Korg Polysix

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Polysix by Korg
Synthesis type: Analog subtractive
Polyphony: 6 voice
Oscillators: 1 with sub-oscillator per voice
VCF: 1 per voice
VCA: 1 per voice
1 envelope per voice
LFO: 1
Velocity sensitive: {{{velocity}}}
Aftertouch: {{{aftertouch}}}
Memory: 32 patches
Onboard effects: Chorus
Original price: $ 1100

The Korg Polysix is a six voice programmable polyphonic synthesizer released by Korg in 1981.

Contents

[edit] Features

The synthesizer's main features are six-voice polyphony, unison and chord play modes, 32 memory slots for patches and cassette port for backing up patches.

[edit] Audio path

The Polysix has a straightforward synthesis architecture. Each voice has one oscillator with sawtooth wave, variable pulse wave, or PWM outputs. The PWM section has its own LFO. In addition, there is a sub-oscillator that allows the addition of a square wave either one or two octaves below the main VCO pitch.

The filter has controls for cutoff frequency, resonance, envelope amount and keyboard tracking. The envelope control has a center zero, letting the user select either a normal or an inverted envelope.The envelope is an ADSR type.

The VCA can be operated from either the envelope or a gate signal.

The mixed sound of all the voices can be sent to an effects section, which offers three modulated delay-based effects (Chorus, Phase or Ensemble setting). This acts to fatten the sound considerably, and was a key feature at the time of release.

[edit] Modulation

The LFO (known here as a 'modulation generator') is a simple triangle wave that can be routed to the VCO, VCF or VCA. It has a variable delay before it is triggered.

[edit] Reliability

Although built into a substantial (and heavy) chipboard case, the Polysix has some reliability problems.

Like other programmable synthesizers of the era, it had a rechargeable battery that powered the memory when the unit was switched off. The original batteries would now be well past their designed lifespan and thus, prone to failiure, leaving the instrument unable to recall user designed patches from its memory. If the battery is not replaced, it can leak and corrode the circuits. Unfortunately for the Polysix, this battery is mounted on the main processor board and corrosion here can be fatally damaging to the circuitry of the instrument.

Some instruments of its era had begun the move towards digital technology by using DCOs or microprocessor-generated envelopes.The Polysix, however, still uses a separate analog VCO, VCF and envelope generator for each voice. Whilst this might have benefits for the richness of the sound, the extra complexity also brings greater tuning problems and more possibilities for failure.

The Polysix keyboard uses a light plastic keyboard with conductive rubber contacts. These contacts are often the source of 'dead' keys on the keyboard. This is probably the most common problem on old Polysix units, and one shared with some other Korg instruments that used the same keyboard, such as the Poly61

[edit] Trivia

  • The Korg Polysix is the source of Japanese rock band Polysics's name.
  • The keyboard riff for Europe's 1986 song "The Final Countdown" was composed on a Korg Polysix around 1982.

[edit] Source

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