KORG PROPHECY Analogue and Physical Modelling Mono Synth Synthesiser OS UPGRADE

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KORG PROPHECY Analogue and Physical Modelling Mono Synth Synthesiser OS UPGRADE

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This stunning synth has been upgraded to the latest System eProm which fixes problems with the arpeggiator and MIDI clock sync that many other pretended Prophecies still have.In excellent condition with original manuals and power supply. All knobs and buttons are present and correct; all keys are working, this is a great early VA and Physical Modelling synth. Take a good look at the photos, some small amount of sunrash on the controllers but doesnt affect the sound at all.
The Korg Prophecy is a direct descendant of the ill-fated OASYS project.[3] It was a small three-octave monosynth, a pioneer of the late 1990s “return-to-analog” trend. Offering assignable knobs, a “log controller” (a mix-up of a modulation wheel and ribbon controller assembled like a “sausage”) and many other control sources, it invited players to tweak and shape the sound both easily and quickly. Deep editing, however, wasn’t as straightforward, because the sound engine contained no less than 13 DSP-modeled oscillator types, each one offering a large number of parameters to adjust. Some of the most used DSP models were the analog model (based on the classic osc+filter+amp scheme, although with many powerful enhancements), the VPM model (a form of FM synthesis which avoided Yamaha’s FM patent) and the “physical modeling” algorithms. The latter deserves special mention. In the mid to late 1990s, it was believed that digital “physical modeling”, which recreated the sound of acoustic instruments (brass, strings, woodwinds, etc.) using DSP algorithms instead of samples, would eventually replace sample-based synthesis of those instruments, because of its unprecedented realism and expressiveness. As time passed, physical modeling seemed to lose its appeal to both manufacturers (because of the cost of investigation and implementation) and final users, who complained about the realism of the models and limited polyphony. Also, more complex playing techniques were required to play the models in a convincing way. Nevertheless, the Prophecy’s low cost and broad implementation of sound generation techniques earned it a significant place in synthesizer history.
Technically, the Prophecy offered one-note monophony, several effects (including distortion, wave shaping, delay/reverb and chorus/flanger), and 128 memory locations for user sound programs. No sequencer was included, but its integrated arpeggiator was a source of “instant gratification”, as some magazines put it. A PCMCIA slot allowed for offline storage of patches and banks. Standard MIDI sockets, a special socket for connecting an EC5 pedal bank, a sustain pedal socket, and a pair of audio outputs occupied the rear panel.
Dispatched with Royal Mail 2nd Class.

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Category: Musical Instruments:Pro Audio Equipment:Synthesisers and Sound Modules
Location: Norwich