Computer Music

BLAST FROM THE PAST: ELEKTRON SIDSTATION

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Over the past two decades, Elektron have become a hallowed name among the synthesis cognoscent­i. Their quirky-yetcapable groove boxes have earned them no small amount of praise by some of the most successful electronic artists on the planet. Many of their instrument­s are now seen as classics, and their approach to sequencing has had a big impact on modern music.

Though the company itself has made valiant efforts to integrate hardware and software, many musicians have looked to Elektron’s powerful products as a means to escape the confines of the desktop DAW.

Ironically, they got their start by literally getting the sound out of the computer. It all started in 1997 when three students at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenberg, Sweden were given a mandatory assignment for their computer science program. Not excited by the projects suggested, Daniel Hansson, Anders Gärder and Mikael Räim decided to build a hardware synth around the SID chip found in the old Commodore 64 computer. The result of their labours was the SidStation, the original run of which numbered a whopping ten units. Realising they had a viable product on their hands, the trio secured university backing to help start a company.

The very definition of a boutique instrument, the SidStation could only be produced in finite numbers – depending on how many of the original SID chips could be obtained at any given time. As a result, production went through various editions and price points, depending on demand.

What could a proud SidStation owner expect to be getting for their money? A keen analogue/ digital hybrid in a slab of silver designed as a desktop module. The legendary Elektron sequencer had not yet come into play – this was a MIDI module, pure and simple. A SidStation voice consisted of three oscillator­s, each capable of producing one of five waveforms: triangle, noise, saw, pulse, and mixed. Oscillator­s could modulate one another, synced, transposed, delayed, detuned, and subjected to pulse-width modulation. Wavescanni­ng provided some PPG-like timbres. A multimode, resonant filter was provided, as were four envelope generators and LFOs.

It should go without saying that a SidStation is an excellent source of chiptune patches, but it also makes a fine resource for gritty leads and grumpy basses. Alas, the company eventually ran out of SID chips and production came to an end in 2006. A facsimile of the SID sound would then live on in the later Monomachin­e, alongside a number of other quite unashamedl­y digital oscillator­s.

Despite their limited numbers, secondhand prices hover around what the unit cost when it was new – it has yet to achieve vintage collectors’ status, despite having reached its second decade. There are, of course, many ways for someone to achieve SID-like sounds on a computer, but if you should stumble upon a SidStation for a good price, it’s definitely worth checking out.

In 1998, the SidStation made it quite clear that they were headed for great things; and in 2018, Elektron are celebratin­g their 20th year.

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