Computer Music

Oberheim DSX

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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.

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