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Sampler (musical instrument)

 
Sampler (musical Instrument)

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Sampler (musical instrument)



 
 
A sampler is an electronic musical instrument closely related to a synthesizer
Synthesizer

A synthesizer is an electronic instrument capable of producing a variety of sounds by generating and combining signals of different frequency....
. Instead of generating sounds from scratch, however, a sampler starts with multiple recordings (or "samples
Sampling (music)

In music, sampling is the act of taking a portion, or sample, of one sound recording and reusing it as an musical instrument or a different sound recording of a song....
") of different sounds added by the user, and then plays each back based on how the instrument is configured.






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Akai 1
A sampler is an electronic musical instrument closely related to a synthesizer
Synthesizer

A synthesizer is an electronic instrument capable of producing a variety of sounds by generating and combining signals of different frequency....
. Instead of generating sounds from scratch, however, a sampler starts with multiple recordings (or "samples
Sampling (music)

In music, sampling is the act of taking a portion, or sample, of one sound recording and reusing it as an musical instrument or a different sound recording of a song....
") of different sounds added by the user, and then plays each back based on how the instrument is configured. Because these samples are usually stored in RAM
Ram

Ram, ram, or RAM as a non-acronymic wordAs a non-acronymic word Ram, ram, or RAM may refer to:...
, the information can be quickly accessed.

The sampler has become an important instrument in hip hop
Hip hop

Hip hop is a cultural movement built largely around the music genre of hip hop music, which developed in New York City during the 1970s primarily among African Americans and Latino Americans....
, electronic music
Electronic music

Electronic music is music that employs electronic musical instruments and electronic music technology in its production. In general a distinction can be made between sound produced using electromechanical means and that produced using electronic technology....
, and avant-garde music
Avant-garde music

Avant-garde music is a term used to characterize music which is thought to be ahead of its time, i.e. containing innovative elements or fusing different genres....
.

Unlike traditional digital audio
Digital audio

Digital audio uses digital signals for sound reproduction. This includes Analog-to-digital converter, Digital-to-analog converter, storage, and transmission....
 playback, each sample is associated with a set of synthesis parameters, and can thus be modified in many different ways.

Most samplers have polyphonic capabilities - they are able to play more than one note at the same time. Many are also multitimbral
Multitimbral

An electronic musical instrument may be multitimbral, which means it can produce two or more timbres at the same time. Instruments which may be multitimbral include synthesizers, sampler , and music workstations....
: they can play back different sounds at the same time.

Sampler structure


Interface


Usually a sampler is controlled from an attached music keyboard, or from an external MIDI source. Each note value input into the sampler then accesses a particular sample. Often, multiple samples are arranged across the musical range, and assigned to a group of notes. If keyboard tracking is enabled, then the sample is shifted in pitch
Pitch (music)

Pitch represents the perceived fundamental frequency of a sound. It is one of the three major auditory system attributes of sounds along with loudness and timbre....
 by an appropriate amount. Each group of notes to which a single sample has been assigned is often called a keyzone, and the resultant set of zones is called a keymap. When a note value is input to the sampler, it looks at the value, and plays back the sample associated with that note.

For example, in Fig 1, a keymap has been created with four different samples. Each sample should be associated with a particular center pitch. The first sample (violin G2), is distributed across three different notes: g2, g#2, and a2. If a G2 note is received, then the sampler will play back the Violin G2 sample at its original pitch. If a G#2 is input, then the sampler will play the Violin G2 sample, except it will shift it up by a chromatic semitone
Semitone

A semitone, also called a half step or a half tone,Aaron Copland, Leonard Bernstein, and others use "half tone".One source says that step is "chiefly US", and that half-tone is "chiefly N....
. Likewise, an A2 will play back the Violin G2 sample a whole-tone higher. However, when the next note (Bb2) is input, the sampler will then select the Violin B2 sample, and play it a semitone lower than that sample's center pitch of B2.

In general, samplers can play back any kind of recorded audio, and most samplers offer editing facilities which allow the user to modify and process the audio, and to apply a wide range of effects, making the sampler a powerful and versatile musical tool.

Hierarchy

A sampler is organized into a hierarchy of progressively more complicated data structures.

At the bottom lie the samples. Samples are individual recordings of any imaginable sound. Each will have been recorded at a particular sample rate and resolution. It is convenient, if the sample is pitched, that a reference center pitch is included. This pitch indicates the actual frequency of the recorded note. Samples may also have loop points, that indicate where a repeated section of the sample starts and ends. This allows a relatively short sample to play endlessly. In some cases, a loop crossfade is also indicated, which allows for more seamless transitions at the loop point by fading the end of the loop out while simultaneously fading the beginning of the loop in.

The samples are arranged into keymaps, or collections of samples distributed across the range of notes. Each sample placed into a keymap region should then reference which note value will play back the sample at original pitch.

These keymaps are arranged into instruments. At the instrument level, additional parameters may be added to define how the keymaps are played. For example, filters can be applied to change the color, low frequency oscillators and envelope generators can shape the amplitude, pitch, filter, or other parameter. Instruments may or may not have multiple layers of keymaps. A multilayer instrument will be able to play more than one sample at the same time. Often each keymap layer has a different set of parameters, so that the input affects each layer differently. For example, two layers may have different velocity sensitivity, and thus a note with a high velocity may accentuate one layer over another.

At this level, there are two basic approaches to sampler organization. In a bank approach, each MIDI channel is assigned a different instrument. Multiple banks can then be stored to reconfigure the sampler.

A different, and more powerful approach is to associate each instrument with a patch number or ID. Then, each MIDI channel can be configured separately by sending patch change information to the individual channel. This allows much more flexibility in how the sampler is configured.

Types


Samplers can be classified as phrase samplers or studio samplers. The latter term is informal, the former appears in the manufacturer's documentation.

Phrase samplers work with the philosophy of a drum kit. Each keymap spans only a single key and generally has a different sample put under it. For a studio sampler, this would require a large number of zones (61 to fill a regular keyboard), each with its own settings; and each keymap has to be programmed as spanning just one key. This is a lot of work, especially on older menu-driven hardware samplers. Using the phrase sampling approach simplifies this and makes a translation to another interface (such as the 16 pads on the Akai MPC series) easier; the fact that each pad is actually a note is hidden from the user. It also saves computing power as the sampling engine does not have to re-pitch each sample (there is no need for an anti-aliasing algorithm) - it only has to play it back. Since the user interface is simplified in general, it is also a more attractive option for live use.

Studio samplers work as described above with the keymapping system. It is assumed that the user wants to "spread out" a sample over a certain range of keys. This has certain side-effects. These are desirable - such as speeding up or slowing down drum loops, effectively turning a sampler into a digital turntable. In some cases this is not desired; when for instance not enough samples are taken of an instrument, the higher and lower parts of a keymap may sound unnatural, and the transition from one keymap to another may be too noticeable. For mimicking realistic instruments, the art is to make transitions as smooth as possible.

The format differs in obvious ways - studio samplers are available in 19" rack format, phrase samplers have a groovebox
Groovebox

The term Groovebox was originally used by Roland corporation to refer to their MC-303, but has since entered general use. It refers to a self-contained instrument for the production of live, loop-based electronic music, with a high degree of user control facilitating improvisation....
 format; lightweight, easy to operate and carry.

Parameters

Samplers can be classified in terms of a variety of parameter capabilities.
  • Polyphony: How many voices can play simultaneously
  • Sample Space: How much memory is available to load samples
  • Channels: How many different MIDI channels are available for different instruments
  • Bit depth: How much sample resolution can be supported
  • Outputs: How many discrete audio outputs are available.


Historical overview

The emergence of the digital
Digital signal processing

Digital signal processing is concerned with the representation of the signal s by a sequence of numbers or symbols and the processing of these signals....
 sampler made sampling far more practical, and as samplers added progressively more digital processing to their recorded sounds, they began to merge into the mainstream of modern digital synthesizers. The first digital sampler was the EMS Musys system developed by Peter Grogono (software), David Cockerell (hardware and interfacing) and Peter Zinovieff (system design and operation) at their London (Putney) Studio c. 1969. The system ran on two mini-computers, a pair of Digital Equipment’s PDP-8
PDP-8

The PDP-8 was the first successful commercial minicomputer, produced by Digital Equipment Corporation in the 1960s. DEC introduced it on 22 March 1965, and sold more than 50,000 systems, the most of any computer up to that date....
s. These had the tiny memory of 12,000 (12k) bytes, backed up by a hard drive of 32k and by tape storage (DecTape)—all of this absolutely minuscule by today’s standards. Nevertheless, the EMS equipment was used as the world’s first music sampler and the computers were used to control the world's first digital studio.

The first commercially available sampling synthesizer was the Computer Music Melodian (1976). The first polyphonic digital sampling synthesiser was the Australian-produced Fairlight CMI
Fairlight CMI

The Fairlight CMI was the first polyphonic digital Sampler synthesizer. It was designed in 1979 by the founders of Fairlight, Peter Vogel and Kim Ryrie, and based on a dual microprocessor computer designed by Tony Furse in Sydney, Australia....
 which was first available in 1979.

Prior to computer memory-based samplers, musicians used tape replay keyboard
Tape replay keyboard

A tape replay keyboard is a musical instrument that uses pre-recorded analog tapes to produce sound when a key is pressed. Examples of tape replay keyboards include the Chamberlin, the Mellotron, and the Birotron....
s, which stored recordings of musical instrument notes and sound effects on analog tape. As a key was pressed, the tape head would contact the tape and play a sound. The Mellotron
Mellotron

The Mellotron is an electro-mechanical, polyphony keyboard originally developed and built in Birmingham, England in the early 1960s. It superseded the Chamberlin, which was the world's first sampling keyboard....
 was used by a number of groups in the late 1960s and 1970s. Such systems were both expensive and quite heavy due to the multiple tape mechanisms involved. These same factors limited the range of the instrument to at most three octaves. If the user wished to change sound, they would often have to change out many tapes—not practical in a live setting.

Modern digital samplers use mostly digital technology to process the samples into interesting sounds. The E-mu SP-1200
E-mu SP-1200

File:Sp1200_front_of_machine.JPGFile:Sp1200_Back_Panel.JPGE-mu SP-1200 is a classic drum machine and Sampler released in August 1987 by E-mu Systems as an update of the SP-12, which was originally created for dance music producers....
 percussion sampler progressed Hip-Hop away from the drum machine sound upon its release in August 1987, ushering in the sample-based sound of the late 1980s and early 1990s. Later, Akai pioneered many processing techniques, such as Crossfade Looping to eliminate glitches and Time Stretch which allows for shortening or lengthening of samples without affecting pitch and vice versa. The limiting factors in the early days were the cost of physical memory (RAM
Ram

Ram, ram, or RAM as a non-acronymic wordAs a non-acronymic word Ram, ram, or RAM may refer to:...
) and the limitations of external data storage devices.

During the early 1990s hybrid synthesizers began to emerge that utilized very short samples of natural sounds and instruments (usually the attack phase of the instrument) along with digital synthesis to create more realistic instrument sounds. Examples of this are Korg M1
Korg M1

The Korg M1 was the world's first widely-known music workstation. Its onboard MIDI sequencer and palette of sounds allowed musicians to produce complete professional arrangements....
, Korg O1/W and the later Korg Triton
Korg Triton

Korg Triton is a music workstation synthesizer featuring digital Sampling and Music sequencer created by Korg. All Tritons use Korg's HI Synthesis tone generator....
 and Korg Trinity
Korg Trinity

Korg Trinity is a commercially successful synthesizer music workstation released by Korg in 1996. It was also the first workstation to offer modular expansion for not only sounds, but also studio-grade feature such as SCSI, ADAT, various sound engine processors, audio recording capability, and more....
 series, Yamaha's SY series and the Kawai K series of instruments. This made best use of the tiny amount of memory available to the design engineers.

The modern-day music workstation
Music workstation

A music workstation is piece of Electronic musical instrument providing the facilities of:*a sound module,*a music sequencer and* a musical keyboard....
 usually features an element of sampling, from simple playback to complex editing that matches all but the most advanced dedicated samplers. The primary difference is that the workstation also includes additional features such as a sequencer
Sequencer

A sequencer is something that either generates or analyzes a sequence, or triggers events in timed fashion. The term may mean or refer to:* Sequencer, a 1976 electronic music album by Larry Fast...
 to provide flexibility for composers.

Samplers, together with traditional Foley artist
Foley artist

The Foley artist on a film crew is the person who creates many of the natural, everyday sound effects in a film, which are recorded during a session with a recording engineer....
s, are the mainstay of modern sound effect
Sound effect

Sound effects or audio effects are artificially created or enhanced sounds, or sound processes used to emphasize artistic or other content of films, television shows, live performance, animation, video games, music, or other media....
s production. Using digital techniques, various effects can be pitch-shifted and otherwise altered in ways that would have required many hours when done with tape.

Examples of digital samplers


Computer Music Melodian

Computer Music Inc. was started in New Jersey
New Jersey

New Jersey is a state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States. It is bordered on the north by New York, on the east by the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean, on the southwest by Delaware, and on the west by Pennsylvania....
 USA in 1972 by Harry Mendell and Dan Coren. The company was established to develop and market musical instruments based on computer software.

The Melodian was based on the Digital Equipment Corporation
Digital Equipment Corporation

Digital Equipment Corporation was a pioneering United States company in the computer industry. It is often referred to within the computing industry as DEC ....
 PDP-8 computer and hand wired D/A and A/D conversion and tracking anti-aliasing filters. The Melodian was first used by Stevie Wonder in the "Secret Life of Plants" (1979). The Melodian was a monophonic synth with 12 bit A/D and sampling rates up to 22 kHz. It was designed to be compatible with analog synthesizers and had a feature where it would sync to the pitch of an analog synth, such as an Arp 2600. This means the Melodian captured all of the frequency modulation effects, including the touch ribbon control. It also could trigger off the ARPs keyboard so it could almost be thought of as a hybrid sampler/analog synth, making best use of the technology that was available at the time.

Synclavier

The Synclavier
Synclavier

The Synclavier System was an early synthesizer and Sampler , manufactured by New England Digital. First released in 1975, it proved to be highly influential among both music producers and electronic musicians, due to its versatility, its cutting-edge technology and distinctive sound....
 System was an early digital synthesizer and sampler, manufactured by New England Digital. First released in 1975, it proved to be highly influential among both music producers and electronic musicians, due to its versatility, its cutting-edge technology and distinctive sound. Synclavier
Synclavier

The Synclavier System was an early synthesizer and Sampler , manufactured by New England Digital. First released in 1975, it proved to be highly influential among both music producers and electronic musicians, due to its versatility, its cutting-edge technology and distinctive sound....
 Systems were expensive - the highest price ever paid for one was about $500,000, although average systems were closer to about $200,000 - $300,000. Although this made it inaccessible for most musicians, it found widespread use among producers and professional recording studios, and it competed in this market with other high-end production systems, such as the Fairlight CMI. Though scarce, the Synclavier
Synclavier

The Synclavier System was an early synthesizer and Sampler , manufactured by New England Digital. First released in 1975, it proved to be highly influential among both music producers and electronic musicians, due to its versatility, its cutting-edge technology and distinctive sound....
 remains in use in many studios to this day.

Fairlight Instruments


Fairlight Instruments
Fairlight

Fairlight is a digital audio company based in Sydney, Australia. In 1979 they created the Fairlight CMI, the first digital audio sampler, quickly used by artists such as Peter Gabriel , Kate Bush or Jean Michel Jarre....
 was started in Sydney
Sydney

Sydney is the List of cities in Australia by population in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of approximately 4.34 million . It is the List of Australian capital cities of New South Wales, and was the site of the first British Empire colony in Australia....
 Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
 in 1975 by Peter Vogel and Kim Ryrie. The company was originally established as a manufacturer and retailer of video special effects equipment.

The Fairlight CMI
Fairlight CMI

The Fairlight CMI was the first polyphonic digital Sampler synthesizer. It was designed in 1979 by the founders of Fairlight, Peter Vogel and Kim Ryrie, and based on a dual microprocessor computer designed by Tony Furse in Sydney, Australia....
 or Computer Music Instrument, released in (1979), started life as the QASAR M8. The M8 was handwired and legend has it that it took 2 hours to boot up. The CMI was the first commercially available digital sampling instrument. The original Fairlight CMI sampled using a resolution of 16 bits per sample at a rate of 24kHz, and used two 8-bit Motorola 6800
Motorola 6800

The 6800 is an 8-bit microprocessor produced by Motorola and released shortly after the Intel 8080 in late 1974. It had 78 instructions, including the famous, undocumented Halt and Catch Fire bus test instruction....
 processors (later upgraded to the more powerful 16/32-bit Motorola 68000
Motorola 68000

The Motorola 68000 is a 16/32-bit Complex instruction set computer microprocessor core designed and marketed by Freescale Semiconductor ....
). It was equipped with two six-octave
Octave

In music, an octave The octave is occasionally referred to as a diapason.The octave above an indicated note is sometimes abbreviated 8va, and the octave below 8vb....
 keyboards
Keyboard instrument

A keyboard instrument is any musical instrument played using a musical keyboard. The most common of these is the piano. Other widely used keyboard instruments include various types of organ s as well as other mechanical, electromechanical and electronic musical instrument....
, an alphanumeric keyboard, and an interactive video display unit (VDU) where sound
Sound

Sound is vibration transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing and of a threshold of hearing to be heard, or the sensation stimulated in organs of hearing by such vibrations....
waves could be edited or even drawn from scratch using a light pen
Light pen

A light pen is a computer input device in the form of a light-sensitive wand used in conjunction with a computer's cathode ray tube TV set or Computer display....
. Software allowed for editing, looping, and mixing of sounds which could then be played back via the keyboard or the software-based sequence
Sequence

In mathematics, a sequence is an ordered list of objects . Like a Set , it contains Element , and the number of terms is called the length of the sequence....
r. It retailed for around US$25,000.

Fairlight later released the Series IIx, which increased the sampling rate to 32kHz and was the first to feature basic MIDI functionality. In 1985, the Series III was released, adding support for SMPTE time code
SMPTE time code

SMPTE timecode is a set of cooperating standards to label individual frames of video or film with a timecode defined by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers in the SMPTE 12M specification....
. Notable users of the Fairlight CMI include Peter Gabriel
Peter Gabriel

Peter Brian Gabriel is a Grammy Award-winning, Academy Award-nominated England musician and songwriter. He first rose to fame as the lead vocals and flautist of the progressive rock group Genesis ....
, Herbie Hancock
Herbie Hancock

Herbert Jeffrey "Herbie" Hancock is a jazz pianist and composer. He embraces elements of rock and roll and soul music while adopting freer stylistic elements from jazz....
, Trevor Horn
Trevor Horn

Trevor Charles Horn is an English pop music record producer, songwriter and musician. He was born in Hetton-le-Hole, England.Horn has produced commercially successful songs and albums for numerous British and international artists....
, Art of Noise, Yello
Yello

Yello is a Switzerland electronica band consisting of Dieter Meier and Boris Blank . They are probably best known for their singles "The Race " and "Oh Yeah ", which feature a mix of electronic music and manipulated vocals....
, Pet Shop Boys
Pet Shop Boys

Pet Shop Boys are an English people electronic dance music duo, consisting of Neil Tennant, who provides main Singing, Keyboard instruments and occasionally guitar, and Chris Lowe on keyboards and occasionally on vocals....
, Jean Michel Jarre
Jean Michel Jarre

Jean-Michel Andr? Jarre is a France composer, Performing arts and music producer. Since 1991 he writes his name Jean Michel Jarre, without the hyphen....
,and Kate Bush
Kate Bush

Kate Bush is an England singer-songwriter, musician and record producer. Her eclectic musical style and Idiosyncrasy lyrics have made her one of England's most successful solo female performers of the past 30 years having sold over 20,000,000 records worldwide....
.

E-mu Systems


E-mu Emulator
E-mu Emulator

The Emulator is the name given to a series of floppy disk digital Sampling keyboards manufactured by E-mu Systems from 1982 until 1990. Though not the first commercial sampler, the Emulator was among the first to find wide use among ordinary musicians, due to its relatively low price and its size, which allowed for its use in live performanc...
 (1981) was E-mu Systems initial foray into sampling, and saved the company from financial disaster after the complete failure of the Audity
E-mu Audity

The E-mu Audity was a computer controlled, analog synthesizer made in 1978. It began life as a project for Tangerine Dream's Peter Baumann, and eventually evolved into a state-of-the-art, 16-voice Polyphony analog synthesizer with an included digital keyboard and sequencer that was intended to compete with Sequential Circuits' Prophet 5....
 due to a price tag of $70,000. The name 'Emulator' came as the result of leafing through a thesaurus and matched the name of the company perfectly. The Emulator came in 2-, 4-, and 8-note polyphonic versions, the 2-note being dropped due to limited interest, and featured a maximum sampling rate of 27.7 kHz, a four-octave keyboard and 128 kB of memory.

E-mu Emulator II (1985) was designed to bridge the gap between the Fairlight CMI
Fairlight CMI

The Fairlight CMI was the first polyphonic digital Sampler synthesizer. It was designed in 1979 by the founders of Fairlight, Peter Vogel and Kim Ryrie, and based on a dual microprocessor computer designed by Tony Furse in Sydney, Australia....
 and Synclavier
Synclavier

The Synclavier System was an early synthesizer and Sampler , manufactured by New England Digital. First released in 1975, it proved to be highly influential among both music producers and electronic musicians, due to its versatility, its cutting-edge technology and distinctive sound....
 and the Ensoniq Mirage
Ensoniq Mirage

The Ensoniq Corporation's Mirage was an 8-bit sampler introduced in 1985. Priced below $2000 with features previously only found on more expensive samplers like the Fairlight CMI, it became a best seller....
. It featured 8 notes polyphony, 8-bit sampling, 512kb of RAM (1mb in the EII+ though only accessible as two independent 512kb banks), an 8-track sequencer, and analog filtering. With the addition of the hard disk option, the Emulator II was comparable to samplers released 5 years later.

E-mu Emulator III (1987) was a 16-bit stereo digital sampler with 16-note polyphony, 44.1 kHz maximum sample rate and had up to 8 MB of memory. It featured a 16 channel sequencer, SMPTE and a 40 MB hard disk.

E-mu SP-1200
E-mu SP-1200

File:Sp1200_front_of_machine.JPGFile:Sp1200_Back_Panel.JPGE-mu SP-1200 is a classic drum machine and Sampler released in August 1987 by E-mu Systems as an update of the SP-12, which was originally created for dance music producers....
 was, and still is, one of the most highly regarded samplers for use in hip-hop
Hip hop music

Hip hop music is a music genre typically consisting of a rhythmic vocal style called rapping which is accompanied with backing beats. Hip hop music is part of hip hop culture, which began in the Bronx, in New York City in the 1970s, predominantly among African Americans and Latino Americans....
 related production. Its 12-bit sampling engine gave a desirable warmth to instruments and a gritty punch to drums. It featured 10 seconds of sample time spread across four 2.5-second sections.

E-mu Emax
E-mu Emax

The Emax was a line of Sampler , developed, manufactured, and sold by E-mu Systems from 1986 to 1995. Sold alongside their more expensive E-mu Emulator II and E-mu Emulator III samplers, the Emax line was conceived after the release of the Akai and Sequential Circuits, and was designed to compete for the lower end of the sampling market....
, sold between 1985 & 1995, and aimed at the lower end of the market.

E-mu ESI-32 (1994) was a stripped down, far cheaper, and simplified EIIIx, and could use the same samples. The unit could accommodate up to 32 MB RAM. 32 note polyphony and sounds could be routed internally to one of four polyphonic outputs. Via optional SCSI interface, the ESI-32 could access external CD-ROM, Zip-100, and hard drives.

Akai


Akai entered the electronic musical instrument world in 1984 when Roger Linn
Roger Linn

Roger Linn is a musical instrument designer, mainly of electronics drum machines, and has recently branched out into guitar effects pedals. His products have become underground hits, being used on many famous recordings....
, the creator of the Linn LM-1
Linn LM-1

The LM-1 Drum Computer, manufactured by Linn Electronics Inc., was the first drum machine to utilize digital Sampling of acoustic drums. Conceived and designed by Roger Linn, it was also one of the first programmable drum machines....
, the Linn 9000, and the Linn Drum partnered with the Japanese Akai
Akai

Akai is a consumer electronics brand, founded as , a Japanese manufacturer in 1929. It is now headquartered in Singapore as a subsidiary of Grande Holdings, a China Hong Kong-based conglomerate, which also owns the formerly Japanese brands Nakamichi and Sansui....
 Corporation to create samplers similar to the ones created at Linn's own company, Linn Electronics. With this came the first in a series of affordable samplers, the S612, a 12 bit digital sampler module. The S612 was superseded in 1986 by the S900.

The Akai S900 (1986) was the first truly affordable digital sampler. It was 8-note polyphonic and featured 12-bit sampling with a frequency range up to 40 kHz and up to 750 kB of memory that allowed for just under 12 seconds at the best sampling rate. It could store a maximum of 32 samples in memory. The operating system was software based and allowed for upgrades that had to be booted
Booting

In computing, booting is a Bootstrapping process that starts operating systems when the user turns on a computer system. A boot sequence is the initial set of operations that the computer performs when it is switched on....
 each time the sampler was switched on.

The Akai MPC60 Digital Sampler/Drum Machine and MIDI Sequencer (1987) was the first rack mounted model released. It is also the first time a sampler with touch sensitive trigger pads was produced by AKAI, giving birth to the popular MPC series of sampler sequencers.

The Akai S950 (1988) was an improved version of the S900, with a maximum sample frequency of 48 kHz and some of the editing features of the contemporary S1000.

The Akai S1000
Akai S1000

The Akai S1000 is a 16-bit professional stereo digital Sampler , released by Akai in 1988. The S1000 was among the first professional-quality 16-bit stereo samplers....
 (1988) was possibly the most popular 16-bit 44.1 kHz stereo sampler of its time. It featured 16-voices, up to 32 MB of memory, and 24-bit internal processing, including a digital filter (18dB/octave), an LFO, and two ADSR envelope
ADSR envelope

An ADSR envelope is a component of many synthesizers, sampler s, and other electronic musical instruments. Its function is to Modulation some aspect of the instrument's sound — often its loudness — over time....
 generators (for amplitude and filtering). The S1000 also offered up to 8 different loop points. Additional functions included Autolooping, Crossfade Looping, Loop in Release (which cycles through the loop as the sound decays), Loop Until Release (which cycles through the loop until the note begins its decay), Reverse and Time Stretch (version 1.3 and higher).

Other samplers released by AKAI include the S01, S20, S700, S2000, S3000, S3000XL, S5000, S6000, MPC
MIDI Production Center

Akai MPCs are a popular and well respected series of electronic musical instruments originally designed by Roger Linn and produced by the Japanese company Akai from 1988 onwards....
500, MPC1000, MPC2000, MPC2000XL, MPC2500, MPC3000, MPC3000XL, MPC3000LE, MPC4000, MPC5000, Z4 and Z8.

Roland


Roland Corporation
Roland Corporation

is a Japanese manufacturer of electronic musical instruments, electronic equipment and software. It was founded by Ikutaro Kakehashi in Osaka on April 18, 1972, with ?33 million in capital....
 manufactured the S series. These were true samplers that provide all of the features described above, including sampling, sample editing, pitch transposition, and keyzone mapping:

  • Roland S-10
  • Roland S-50
  • Roland S-330
  • Roland S-550
  • Roland S-760
  • Roland S-770


More recently, Roland introduced the Groove Sampler concept. These devices are renowned for their ease of use, but few lack the pitch transposition and keyzone mapping capabilities that most samplers have. Some have limits to rendering loops or sound effects samples that are played back at the same pitch they were recorded. Although these machines are equipped with a wide range of built-in effects, a few lack pitch transposition and keyzone mapping that diminishes their utility significantly. The Roland Groove Sampler line includes the following:

  • Roland DJ-70mkII
  • Roland DJ-70
  • Roland JS-30
  • Roland MC-909
    Roland MC-909

    The Roland Corporation MC-909 groovebox combines the features of a synthesizer, sequencer, and Sampler . It was released by Roland Corporation on October 08, 2002....
  • Roland MC-808
    Roland MC-808

    The Roland Corporation MC-808 is Roland Corporation's latest Groovebox, announced at the Winter NAMM in 2006. It is the successor to the late Roland MC-303, Roland MC-307, Roland MC-505 and Roland MC-909....
  • Roland MC-09
  • Roland MS-1
  • Roland MV-8800
  • Roland MV-8000
  • Roland SP-808EX
  • Roland SP-808
  • Roland SP-606
  • Roland SP-555
    Roland SP-555

    Roland SP-555...
  • BOSS SP-505
  • Roland SP-404
    Roland SP-404

    The Roland SP-404 is a sampling workstation made by Roland Corporation. Its features are:*12 large pads, three control knobs, jumbo display, same friendly operation as SP-303...
  • BOSS SP-303
  • BOSS SP-202
  • Roland W-30


Other manufacturers


  • Alesis
    Alesis

    Alesis is a manufacturer of electronic musical instruments owned by Numark and based in Cumberland, Rhode Island, Rhode Island....
  • Casio
    Casio

    is a multinational electronic devices manufacturing corporation founded in 1946, with its headquarters in Shibuya, Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. Casio is best known for its calculators, sound reproduction equipment, Personal digital assistants, cameras, musical instruments, and watches....
     (no longer in production)
  • Ensoniq
    Ensoniq

    Ensoniq Corp. was an United States electronics manufacturer, best known throughout the mid 1980s and 1990s for its musical instruments, principally Sampler s and synthesizers....
  • Fairlight
    Fairlight CMI

    The Fairlight CMI was the first polyphonic digital Sampler synthesizer. It was designed in 1979 by the founders of Fairlight, Peter Vogel and Kim Ryrie, and based on a dual microprocessor computer designed by Tony Furse in Sydney, Australia....
  • Korg
    Korg

    is a Japanese multinational corporation that manufactures electronics musical instruments and electronic tuners. The company is one of the most widely used and respected names in professional music worldwide....
  • Kurzweil
    Kurzweil Music Systems

    Kurzweil Music Systems is a company that produces electronic musical instruments for professionals and home users. Founded in 1982 by Raymond Kurzweil, a developer of Optical character recognition for the blindness, the company made use of many of the technologies originally designed for reading machines and adapted them to musical purposes....
  • Native Instruments
    Native Instruments

    Native Instruments is a music software production company whose products are mainly aimed at electronic musicians. The company was founded in 1996 in Berlin by Stephan Schmitt and Volker Hinz....
  • Rebis (no longer in production)
  • Sequential Circuits
    Sequential Circuits

    Sequential Circuits Inc. was a California-based synthesizer company that was founded in the early 1970s by Dave Smith and sold to Yamaha Corporation in 1987....
     (no longer in production)
  • Steinberg
    Steinberg

    Steinberg is a German musical software and equipment company based in Hamburg. It mainly produces Musical Instrument Digital Interface music sequencer software, software synthesizers and digital audio editor tools....
  • Tascam
    TASCAM

    TASCAM is the professional audio division of TEAC, headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, and is credited as the inventor of the Portastudio, the first cassette-based Multitrack recording home studio recorders....
  • Waveframe
  • Yamaha


Sample Storage

Most samplers use SCSI as the protocol for getting sample data in and out of the machine. SCSI interfaces were either standard on the sampler or offered as an option. SCSI provides the ability to move large quantities of data in and out of a sampler in reasonable times. Hard drives, CDROM drives, Zip drives and removable cartridge drives such as Syquest and Iomega Jaz drives are the most popular SCSI devices used with samplers. Each has its own strengths and weaknesses, with Hard drives being the fastest devices.

Software-based samplers

In the last 10 years the increases in computer power and memory capacity have made it possible to develop software applications that provide the same capabilities as hardware-based units. These are typically produced as plug in instruments - for example, using the VST
Virtual Studio Technology

Steinberg's Virtual Studio Technology is an interface for integrating software Sound_recording_and_reproduction synthesizer and audio effect plugins with audio editors and hard-disk recording systems....
 system. Some such samplers provide relatively simple sample playback facilities, requiring the user to turn to other software for such tasks as sample editing, sample recording, and DSP effects, while others provide features beyond those offered by rack-mounted units. Here are some examples:
  • Image-Line DirectWave
  • E-mu
    E-mu Systems

    E-mu Systems, Inc. is a synthesizer maker and pioneer in the manufacture of low-cost digital Sampling music workstations....
     Emulator X
    E-mu Emulator X

    E-mu Emulator X is a software-based sound reproduction sampler produced by E-mu Systems.The sampling software runs on a IBM PC compatible running the Microsoft Windows XP operating system....
  • FL Studio
    FL Studio

    FL Studio, formerly known as FruityLoops, is a digital audio workstation, developed by Belgium company . FL Studio was originally the creation of Didier Dambrin, who is now the lead programmer responsible for the overall development....
    , formerly Fruity Loops studio, created by Image-Line Software
    Image-Line Software

    Image-Line Software is a Belgian software company best known for their digital music/virtual studio program FL Studio and related audio plugins....
    .
  • TASCAM
    TASCAM

    TASCAM is the professional audio division of TEAC, headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, and is credited as the inventor of the Portastudio, the first cassette-based Multitrack recording home studio recorders....
     Gigastudio - Originally Gigasampler
  • - A Freeware Sampler For Mac OS X.
  • - a software emulation of a classic 8-bit sampler
  • LinuxSampler
    LinuxSampler

    LinuxSampler is a music sampler under active development, aiming to provide a pure software audio sampler with professional grade features, comparable to both hardware and commercial Windows or Mac software samplers and to introduce new features not yet available by any other sampler....
     - Open source sampler for Linux
    Linux

    Linux is a generic term referring to Unix-like computer operating systems based on the Linux kernel. Their development is one of the most prominent examples of free and open source software collaboration; typically all the underlying source code can be used, freely modified, and redistributed by anyone under the terms of the GNU GPL license...
    , Windows
    Microsoft Windows

    Microsoft Windows is a series of software operating systems and graphical user interfaces produced by Microsoft. Microsoft first introduced an operating environment named Windows in November 1985 as an add-on to MS-DOS in response to the growing interest in graphical user interfaces ....
     and OS X
    Mac OS X

    Mac OS X is a line of computer operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc., and since 2002 has been included with all new Macintosh computer systems....
  • Ableton Sampler
    Ableton Live

    Ableton Live is a professional Music loop-based software music sequencer for Mac OS and Microsoft Windows by Ableton. The latest major release of Live, Version 7, was released in November 2007....
  • Digidesign
    Digidesign

    Digidesign is an American digital audio technology company. It was founded in 1984 by Peter Gotcher and Evan Brooks. The company began as a project to raise money for the founders' band, selling EPROM chips for drum machines....
     Samplecell - Hybrid system that relied on a dedicated card (originally NuBus, then PCI), along with software.
  • Native Instruments
    Native Instruments

    Native Instruments is a music software production company whose products are mainly aimed at electronic musicians. The company was founded in 1996 in Berlin by Stephan Schmitt and Volker Hinz....
     Intakt
  • Native Instruments
    Native Instruments

    Native Instruments is a music software production company whose products are mainly aimed at electronic musicians. The company was founded in 1996 in Berlin by Stephan Schmitt and Volker Hinz....
     Kontakt
    Kontakt

    Kontakt is a software Sampler made by Native Instruments. It runs on Apple Macintosh and Microsoft Windows platforms, available in standalone and plug-in formats ....
  • Native Instruments
    Native Instruments

    Native Instruments is a music software production company whose products are mainly aimed at electronic musicians. The company was founded in 1996 in Berlin by Stephan Schmitt and Volker Hinz....
     Kompakt (Software sampler)
    Kontakt

    Kontakt is a software Sampler made by Native Instruments. It runs on Apple Macintosh and Microsoft Windows platforms, available in standalone and plug-in formats ....
  • Mark of the Unicorn
    Mark of the Unicorn

    Mark of the Unicorn is a music-related computer software and Computer hardware supplier. It is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts and has created music software since 1984....
     Mach 5
  • Realtime Music Solutions RMSampler - Integrated as part of the Sinfonia orchestral enhancement system
  • Speedsoft VSampler
  • Steinberg
    Steinberg

    Steinberg is a German musical software and equipment company based in Hamburg. It mainly produces Musical Instrument Digital Interface music sequencer software, software synthesizers and digital audio editor tools....
     HALion
  • UVI Workstation
  • Yellow Tools Independence


Software-based samplers for mobile devices



See also

  • Chamberlin
  • Mellotron
    Mellotron

    The Mellotron is an electro-mechanical, polyphony keyboard originally developed and built in Birmingham, England in the early 1960s. It superseded the Chamberlin, which was the world's first sampling keyboard....
  • Remix
    Remix

    A remix is an alternative version of a song, different from the original version. A remixer uses Audio mixing to compose an alternate master recording of a song, adding or subtracting elements, or simply changing the equalization, dynamics, Pitch , tempo, playing time, or almost any other aspect of th...
  • Sampling (music)
    Sampling (music)

    In music, sampling is the act of taking a portion, or sample, of one sound recording and reusing it as an musical instrument or a different sound recording of a song....
  • Synthesizer
    Synthesizer

    A synthesizer is an electronic instrument capable of producing a variety of sounds by generating and combining signals of different frequency....
  • Wavetable synthesis
    Wavetable synthesis

    Wavetable synthesis is a technique used in certain digital music synthesizers to implement a restricted form of real-time additive synthesis. The technique was first developed by Wolfgang Palm of Palm_Products_GmbH in the late 1970s, and has since been used in various forms in other synthesizers built by Sequential Circuits, Ensoniq, Yamaha,...


External links

  • A source for new SCSI Storage Hardware that ships worldwide
  • Blog Discussing Hip Hop Sampling, Crates Digging, and Hip Hop Production with Free
  • A forum focused on sampling equipment, techniques, and record digging
  • royalty free samples for samplers