- Buchla
Buchla & Associates, Inc. is a manufacturer of electronic musical instruments, notably
synthesizers and uniqueMIDI controllers. The200e Electric Music Box is currently in production.History
The original Buchla Music Box was the brainchild of
Don Buchla and came from a commission by composersRamon Sender andMorton Subotnick . First built in 1963, thissynthesizer was composed of several "modules" that generated or modified a music event. Each box served a specific function:oscillator , filter,sample and hold , etc. This would have an effect on the pitch,timbre , amplitude and spacial location of thesound . The idea was to allow musicians and composers to create sounds suited to their own specifications. Previously, one had to utilize either discrete audio generators such as test oscillators or viamusique concrete , recorded sounds from natural sources. Although it was a fresh and exciting idea and an excellent way to get new sounds, this was very time-consuming and arduous. The Buchla Box allowed musicians to bend and manipulate sound all in one device. This would lead to the many kinds of electronic instruments available today.The
Buchla 100 series Modular Electronic Music System was commissioned specifically by Subotnick in 1963 for use on his first major electronic work "Silver Apples Of The Moon". He gave Don Buchla ideas and specifications for what the instrument should do. Along withRobert Moog 'sMoog synthesizer , it would go on the revolutionize the way music and sound is made.The
Buchla 200 series Electric Music Box replaced the previous model in 1970 and represented a significant advance in technology. Almost every parameter can be controlled from an external control voltage.In the mid 1970s, Don Buchla began experimenting with digital designs and computer controlled systems. The results were the 500 series and the 300 series, both of which paired the new technology with existing 200 series modules to create hybrid analog/digital systems. The Touché was also the result of this research.
Buchla tends to not refer to his instruments as
synthesizers , as he feels that name gives the impression of imitating existing sounds/instruments. His intent is to make instruments for creating "new" sounds. This convention is evidenced by the omission of a standard musical keyboard on his early instruments, which instead used a series of touch plates which were not necessarily tied to equal-tempered western tuning. He also has different naming conventions than most of the industry: for example, one of his modules is called a "Multiple Arbitrary Function Generator." These differences run deeper than nomenclature though. The Multiple Arbitrary Function Generator (or MARF) goes well beyond what a typical sequencer is capable of performing and is capable of acting as anenvelope generator , LFO, CV selector, voltage quantizer or tracking generator. Another module that sometimes gets cited for its uniqueness is the Source of Uncertainty. The Source of Uncertainty provides many different flavors of randomness, from noise of different colors, to a LFO-like fluctuating random voltage, and a couple forms of triggered static random voltages, all under voltage control. The Source of Uncertainty goes well beyond a noise and random module in a typical synthesizer.It is also important to note that
Don Buchla andRobert Moog simultaneously invented the modularsynthesizer in 1963, Moog inNew York and Buchla inSan Francisco . While there had been previoussynthesizer experiments, Moog and Buchla's major developments that made the synthesizer portable and flexible was that of usingcontrol voltage to manipulate the various elements of the circuits.Buchla's instruments, such as the Music Easel (pictured), use a different method of
timbre generation thanMoog synthesizer s. Moog units use oscillators with basicfunction generator type waveshapes and rely heavily on filtering with 24dB resonantlow-pass filters , while Buchlas are geared toward complex oscillators usingfrequency modulation ,amplitude modulation , and dynamic waveshaping to produce other forms of timbre modulation. Many of Don Buchla's designs, including the Low-Pass Gates (later called Dynamic Managers) contain vactrols, components that mate a light source (LED) with a photo resistor, the rounded slew of which give them a very "natural" sound.By the late 1980s, Don Buchla had stopped creating instruments and shifted his focus to alternate
MIDI controllers. His controller designs have included the Thunder, Lightning, andMarimba Lumina .In 1995, he was brought on to the team that designed the
Oberheim OB-MX , the so called "Ober-Moog," in the 11th hour to help make it a working instrument. A hybrid analog/digital design, the OB-MX uses many of the lessons learned when researching for the 300 and 500 systems.Finally, in 2004, Don Buchla returned to designing full blown modular electronic instruments with the 200e. A hybrid system using digital microprocessors that uses the same size modules and signals as the 100 and 200 series systems. The 200e modules convert all signals to analog at the panel, appearing to the user like an analog system, with patch cables. Systems can be built using a combination of 100, 200 and 200e modules. The 200e modules connect together through a digital communications buss, allowing the system to store the settings of the knobs and switches. [http://buchla.com/200e/index.html]
External links
* [http://buchla.com/ Buchla & Associates homepage]
* [http://www.buchla.com/historical/b100/index.html Buchla Model 100 page]
* [http://www.buchla.com/historical/b200/index.html Buchla Model 200 page]
* [http://www.buchla.com/200e Buchla Current Model 200e page]
* [http://electricmusicbox.com/ Electric Music Box Model 200 page] (Flash Required)
* [http://www.synthmuseum.com/buchla/buc10001.html Buchla 100 Modular Synthesizer @ Synthmuseum.com]
* [http://www.audities.org/audities/index.html Buchla instrument collection @ Audities.org]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.