Xylosynth

The xylosynth, also known as a "xylophonic synthesizer", is an instrument created by Will Wernick in 1986, originally specifically designed for the English pop band, the Drum Theatre.[1]

History

In the early 1990s, there was a demand of artists wanting to play on acoustic mallets, Gerry McCavana, who was originally a Metrology Engineer, quit his job to spend time with Will Wernick.[1] Together, they began to develop and advance the software and electronics for the xylosynth.[1] It is now used in many different styles of music and percussions, worldwide, such as jazz and contemporary.[1]

Instrument

The xylosynth is an electric percussion mallet instrument, similar to a xylophone. The keys are made out of either solid bubinga wood or birch wood resulting in a dynamic range from two to five octave sizes.[1] The xylosynth has a latency speed of 0.003 seconds or less.[2] The sound generated from the xylosynth is very clear and each note is easily heard. Even though it is not an acoustic instrument, the feel and sound of the instrument would lead one to believe that it could be.[2] The xylosynth can by complemented by a variety of accessories such as a single or double foot pedals.[2]

gollark: I've only read about direction finding a bit on the RTL-SDR blog and such, don't know much about it.
gollark: > Is this gona be one of those I Know They (always Capital They) have bugged my room and I need to stop them form reading my thoughts." kind of thing?> no
gollark: I think there's actually a standard for 900MHz WiFi or something, but it hasn't really taken off.
gollark: If the 2.4GHz bands older (most...) WiFi uses was bigger we would have less of a problem with interference or whatever in busy places.
gollark: Really? Huh. It also doesn't help that the regulation varies between countries.

References

  1. "About Wernick Musical Instruments". Wernick Musical Instruments. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  2. "Xylosynth XS6 in SOLID BUBINGA". Wernick Musical Instruments. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
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