The PARIS Forums


Home » The PARIS Forums » PARIS: Main » OT - AKAI AX73 Keyboard
OT - AKAI AX73 Keyboard [message #101923] Mon, 05 January 2009 18:40 Go to next message
Stephen Stecyk is currently offline  Stephen Stecyk   UNITED STATES
Messages: 35
Registered: February 2007
Member
Just curious if anybody knows of a soft synth out there that emulates this
particular keyboard. Threre's a patch that I would like to use, but the
volume slider is dirty, and no mater how much I've attempt to clean it, it
adds a "scratchy" background sound, which I obviously do not want.

Thanks a bunch!

Stephen
Re: OT - AKAI AX73 Keyboard [message #101929 is a reply to message #101923] Mon, 05 January 2009 19:33 Go to previous messageGo to next message
audioguy_editout_ is currently offline  audioguy_editout_   CANADA
Messages: 249
Registered: December 2005
Senior Member
You could always open it up and hard-bypass the volume control by
removing the slider and adding a jumper (if a replacement part can't be
found). Just jumper it full out.

David.

Stephen Stecyk wrote:
> Just curious if anybody knows of a soft synth out there that emulates
> this particular keyboard. Threre's a patch that I would like to use,
> but the volume slider is dirty, and no mater how much I've attempt to
> clean it, it adds a "scratchy" background sound, which I obviously do
> not want.
>
> Thanks a bunch!
>
> Stephen
>
Re: OT - AKAI AX73 Keyboard [message #101933 is a reply to message #101923] Mon, 05 January 2009 21:56 Go to previous message
Jamie K is currently offline  Jamie K   UNITED STATES
Messages: 1115
Registered: July 2006
Senior Member
Based on the description at sonicstate, it seems like it uses a fairly
simple subtractive synth architecture:

From http://www.sonicstate.com/synth/akai_ax73.cfm
"The Akai AX73 is practically a MX73 master keyboard (minus some
controller features) added with 6 voice polyphonic analog synth. I
believe VX90 has exactly the same sound generating circuitry, which is
based on Curtis CEM3394 chips (the same as in Sequential's Six-Trak and
Max).

The voice is pretty basic, we have 1 VCO, VCF, 2 ADSR's 1 LFO and 1 VCA
per voice. There are some interesting parts, though. The VCO's have
triangle, sawtooth, variable pulse (with PWM) and a composite waveform
of saw & triangle. The PWM actually works with any of the waveforms, not
just pulse, which provides a little more sonic variability. The VCF is a
24dB/octave resonant lowpass and self- oscillates quite nicely. Keyboard
tracking goes well beyond 100%. The VCO can modulate VCF which is great
for ring-mod efects and suchlike. VCF cutoff can be modulated by bender
and keyboard velocity, which is one of the best features in the synth.
There's also a non-time-variable highpass filter in series with the
lowpass filter, which is nice. The two envelopes can modulate VCF, VCA
and/or VCO pitch. The lone global LFO is shared by all voices, but has
plenty of waveforms, including triangle, up/down saw, pulse and random
(sample&hold). There's also a built-in 2-position chorus effect, which
is pretty noisy.

Keyboard assing modes include poly, dual and unison, with 1, 3, and 6
oscillators per note, respectively. Adjustable portamento is available
in any of these, but it's always monophonic."

End quote


So you could probably create a similar patch with any soft synths that
include a suitable subtractive synth architecture, such as Zebra, Pro53,
Reaktor, Massive, ES2, ESX24, the Arturia synths, etc. All these and
more, while not directly emulating the AX73, offer a superset of what
the AX73 does.

Cheers,
-Jamie
www.JamieKruz.com



Stephen Stecyk wrote:
> Just curious if anybody knows of a soft synth out there that emulates
> this particular keyboard. Threre's a patch that I would like to use,
> but the volume slider is dirty, and no mater how much I've attempt to
> clean it, it adds a "scratchy" background sound, which I obviously do
> not want.
>
> Thanks a bunch!
>
> Stephen
>
Previous Topic: Why audio quality matters - recording density
Next Topic: OT: Intel core i7 processor?
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Mon Dec 16 23:01:43 PST 2024

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.02527 seconds