I think the primary design philosophy behind the GX1 was that, while
comprised of voltage-controlled voice cards, it was an Electone; that is,
it was designed by the Yamaha Electone organ divison and as such, it was a
stage organ first and a synthesizer second. The voice signal path,
http://www.cs80.com/gx1voice.gif was meant to make it possible (I think) to create flutes, diapasons,
reed and brass in a manner at least familiar to organists. Gary
Leuenberger once told me that at the US introduction of the GX1 in San
Francisco in 1974, the concert crowd was rather neatly divided into those
who were 'offended' at the un-organlike nature of the machine, while the
other half were awed.
In keeping with the user-configurable harmonic structure for organs,
the GX1 has overtone triangle-wave doublers and filter-based harmonic
selectors, things that did not, for example, migrate to the CS-80:
http://www.cs80.com/csvoice.gif Hope this helps,
Crow
/∗∗/
On 17 Feb 2005 jhaible@... wrote:
> This is an interesting concept!
> Do you know what was the philosophy behind this architecture?