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Fairlight-CMI

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Re: Recreating the Fairlight

2008-07-14 by antonyp69

Like the original poster of this thread, I too would be interested 
in a recreated Fairlight CMI.

The idea that has been floated is a VST type virtual Fairlight CMI.

However due to major advances in microtechnology and processing 
power and mega storage capacities, I believe the best solution would 
be to rereate the Fairlight CMI as a computer soundcard. A software 
package with all the Fairlight CMI functions such for example, Page 
6  Waveform Drawing, Page 7  Control Parameters  etc.. should also 
be included. To enable waveform drawing, an input device such as a 
usb optical mouse or usb optical pen could be used. Of course the 
soundcard would have a microphone input for sampling.  

A modern day personal computer with dual/quad core processors, 
gigabytes of memory and storage would be ample to host a "Fairlight 
soundcard".

I am not a computer board designer or electrical engineer, however I 
have assembled many computer systems and owned dozens of soundcards 
over the last 17 years.

In previous posts to this thread, the posters have stated that the 
goal is to obtain the "Fairlight" sound. Peter Vogel stated there 
were various nuances such as "birdies" and other quirks that gave the
Fairlight its sound.

As mentioned there have been major advances in computer technology 
over the last 30 years since the Fairlight CMI has been around. I am 
pretty sure there are modern day components that could mimic the 
circuitry of the CMI. Probably even software could emulate the 
circuitry as well, however a hardware soundcard version of the 
Fairlight CMI would do it justice.

How would I design a Fairlight CMI soundcard?

I would look at the Creative Labs Soundblaster cards that support 
Soundfonts as a starting point. The Soundfont is similar in that it 
spans the sound sample along the music keyboard. However although 
the Soundfont sounds great, it is not a Fairlight. The Creative Labs 
Soundblaster cards do not have the processing filters of the CMI.  

A CMI soundcard would ideally have sampling and processing qualities 
like a the original Fairlight CMI.

I would even put the original factory libraries of the Series IIx 
and Series III on a rom chip on the soundcard.

What I would love to see....

Because he knows the Fairlight back to front, he is very clever, and 
on a patriotic note, Australian, it would be great if Peter Vogel 
designed and produced this card. Maybe a 'Vogelight CSCI (Computer 
Soud Card Instrument)' ?????

This maybe a pipe-dream, but it maybe a thing that will keep the 
Fairlight legacy going a lot longer and introduce a new generation 
to the wonders of the CMI.

Antony
Melbourne, Australia

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