Oberheim DSX
Modern electronic music studios more often than not contain a hodgepodge of equipment from different manufacturers that – thanks to MIDI – can all communicate. This wasn’t always the case. Before MIDI, very few synth manufacturers offered communication between instruments, and then it was via gates, triggers and voltages. Most followed the 1-voltper-octave pitch standard put forth by Moog, while others, like Korg and Yamaha, chose an entirely different, incompatible approach.
Roland, Oberheim and PPG further complicated the issue by incorporating digital communication busses designed to be used with their own gear.
The proprietary Oberheim Parallel Buss allowed that company’s flagship devices to be interconnected to form the ‘Oberheim System’. At its heart was the DSX, a polyphonic sequencer that offered nine tracks, at least one of which was intended for use with one of the company’s synthesisers. In fact, the DSX couldn’t be used without one of their pricey synths, putting the System well out of reach of the gigging musician.
Of particular interest were the 16 gate/CV jacks around the back, providing control of up to eight CV-capable analogue synths. Only volts-peroctave instruments were supported – no Korgs or Yamahas. Sync jacks allowed the DMX or DX drum machines to lock up to the DSX, allowing for the creation of complete productions.
The DSX offered up to 6000 notes of storage, ten patterns and ten songs. Real-time and step entry could be performed, with varying amounts of quantisation applied, if needed. Looping and transposition were offered, as was the ability to store and send patches changes and key split/layer info to an Oberheim synth.
Though the DSX was introduced in 1981, Oberheim didn’t begin hawking its System until 1982 – a year before MIDI was standardised. Needless to say, the allure of the proprietary System couldn’t compete with the onslaught of interconnectable MIDI devices to come. Those that ponied up for an Oberheim combo could eventually have their System retrofitted with MIDI ports, but the analogue instruments the DSX was designed to control were rapidly falling out of favour, so it was hardly worth the effort.
Today, the Oberheim System’s requirements make it even less practical than it was in 1981. However, you no longer needs access to an Oberheim keyboard to get sequences into a DSX, thanks to Dan Nigrin’s DSX Hack ( bit.ly/DSXhack). This cross-platform app can translate standard MIDI files into an audio file that can be fed into the DSX via its cassette interface. It’s a bit of a kludge, but it could make the DSX a powerful playmate in a modern modular rig.
Current practitioners will likely want to skip the middle step altogether, choosing one of the many software options that allow communication between computer and CV-capable instruments. After all, as appealing as the DSX’s single-line LED display may have been in 1981, it can’t compete with a modern computer or tablet. The DSX and the System it commanded were an interesting footnote in the history of computer-assisted electronic music, to be sure, but it’s probably best left to collectors.