December 2009
Other recent issues: | EL SIDElectron Sidstation Sound ModulePublished in SOS November 1999 Reviews : Sound Module
Swedish company Elektron have taken the retro philosophy to new heights, with a synth based around the original SID sound chip from the Commodore 64 home computer. Simon Trask finds out if this is inspiration or insanity... The Commodore 64 was the first computer I owned, and I still remember it with affection - not least because it was the first micro to treat sound and music as something more than a third-class afterthought. Its music and effects capabilities came courtesy of a specially-designed sound chip, the MOS 6581 Sound Interface Device, colloquially known as the SID chip. SID provided nothing less than a synthesizer on a chip, complete with three oscillators, a multimode filter and three ADSR envelopes. As such it represented a major development in the sonic capability of personal computers. The SID chip was designed for Commodore in the early eighties by Bob Yannes, who later went on to found Ensoniq and produce much more powerful synthesis chips and stand-alone synthesizers. His original sound chip has not been forgotten, however, particularly by Swedish company Elektron - of whose new SidStation it forms the heart. Travels With SID Elektron's motivation for developing the SidStation can be summed up in a short quote from the manual and web site: "The SID is the classic synthesizer that never had a case built around it." Well, now it has a case, and a striking example of retro-futurist styling it is too, looking for all the world like a remnant of Flash Gordon's spaceship. In fact the SidStation is a compact and fairly light unit, though at the same time the casing feels quite robust.
In Edit mode you can also use the 1-4 buttons to directly select parameters in the 2 x 16-character backlit LCD, while the Rotary Encoder and four Direct Controller knobs can be used to edit the selected parameter. There are some well-thought-out timesavers, such as the ability to quickly move to and fro between oscillators when you're editing them in Single mode, by pressing the zero button, then pressing the left or right button. In general, it's possible to move very rapidly through the SidStation's hierarchical menu system. Though learning your way around the SidStation isn't an arduous task, it's surprising how many parameters the instrument offers you. In Patch Play mode the four Direct Controller knobs can be used for live edits on up to four SidStation Patch parameters, selected from over 80 available parameters. The knobs are also mapped to MIDI controllers 16-19, so you can record your live edits into a MIDI sequencer for subsequent playback as part of a sequence. The selection of parameters and their value ranges are specific to each Patch, so simply by changing the Patch on playback you can have your sequenced edits controlling a completely different set of parameters. Also, each Direct Controller Knob transmits MIDI controller data whether or not a SidStation parameter is mapped to it, so you can use some or all of the knobs to control an external synth without affecting the SidStation itself. If you prefer a more graphical approach to Patch editing, the SidStation comes up trumps with a MIDI implementation that allows all of its synthesis parameters to be edited remotely via MIDI, so it's possible for users to create graphical editing environments within MIDI sequencing packages that support such things (a Logic Environment for the SidStation is available on the unofficial web site at www.abstractreality.com/sidstation/). Rather than any tricky NRPN or SysEx parameter edits, the SidStation's MIDI implementation uses straight MIDI controllers for all its parameter edits.
Oscillating With SID The SID chip has three oscillators, which can be used in one of two ways. In Single mode, the synth is monophonic, using a sound consisting of up to three layered and independently programmable oscillators. In Poly mode, you can play up to three notes at once, but each note plays only a single-oscillator sound (using Oscillator 1's settings).
Sync'ing With SID Single mode also gives you access to a basic arpeggiator - in fact, although this is the monophonic mode, each oscillator has an independent arpeggiator, which can play different patterns at different speeds. Arpeggiated chordal notes play back in the order that you played them on the keyboard, so you can easily change note sequences. Each arpeggiator can be set to play at its own speed, relative to either a global or Patch-specific Speed setting (in the range 50-200Hz) or to an external MIDI clock rate, depending on the Sync Source setting in System mode. The Speed setting defines how often SidStation sound parameters are updated, while the Arp setting divides down from that - so a Speed value of 100Hz and an Arp value of 25 would produce four arpeggiated notes a second. When the SidStation is locked to external MIDI Clock, it updates 48 times per quarter note (or twice per MIDI Clock). This capability means that the module's arpeggiators can be sync'ed to an externally defined MIDI tempo. Envelopes & LFOs
In the oscillator section, oscillator pitch (for vibrato effects) and PWM width can each be modulated by any one of the four available LFOs - independently for each oscillator in Single mode. For PWM width you can set the LFO mod depth, while for vibrato you can adjust LFO mod depth and also mod wheel depth for dynamic control. You can also assign an LFO to modulate filter cutoff, and again set mod depth and mod wheel depth. And if External Clock is selected as the System Sync source, then the LFOs will be syn'ced to a MIDI sequencer or drum machine tempo. On The Table Another feature of the SidStation is the Waveform table, an early version of what later became Transwave synthesis on Ensoniq's synths. There are essentially two ways to use the tables: for creating new sounds by rapidly stepping through and looping around a sequence of waveforms, and for creating pitched, rhythmic note sequences. The two different applications are enabled by the SID-table Speed setting, and can be sync'ed to MIDI Clock. As waveform tables are oscillator-specific in Single mode, you can use them to create three-part rhythmic sequences. In Poly mode, if Oscillator 1's Waveform table is enabled then the SidStation rotates through the tables assigned to each Oscillator in Single mode, playing a different table on each consecutive note. When you play two or three notes together as a chord, you can vary the texture by the order in which you play the notes, so you can have three-part sequences in Poly mode as well as Single, only in this case each part is triggered at a different pitch (though at the same rate) and you can spontaneously change the pitch assignments of the sequences. To use tables in Poly mode without any problems, the individual table steps must be assigned waveforms (even if it's only the same waveform that you've assigned to the Oscillator anyway in the Wave section of Edit mode) or else turned off.
A Waveform table can have up to 32 steps, each of which can be assigned one of the five available oscillator waveforms, turned off (allowing you to create rests in rhythmic sequences), or set to Loop or End. A Loop step also lets you define the loop start step, while other step-specific parameters available are note pitch, oscillator sync on/off and ring mod on/off. One common application for Waveform tables is creating percussion sounds, but the possibilities are quite diverse, and represent a significant and effective expansion of the SidStation's sonic palette. Meanwhile, if you're into riffs and rhythms, this aspect of the Waveform tables is a worthwhile addition and complement to the arpeggiators, while the SidStation's ability to arpeggiate Waveform table sequences provides yet another worthwhile avenue of rhythmic exploration. The Wavetables can be a bit of a pain to create, but if you persevere, the results you can achieve are worth the effort. Filtering At a typical GBP/SEK exchange rate of 13.3 Kroner to the pound, therefore, the SidStation will set you back just over £385, and the delivery just under £33, for a total of £418. LFOs Each LFO lets you select from six base waveforms: triangle, sawtooth, ramp, square, random, and flat (the latter actually giving the LFO a fixed output value). You can also define LFO speed (relative to the system sync speed, which as mentioned earlier can be external MIDI Clock), invert the waveform, set AbZ on/off (on means all LFO output values below zero are inverted), set Sample and Hold on/off (this capability is applied as a modifier to the selected base waveform), and turn Lace on/off. Talk about frills! Lace actually controls the interlace speed of the LFO output and another source, which you can set to be a zero value or the output of another LFO. Yet another LFO feature is Mixer, which lets you mix two LFO waveform outputs to form a third, more complex waveform; you can also set the depth of each LFO in the mix. Each LFO also lets you assign any one of mod wheel, pitch-bend wheel, velocity, aftertouch, MIDI controllers 20-23, or LFOs 1-4 to LFO speed, S/H or Lace rate as mod controllers, and you can choose between LFO retriggering on note-on or -off, and set a fade-in time for the LFO. Sid Star? The SidStation doesn't sound warm exactly, nor quite what I'd call well rounded, although it is capable of producing rich, booming bass drone sounds. But if you're serious about deep, punchy, dynamic bass then the SidStation wouldn't be your first port of call, and, although it has pad sounds, 'luscious' is not a word that springs to mind to describe them; nor is 'smooth'. And if cleanliness is next to Godliness then the SidStation won't get to Heaven. Words like rasping, crunchy, cutting, nasal, metallic, gritty, and cheesy spring to mind. The SidStation's sound offers oomph and bite, and provides an excellent sonic complement to clean-sounding modern instruments. And desp The SID chip could have passed into history as a superior computer-games sound chip, but Elektron have succeeded in making its full synthesis capabilities accessible in a way that will be familiar to hi-tech musicians. In doing so they've revealed its true nature as a real synthesizer, blessed with originality and inventiveness. There are a lot of things the SidStation doesn't have, and deliberately so - no instrument samples, MIDI multitimbrality, onboard effects, stereo outputs, or plentiful polyphony. But then if you want these features, go out and buy a GM/GS/XG module. If you're into creative synthesis and gritty, abstract, wild sounds, and don't mind getting your programming hands dirty, then SID could become your best friend.
Published in SOS November 1999 | Saturday 21st November 2009 December 2009
Click image for Contents
Other recent issues: SOS News Headlines
WIN Great Prizes in SOS Competitions!
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||