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VST plug-in soft-synth versions of some of these keyboards have also been released by various developers, including the Yamaha PSS-170 and PSS-480 by Audio Animals, [9] [10] GSS-370 (based on the PSS370 keyboard) [11] and PortaFM. [12] [13]
Japanese Master System, Sega Mark III, MSX (in MSX Music cartridges like the FM-PAC, and internally in several Japanese models by Panasonic, Sony and Sanyo), Yamaha Portasound digital keyboards (PSS-140, PSS-170, PSS-270) Silicon-gate NMOS LSI chip [69] [33] [63] YM2604 (OPS2) / YM3609 (EGM) 1986 96 16 6 Yamaha DX7 II and TX802 digital synthesizers
Yamaha PSS-570 49 mini-keys 21-sounds, 5 steps sliders, additional YM3301 chip [17] for drums (1987) Synthesizers that use the YM2413 (cost reduced YM3812): [16] Yamaha PSR-6 49-keys 100-sounds (1994) Yamaha PSS-140 37 mini-keys 100-sounds (1988); the PSS-140 actually uses the YM2420, a slightly modified variant of the YM2413 with different ...
The Yamaha WX5, WX11, and WX7 are ... / PSS-480 / PSS-680 (1988, FM&acc) PSS-170 44-keys 100-sounds, YM2413 (1986) ... two FM operators, nine voice polyphony ...
Yamaha YM2420 (OPLL2) is a variant with slightly changed registers (intentionally undocumented to avoid hardware piracy), used in Yamaha's own home keyboards. It has the same pinout and built-in FM patches as the YM2413, but several registers have parts of the bit order reversed. Yamaha YM2423 (OPLL-X) is another YM2413 derivative. It has the ...
In the late 1990s, Yamaha released a series of portable battery operated keyboards under the PSS and the PSR range of keyboards. The Yamaha PSS-14 and PSS-15 keyboards were upgrades to the Yamaha PSS-7 with short demo songs, short selectable phrases, and sound effects. [13] In 2002, Yamaha closed its archery product business that was started in ...
The Yamaha DX5 is a derivative of the DX1, introduced in 1985 with a list price of US$3,495. It has the same synth engine, but lacks the DX1's fully weighted keys, polyphonic aftertouch, aesthetics (rosewood case and wooden keyboard), and user interface features (parameter displays).
Released on June 29, 2007 by PowerFX, Sweet Ann was originally developed for the original Vocaloid engine, but was later ported to Vocaloid 2, and was released as the first voice bank for the engine. She was also released in Taiwan on September 7, 2011, with boxart that was reworked for the Taiwanese market. [ 13 ]