Monday, 15 August 2011

Key players in MIDI.




One of, if not the biggest contributor to electronic music software/ hardware. The company began in 1995 in a small home office in Berlin-Kreuzberg. Here is where the vision of a new kind of musical instrument was born and turned into reality. Enter Stephan Schmitt, a hardware engineer by trade who developed mixing desks at the time. An active live musician and synthesiser player, Stephan Schmitt had reached the point where he felt profoundly limited by the instruments that were available to him. Hardware synthesizers seemed not only overly bulky and expensive but also very much limited in terms of sonic potential and musical expressiveness.

In his search for a solution, Stephan Schmitt realized that standard personal computers could be used as powerful musical instruments. The ever-growing computational power brought real-time software synthesis into the realm of possibility, and Stephan Schmitt envisioned a computer-based sound-generation platform that could leave existing limitations far behind. Together with programmer Volker Hinz, he developed the concept of the first modular software synthesizer, which was eventually called GENERATOR. A radically innovative approach, GENERATOR allowed for the construction of virtually any kind of sound generation and sound-processing device from a set of basic building blocks, and offered a sonic flexibility that was literally unheard of.  

They offer a massive range of products: (excuse the pun as one of their plugin synths is named massive.) Software such as traktor/ absynth/ massive and hardware such as Mashine (a midi controller.)

However you see it native instruments have made some major advancements and created some of the best quality products on the market today.

(stay tuned for reviews of these products in new posts.)

for now 3spada out!

2 comments:

  1. I love NI!
    Looks like the company has quite an interesting history. The maschine really does look like an instrument from the future.
    I wonder if one day these MIDI interfaces take over conventional instruments completely.

    Nice Post!

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  2. Thanks man... It is interesting you raise the point of replacing instruments as i was going to post on this very soon, essentially i believe that although these instruments are becoming more popular and their sound quality is improving rapidly..... i dont believe that they have the potential to over take conventional instruments at the moment and there would be many 'purists' that would not follow such a change.

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