Kurzweil K250


The Kurzweil K250, manufactured by Kurzweil Music Systems, was the first electronic musical instrument which produced sound from sampled sounds compressed in ROM, faster than common mass storage such as a disk drive. Acoustic sounds from brass, percussion, string and woodwind instruments as well as sounds created using waveforms from oscillators were utilized. Designed for professional musicians, it was invented by Raymond Kurzweil, founder of Kurzweil Computer Products, Inc., Kurzweil Music Systems and Kurzweil Educational Systems with consultation from Stevie Wonder; Lyle Mays, an American jazz pianist; Alan R. Pearlman, founder of ARP Instruments Inc.; and Robert Moog, inventor of the Moog synthesizer.

History

In the mid-1970s, Raymond Kurzweil invented the first multi-font reading machine for the blind, consisting of the earliest CCD flat-bed scanner and text-to-speech synthesizer. In 1976, Stevie Wonder heard about the demonstration of this new machine on The Today Show, and later became the user of first production Kurzweil Reading Machine, beginning a long-term association between them.
In 1982 Stevie Wonder invited Raymond Kurzweil to his new studio in Los Angeles, and asked if "we could use the extraordinarily flexible computer control methods on the beautiful sounds of acoustic instruments?" In response, Raymond Kurzweil founded Kurzweil Music Systems, with Stevie Wonder as musical advisor. Kurzweil used the sampling technique that had been exploited in reading machines and adapted it for music. Reading machines sample the characters in a text document to produce an image. The machines convert the light and dark areas of the image into text data stored in and/or, then output spoken text with a text-to-speech synthesizer.

Sound reproduction technique

The Kurzweil K250 utilizes a similar concept: Sounds are sampled, compressed & converted into digital data, stored in ROM and reproduced as sound via 12 separate DACs and analog envelopes, which are programmed to simulate the dynamics and sustain of the original sound.. This method was called 'contoured modelling' by Kurzweil in marketing material and regarded as a proprietary scheme. Bob Moog, then a consultant at Kurzweil, was asked about the method in an article in Electronic Sound Maker in 1985:
This method greatly reduced the number of then-expensive EPROMS needed whilst maintaining the dynamics of the sound which would be otherwise compromised by compression. The CEM 3335 integrated voltage controlled amplifier provided exponential gain to reconstruct the dynamics that were lost in the compression.
A prototype of the Kurzweil K250 was manufactured for Stevie Wonder in 1983. It featured Braille buttons along with sliders for various controls and functions, an extensive choice of acoustic and synthesized sounds, a sampler to record sounds onto RAM and a music sequencer with battery-backed RAM for composition. During production of the Kurzweil K250 at least five units were manufactured for Stevie Wonder.
The Kurzweil K250 was unveiled during the 1984 Summer NAMM music industry trade show. The Kurzweil K250 was manufactured until 1990, initially as an 88-key fully weighted keyboard or as an expander unit without keys called the Kurzweil K250 XP. A few years later a rack mount version called the Kurzweil K250RMX also became available.

The Kurzweil K250 was the first electronic instrument to faithfully reproduce the sounds of an acoustic grand piano. It could play up to 12 notes simultaneously by utilizing individual sounds as well as layered sounds. Until then the majority of electronic keyboards utilized synthesized sounds and emulated acoustical instrument sounds created in other electronic instruments using various waveforms produced by oscillators, and prior to that there were instruments such as the mellotron and orchestron which used tape loops. Five other manufactured digital sampled sound musical instruments were available at that time: E-mu Corporation's E-mu Emulator and E-mu Emulator II; Fairlight Corporation's Fairlight CMI; and New England Digital's Synclavier I and Synclavier II.

Audio