_No_Computer

    Battle's first music gear related video was posted in 2016. [3] [7] Besides ad income from YouTube, Battle has also been funding his electronic inventions with fan donations, on the subscription platform Patreon. [3] In 2019, he created a Furby (an electronic robotic toy) based synthesizer, by wiring it up into a modular synthesizers. [8]

  3. Electronics in rock music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronics_in_rock_music

    This led to the growth of synthpop, by which, particularly through their adoption by the New Romantic movement, synthesizers came to dominate the pop and rock music of the early 80s. [48] The early sound of synthpop was "eerie, sterile, and vaguely menacing", but more commercially orientated bands like Duran Duran adopted dance beats to produce ...

  4. Analog revival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_revival

    However, mainstream music was still using digital synthesizers and samplers during this period. [5] Analog synthesizer manufacturers were unable to capitalize on demand since most were out of business; those that remained had embraced digital synthesis and did not want to return to analog. [10]

  5. Synthesizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthesizer

    A synthesizer (also synthesiser [1] or synth) is an electronic musical instrument that generates audio signals. Synthesizers typically create sounds by generating waveforms through methods including subtractive synthesis, additive synthesis and frequency modulation synthesis.

  6. Tonto's Expanding Head Band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonto's_Expanding_Head_Band

    Tonto's Expanding Head Band was a British-American electronic music duo consisting of Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff.Despite releasing only two albums in the early 1970s, the duo were influential in the development of electronic music and helped bring the synthesizer to the mainstream through session and production work for other musicians (most notably Stevie Wonder [1] [2]) and ...

  7. Moog synthesizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moog_synthesizer

    Moog developed the synthesizer in response to demand for more practical and affordable electronic music equipment, guided by suggestions and requests from composers including Herb Deutsch, Richard Teitelbaum, Vladimir Ussachevsky and Wendy Carlos. Moog's principal innovation was voltage control, which uses voltage to control pitch. He also ...

  8. E-mu Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Systems

    The first of these was the electronic electronic dance music-oriented Orbit. [10] In 1997, the hip hop and trip hop-oriented Planet Phatt and the latin music-oriented Carnaval were introduced. [11] [12] In 1998, E-mu was combined with Ensoniq, another synthesizer and sampler manufacturer previously acquired by Creative Technology. [1]

  9. Synclavier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synclavier

    The Synclavier is an early digital synthesizer, polyphonic digital sampling system, and music workstation manufactured by New England Digital Corporation of Norwich, Vermont. It was produced in various forms from the late 1970s into the early 1990s.