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Beginning with our release of the SY1 in 1974, Yamaha’s rich history of development and production of synthesizers has now reached the 40-year milestone. As a musical instrument that lets you create exciting new sounds and express yourself freely, the synthesizer has been at the cutting edge of electronic music making ever since it first arrived on the scene.
What’s more, the technologies perfected in order to make this instrument a reality are now being put to use in all kinds of audio-related devices, and we can rightly say that the synth truly embodies the evolution of modern music.
On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the Yamaha synthesizer—which has remained consistently at the forefront of the music industry—we explore this innovative history, looking back on the products, technologies, and developments unique to each period.
Technologies and products that could be seen as prototypes for the first electronic musical instruments have been around since the 1920s, but none has developed in closer association with popular music than the electronic organ. The Electone® ("Electone" is the product name and trademark used for Yamaha's electronic organs) debuted in 1959 with the D1.
Similar musical instruments based on vacuum-tube technology were already available at the time, but the D1 was revolutionary in that its modules relied on transistors alone. Although the Electone set the stage for the modern synth in terms of sound synthesis, it lacked the expressivity of acoustic instruments to such a degree that the president of Yamaha at the time referred to it as a mere "musical toy".
The instant one played a key, the instrument produced a tone that ceased immediately with an abrupt mechanical cutoff sound when the key was released. Various research projects at that time had identified the way in which a tone changes over time as the most important factor in our interpreting it as the sound of a musical instrument.
Let's consider the piano as an example: the tone produced when a key is played includes complex harmonics generated by the physical striking of the string. As the sound sustains, however, it gradually comes to resemble a wave with less harmonic content—such as a sine wave. This specific sonic variation over time is the most distinctive characteristic that allows us to identify the sound of the piano.
Yamaha realized that the development of technologies capable of recreating these changes in a sound would be critical if electronic instruments were ever to produce the natural-sounding voices of acoustic instruments. In reality, Yamaha's history of synthesizer development actually began with this variation of sound over time and our quest to make the Electone produce more interesting sounds.
Christened the "Electone", our D1 was released in December 1959 as an electronic organ with an all-transistor design.
The tone producing system used in the first-generation Electone was extremely simple. Each key on the keyboard had its own oscillator—or what we now call a "tone generator"—which would generate a sound whenever its key was played. If the keyboard had 40 keys, the instrument would have 40 oscillators, with each pair operating in much the same way as a switch and buzzer.
The decision to use new circuits capable of modifying sound over time as described above would thus have meant providing one for each and every key on the keyboard. Given the state of technology at the time, however, this would have made the design extremely expensive and resulted in an instrument that was unfeasibly large.
It was thus clear that new control technology would be required in order to use a limited number of circuits in a more effective manner. If, for example, an instrument had eight control circuits, it could generate up to eight polyphonic tones—that is, eight different notes at the same time.
Sound synthesis in the Electone D1
But if it also had 36 keys in a three octave configuration, this new technology would need to know which of the circuits to trigger in response to the playing of a particular key. Our solution was to introduce a device that could assign circuits to keys efficiently, based on the order in which they were played, the total number of keys currently being held down, and other related factors.
This type of device was known as a Key Assigner, and it can rightly be called the predecessor of today's dynamic voice allocation (DVA) technology. Back in the early 70s, when tone generators still relied on analog technology, digital circuitry was already being put to use in these key assigners. As such, their adoption was an important milestone in the introduction of digital technology in the analog-synth era.
Key Assigner at work
In 1973, Yamaha completed development work on a prototype codenamed the GX-707. Based on cluster voltage control, this instrument could be regarded as the predecessor of the Electone GX1. Although it looked just like an Electone, the GX-707 was actually an 8-note polyphonic synthesizer—more specifically, the upper and lower keyboards supported 8-note polyphony, while the solo and pedal keyboards were both monophonic.
As the flagship model in the Electone lineup, however, this prototype was conceived of as a "theatre model" for use on the concert stage. With a console weighing in excess of 300kg and a separate board required for editing tones, it was not well suited for sale to the general public, and to this day is still considered a niche instrument.
Yet the GX-707 did possess extremely expressive tone generators, technology which Yamaha elected to use in a separate solo-part keyboard product for use with existing Electones. Thus was born the SY1 monophonic synthesizer, which became Yamaha's first synth upon its release in 1974.
Given that analog synthesizers have typically evolved from monophonic to polyphonic, this reverse pattern—namely, moving from poly to mono—is further evidence of Yamaha's unique way of thinking.
Yamaha SY1
Although the SY1 lacked a key assigner, it did feature an envelope generator for altering its sounds over time. The envelope generators used in synthesizers typically comprise four stages, identified by the letters ADSR.
"A" stands for Attack time—that is, the adjustable time between pressing of a key and the resultant note reaching its peak level. The Decay time—represented by "D"—defines how long it will take when the key is being held down for the sound to drop from this peak to the Sustain level.
This Sustain level, indicated by "S", is the constant volume that held notes ultimately reach. Last but not least, the Release time—represented by the "R" in ADSR—specifies how long it will take for the sound to fade away completely once the key has been released.
Normally, one would use a controller for each of these parameters to adjust how the sound should change over time in response to playing, holding, and releasing the keys. However, we can clearly see that the SY1 control panel lacks the knobs provided on modular synths such as the Moog and Minimoog for configuring the ADSR stages of amplitude and filter envelopes.
Instead, a pair of sliders labeled Attack and Sustain are used to adjust the amplitude envelope, and a feature known as Attack Bend allows the pitch and filter envelopes at the beginning of the note to be adjusted in a unique way.
SY1 envelope section
The SY1 featured a range of preset envelopes for recreating the sound of various instruments such as the flute, guitar and piano, which could be activated simply by moving the tone levers. Today, we take it for granted that synthesizer presets can be easily recalled, but Yamaha's inclusion of this functionality in its very first analog synthesizer was highly innovative.
Another groundbreaking feature of the SY1 was touch control, or what is commonly known today as velocity sensitivity. Prior to the introduction of the SY1, electronic organs had typically been equipped with a volume or expression pedal that the musician could use to modulate the sound for greater expression while playing.
Yamaha had, however, been working on a range of different prototypes with the aim of modulating tone based instead on how hard the keys were played. Ultimately, we perfected a technology that measured the strength of playing by detecting how long it took for keys to be fully pressed down, and it was this system that we debuted in the SY1.
In 1975, one year after releasing the SY1, Yamaha introduced the GX1 as a concert-model Electone; however, the first non-Electone products to inherit the unique technologies of the SY1 were the combo synthesizers of the CS Series.
One of the most notable features of the CS synths was the integrated circuitry used in their tone generators and controllers—components that had up until then taken the form of transistor assemblies. This integration of state-of-the-art technology paved the way for huge weight reductions and vastly improved portability.
Consider, for example, the GX1 and the CS80—the top-of-the-line CS synth: while these two instruments certainly differed in terms of design and mode of use, the GX1 weighed in at over 300kg and had a price tag of 7 million yen, but the CS80 was only 82kg and cost just 1.28 million yen, meaning that the individual musician could both afford it and move it around.
Introduced in 1975, the GX1 was 8-note polyphonic and had 35 tone generators for sound synthesis. This famous instrument was much loved by owners such as Stevie Wonder and Keith Emerson.
Yamaha GX1 with its speakers.
Yamaha synthesizers at the time had two very distinctive features, the first of which was the ability to retain programmed sounds. These days, we think nothing of storing our original sounds in an instrument's memory in much the same way as saving a file on a PC. Back in the 70s, however, neither RAM nor ROM yet existed, so an extremely analog approach was employed to store sounds.
The following illustration shows part of a page from the CS60 service manual, which was used by technicians when repairing the instrument. This section, titled "Tone Preset 1 Circuit", contains instrument names, resistance values, and a circuit diagram. The synthesizer's levers were connected to variable resistors—that is, circuit elements that can limit current and voltage.
As shown, however, fixed resistance values corresponding to specific positions of these levers are built into this circuit. The combination of these values resulted in a certain sound or tone, leading these circuits—which were widely used back then—to be called "tone boards."
CS60 service manual (Tone Preset 1 Circuit)
In instruments like the GX1, tone boards were physically inserted and removed to change sounds. As such, Yamaha was already at that time employing a sound storage method not unlike analog-type ROM cartridges. The CS80, meanwhile, possessed functionality that allowed instantaneous switching between four original sounds.
Specifically, it had four complete sets of memory elements, with one memory element from each set corresponding to a specific instrument controller. Each of the four sets could thus be used to store all of the controller positions for a user-created sound.
GX1 ROM cartridge
What’s more, the technologies perfected in order to make this instrument a reality are now being put to use in all kinds of audio-related devices, and we can rightly say that the synth truly embodies the evolution of modern music.
On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the Yamaha synthesizer—which has remained consistently at the forefront of the music industry—we explore this innovative history, looking back on the products, technologies, and developments unique to each period.
CHAPTER 1

Origins of the Yamaha Synthesizer
Part 1/2
Part 1/2
Evolution from the Electone
Technologies and products that could be seen as prototypes for the first electronic musical instruments have been around since the 1920s, but none has developed in closer association with popular music than the electronic organ. The Electone® ("Electone" is the product name and trademark used for Yamaha's electronic organs) debuted in 1959 with the D1.
Similar musical instruments based on vacuum-tube technology were already available at the time, but the D1 was revolutionary in that its modules relied on transistors alone. Although the Electone set the stage for the modern synth in terms of sound synthesis, it lacked the expressivity of acoustic instruments to such a degree that the president of Yamaha at the time referred to it as a mere "musical toy".
The instant one played a key, the instrument produced a tone that ceased immediately with an abrupt mechanical cutoff sound when the key was released. Various research projects at that time had identified the way in which a tone changes over time as the most important factor in our interpreting it as the sound of a musical instrument.
Let's consider the piano as an example: the tone produced when a key is played includes complex harmonics generated by the physical striking of the string. As the sound sustains, however, it gradually comes to resemble a wave with less harmonic content—such as a sine wave. This specific sonic variation over time is the most distinctive characteristic that allows us to identify the sound of the piano.
Yamaha realized that the development of technologies capable of recreating these changes in a sound would be critical if electronic instruments were ever to produce the natural-sounding voices of acoustic instruments. In reality, Yamaha's history of synthesizer development actually began with this variation of sound over time and our quest to make the Electone produce more interesting sounds.

Why digital technology in an analog synth?
The tone producing system used in the first-generation Electone was extremely simple. Each key on the keyboard had its own oscillator—or what we now call a "tone generator"—which would generate a sound whenever its key was played. If the keyboard had 40 keys, the instrument would have 40 oscillators, with each pair operating in much the same way as a switch and buzzer.
The decision to use new circuits capable of modifying sound over time as described above would thus have meant providing one for each and every key on the keyboard. Given the state of technology at the time, however, this would have made the design extremely expensive and resulted in an instrument that was unfeasibly large.
It was thus clear that new control technology would be required in order to use a limited number of circuits in a more effective manner. If, for example, an instrument had eight control circuits, it could generate up to eight polyphonic tones—that is, eight different notes at the same time.

But if it also had 36 keys in a three octave configuration, this new technology would need to know which of the circuits to trigger in response to the playing of a particular key. Our solution was to introduce a device that could assign circuits to keys efficiently, based on the order in which they were played, the total number of keys currently being held down, and other related factors.
This type of device was known as a Key Assigner, and it can rightly be called the predecessor of today's dynamic voice allocation (DVA) technology. Back in the early 70s, when tone generators still relied on analog technology, digital circuitry was already being put to use in these key assigners. As such, their adoption was an important milestone in the introduction of digital technology in the analog-synth era.

Birth of the SY1
In 1973, Yamaha completed development work on a prototype codenamed the GX-707. Based on cluster voltage control, this instrument could be regarded as the predecessor of the Electone GX1. Although it looked just like an Electone, the GX-707 was actually an 8-note polyphonic synthesizer—more specifically, the upper and lower keyboards supported 8-note polyphony, while the solo and pedal keyboards were both monophonic.
As the flagship model in the Electone lineup, however, this prototype was conceived of as a "theatre model" for use on the concert stage. With a console weighing in excess of 300kg and a separate board required for editing tones, it was not well suited for sale to the general public, and to this day is still considered a niche instrument.
Yet the GX-707 did possess extremely expressive tone generators, technology which Yamaha elected to use in a separate solo-part keyboard product for use with existing Electones. Thus was born the SY1 monophonic synthesizer, which became Yamaha's first synth upon its release in 1974.
Given that analog synthesizers have typically evolved from monophonic to polyphonic, this reverse pattern—namely, moving from poly to mono—is further evidence of Yamaha's unique way of thinking.

Although the SY1 lacked a key assigner, it did feature an envelope generator for altering its sounds over time. The envelope generators used in synthesizers typically comprise four stages, identified by the letters ADSR.
"A" stands for Attack time—that is, the adjustable time between pressing of a key and the resultant note reaching its peak level. The Decay time—represented by "D"—defines how long it will take when the key is being held down for the sound to drop from this peak to the Sustain level.
This Sustain level, indicated by "S", is the constant volume that held notes ultimately reach. Last but not least, the Release time—represented by the "R" in ADSR—specifies how long it will take for the sound to fade away completely once the key has been released.
Normally, one would use a controller for each of these parameters to adjust how the sound should change over time in response to playing, holding, and releasing the keys. However, we can clearly see that the SY1 control panel lacks the knobs provided on modular synths such as the Moog and Minimoog for configuring the ADSR stages of amplitude and filter envelopes.
Instead, a pair of sliders labeled Attack and Sustain are used to adjust the amplitude envelope, and a feature known as Attack Bend allows the pitch and filter envelopes at the beginning of the note to be adjusted in a unique way.

The SY1 featured a range of preset envelopes for recreating the sound of various instruments such as the flute, guitar and piano, which could be activated simply by moving the tone levers. Today, we take it for granted that synthesizer presets can be easily recalled, but Yamaha's inclusion of this functionality in its very first analog synthesizer was highly innovative.
Another groundbreaking feature of the SY1 was touch control, or what is commonly known today as velocity sensitivity. Prior to the introduction of the SY1, electronic organs had typically been equipped with a volume or expression pedal that the musician could use to modulate the sound for greater expression while playing.
Yamaha had, however, been working on a range of different prototypes with the aim of modulating tone based instead on how hard the keys were played. Ultimately, we perfected a technology that measured the strength of playing by detecting how long it took for keys to be fully pressed down, and it was this system that we debuted in the SY1.
Crossover to CS Series Combo Synthesizers
In 1975, one year after releasing the SY1, Yamaha introduced the GX1 as a concert-model Electone; however, the first non-Electone products to inherit the unique technologies of the SY1 were the combo synthesizers of the CS Series.
One of the most notable features of the CS synths was the integrated circuitry used in their tone generators and controllers—components that had up until then taken the form of transistor assemblies. This integration of state-of-the-art technology paved the way for huge weight reductions and vastly improved portability.
Consider, for example, the GX1 and the CS80—the top-of-the-line CS synth: while these two instruments certainly differed in terms of design and mode of use, the GX1 weighed in at over 300kg and had a price tag of 7 million yen, but the CS80 was only 82kg and cost just 1.28 million yen, meaning that the individual musician could both afford it and move it around.


Yamaha synthesizers at the time had two very distinctive features, the first of which was the ability to retain programmed sounds. These days, we think nothing of storing our original sounds in an instrument's memory in much the same way as saving a file on a PC. Back in the 70s, however, neither RAM nor ROM yet existed, so an extremely analog approach was employed to store sounds.
The following illustration shows part of a page from the CS60 service manual, which was used by technicians when repairing the instrument. This section, titled "Tone Preset 1 Circuit", contains instrument names, resistance values, and a circuit diagram. The synthesizer's levers were connected to variable resistors—that is, circuit elements that can limit current and voltage.
As shown, however, fixed resistance values corresponding to specific positions of these levers are built into this circuit. The combination of these values resulted in a certain sound or tone, leading these circuits—which were widely used back then—to be called "tone boards."

In instruments like the GX1, tone boards were physically inserted and removed to change sounds. As such, Yamaha was already at that time employing a sound storage method not unlike analog-type ROM cartridges. The CS80, meanwhile, possessed functionality that allowed instantaneous switching between four original sounds.
Specifically, it had four complete sets of memory elements, with one memory element from each set corresponding to a specific instrument controller. Each of the four sets could thus be used to store all of the controller positions for a user-created sound.


GX1 ROM cartridge