Alesis Andromeda A6
Andromeda A6 | |
---|---|
Alesis Andromeda A6 (side view) | |
Manufacturer | Alesis |
Dates | 2000-2010 |
Price | US$2,499 - 2,999 |
Technical specifications | |
Polyphony | 16 |
Timbrality | 16 |
Oscillator |
2 VCOs per voice 1 sub-oscillator per VCO |
LFO | 3 dedicated LFOs and S+H |
Synthesis type | Analog Subtractive |
Filter |
2 per voice 2-pole resonant multimode - SEM-style 4-pole resonant - Moog-style |
Attenuator | 3 x 6-stage envelopes |
Memory |
4 x 128 patch internal memory SRAM expansion card slot |
Effects | Analog distortion + digital fx unit |
Input/output | |
Keyboard |
61-note semiweighted Velocity sensitive Aftertouch |
Left-hand control | Pitch bend and modulation wheels |
External control | MIDI & CV/Gate |
The Alesis Andromeda A6 is a 16-voice, 16-channel multitimbral analog synthesizer by Alesis which was released in 2000 and discontinued[1] in 2010. The Andromeda has analog oscillators and filters combined with modern digital control. It can be considered a hybrid of older and newer technologies, but its entire signal path is purely analogue. The VCOs have a very practical pitch correction function. A feature missing on other old polysynths. The VCOs have FM and ring modulation and sub-oscillators. These features makes it possible to create a much wider sonic palette than usual on analog polysynths.
Specifications
- Polyphony: 16 voices
- Oscillators: 2 oscillators (with subs) per voice, 5 waveforms available (sine, triangle, pulse, up saw, down saw)
- Filter: 2-pole multimode resonating filter per voice, 4-pole lowpass resonating filter per voice (32 total)
- Effects: Digital reverberation, chorus, echo, analog distortion, quad pitch-shifting, flange, and more
- Arpeggiator: Up, Down, Up/Down
- Sequencer: 16-step, analog style; both have MIDI sync
- Keyboard: 61 keys (velocity and aftertouch sensitive) and a ribbon controller
- Program Memory: 256 preset and 128 user-defined
- Mix Memory: 128 user-defined
- Memory Card Slot: PCMCIA-format
- Control: MIDI (16-parts)
- Date Produced: Late 2000 - 2010
- DisplayDimensions please
References
- ↑ "Alesis Legacy Products". Alesis. Archived from the original on 13 July 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
Bibliography
- "Alesis Andromeda review". Keyboard (magazine) (May 2001).
- Jenkins, Mark (2009). "The analog revival". Analog Synthesizers: Understanding, Performing, Buying--From the Legacy of Moog to Software Synthesis. CRC Press. pp. 215–216. ISBN 978-1-136-12278-1.
In the USA, Alesis, ... announced the Andromeda, again a 'genuine analog' synth. ... Andromeda looked like being one of the most powerful analog synthes available, at US $3000 quite an expensive proposition, but was taken up by Klaus Schulze and others, and at the time of writing is still reasonably easy to find, if not actually in active production.
External links
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