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  2. Ace Tone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ace_Tone

    Ace Tone TOP-1. Ace Electronic Industries Inc., or Ace Tone, was a manufacturer of electronic musical instruments, including electronic organs, analogue drum machines, and electronic drums, as well as amplifiers and effects pedals.

  3. Boss Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boss_Corporation

    In more recent times, Boss expanded their product range by including digital studios, rhythm machines, [2] samplers [3] and other electronic music equipment. They also are now manufacturing solid-state amplifiers and speaker heads such as the Waza and the Katana. Both feature multi-effects units meant to emulate Boss' classic effects pedals.

  4. List of Korg products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Korg_products

    KR mini Korg Rhythm – compact rhythm machine with a built-in speaker, battery powered; Korg TM-50C – Combo – Tuner Metronome plus a contact microphone; Korg pitchblack – Polyphonic tuner; Korg CM-200 – Contact microphone designed especially for tuners; Korg HeadTune – Clip on tuner for Guitar / Clip on tuner for Bass / Clip on tuner ...

  5. Boss DR-110 Dr. Rhythm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boss_DR-110_Dr._Rhythm

    As with most previous Roland drum machines, the bass and snare voices are generated by a "damped tuned resonance" oscillators. The cymbals and hi-hats are created by VCA -shaping and band-pass filtering a combination of white noise and four non- harmonically related square wave oscillators (generating a much more realistic sound than white ...

  6. Roland TR-707 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_TR-707

    The TR-707 has 15 digitally sampled sound and 10-voice polyphony.The alternate bass drum, snare, and hi-hat sounds cannot be triggered simultaneously. The instruments are labeled as Bass Drum, Snare Drum, Low Tom, Mid Tom, Hi Tom, Rimshot, Cowbell, Hand Clap, Tambourine, Hi-Hat (Closed or Open), Cymbal (Crash or Ride), as well as an additional function labeled accent, which serves to ...

  7. Boss DR-220 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boss_DR-220

    The Boss DR-220 Dr. Rhythm is a series of two budget-priced digital drum machines developed and manufactured by Boss Corporation (a subsidiary of Roland Corporation) beginning in 1985. Origin [ edit ]

  8. Univox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Univox

    Univox had many effects units, generally made by Shin-Ei, but perhaps their most well known was the Super-Fuzz Pedal, used by Pete Townshend. [3] Univox also produced the Uni-Vibe , a chorus/vibrato that attempted to emulate a Leslie speaker effect, popularized by Jimi Hendrix .

  9. Roland CR-78 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_CR-78

    The CR-78's built-in rhythm sounds were a further development of those available on the earlier Roland Rhythm 33, 55 and 77 machines. The analog percussion voices consist of bass drum, snare drum, rim shot, hi-hat, cymbal, maracas, claves, cowbell, high bongo, low bongo, low conga, tambourine, guiro, and "metallic beat" (an accent that could be overlaid on the hi-hat voice).