Generalmusic was an Italian musical instrument manufacturing company focusing on digital and acoustic pianos, synthesizers and arranger workstations. They produce three lines, musical instrument series called GEM ,various studio equipment series called LEM and amplificator products called ELKA.
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Generalmusic's first successful arranger workstation models were their WX series, which offered a large blue LCD display, a user-friendly interface and some useful vintage synth sound presets like Oberheim, Arp2600, Prophet or Synthex. Although designed as arranger workstations, WX series had some professional synthesizer capabilities like filter and cutoff (resonance) editing with an integrated powerful 16-track sequencer. The company also offered more sophisticated versions of the WX series as S series synthesizers. Generalmusic's S2 was used among many professional musicians including Brian Eno. The S2 was similar to a Kurzweil K2000 for its functionalities such as optional sampling, and layout and patch manipulation.
Up until 2000, Generalmusic made a physically modeled, digital half-rack piano module called the RealPiano Expander. The device is still sought after for its realistic grand piano sounds and continuous damper pedal. Unfortunately, the RealPiano Expander has a delicate LCD readout that is prone to failure, due to the internal placement of the LCD ribbon wire in proximity to the top front edge of the plastic front bezel. A damaged screen does not affect sound quality or other functions at all. To prevent damage to the irreplaceable ribbon wire, users avoid placing heavy objects on top of the module. The device also has a few bugs related to key velocity that were never corrected in the upgradable firmware.
Next-generation Generalmusic arranger keyboards were the WK series. Again, they offered a more sophisticated SK series as a synth-arranger alternative and Equinox as a standalone Kurzweil K2500 clone. Although WK series had a long-lived success in the semi-professional market the Equinox synthesizer was severely criticised by professional customers for its buggy operating system and lack of customer support. For instance, while it was easy for other synth manufacturer product owners to upgrade and support their instruments over the web, even listening to the demonstrations of the Equinox from Generalmusic's web site was impossible during its heyday.
The last generation of Generalmusic synthesizer is the Genesys series, offering onboard sampling from an integrated CD-ROM, audio sequencer tracks, and flash ROM. This new workstation does not have the same sounds as previous models, breaking with this tradition from all products in the GEM series before.
With Genesys, GEM gave up their former product segmentation philosophy. It had been a regular strategy for GEM to release one live player's arranger workstation line, one professional arranger workstation line and a top-notch synthesizer line in a production term. (i.e. WS, WX and S series accordingly). But with the Genesys era, GEM left this strategy and instead of offering a high-end synthesizer product, they focused completely on one workstation which tries to combine the elements from the aforementioned three model lines. In addition to Genesys the company offers the beginner alternative as GK series and a simplified WK version as WK-1000/2000.
Although this seems reasonable, there is one thing to note; GEM's former and present arranger workstations and live workstations have the capability to play oriental/Arabic rhythms and scales. In contrast, their old professional synthesizer models were designed for electronic music in mind. If we take professional music production into consideration, an instrument's capability to play rhythms and scales is usually not accepted as a quality standard; rather, the sound manipulation capabilities are important. Because Genesys was marketed as a rhythm-boxed arranger workstation with relatively few sound presets, it can be said that GEM gave up the professional market in virtue of the semi-professional consumers.
Another common reality for GEM products is their high new values drop to very low when they become second-hand.
Generalmusic also produces digital pianos, the Promega series, which are more popular than their synthesizer products.
Both Generalmusic Srl and Generalmusic Technologies Srl have closed factories and offices in 2008 and gone bankrupt in 2011.