Peterson Electro-Musical Products

Peterson Electro-Musical Products
Private
Industry Electronics
Founded Chicago (1948)
Founder Richard H. Peterson
Headquarters Alsip, Illinois, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Richard Peterson (Founder)
Scott R. Peterson (President)
Bill Hass (Engineer)
Patrick J. Bovenizer (VP)
Products Tuners
Subsidiaries Conn Tuner
Website www.petersontuners.com

Peterson Electro-Musical Products, Inc. is a music-electronics company founded by Richard H. Peterson in 1948.[1] The Peterson company introduced the first commercial handheld electronic tuner for musicians, the Model 70, in 1964, and later its models of strobe tuners became popular among touring and studio musicians such as the Grateful Dead, The Who, Pink Floyd, Frank Zappa, Jimi Hendrix, and Neil Young.[1] Since its inception the company has also contributed notable inventions and innovations to the electronic organ, and its products are in use in many thousands of pipe organs, and hundreds of thousands of electronic organs, worldwide.[2]

Company history

Richard Peterson
Founder

Founder Richard H. "Dick" Peterson (born February 26, 1925, died January 29, 2009), was born in Chicago. In his teens, he began developing a keen interest in radios, vacuum tube circuits, and pipe organs. He served as a radio operator for the U.S. Army near the end of World War II, and while stationed in New York City, developed a further fascination with the sound and mechanics of pipe organs. He founded Haygren Organ Company to build electronic pipe organs with a sound he felt better matched real pipe organs, and was the first to use multiple oscillators in the organ design to produce a genuine ensemble. He also focused on the realistic attack and decay of individual electronic notes.[2]

Founding

Peterson founded Peterson Electro-Musical Products in 1948.[1] He soon licensed his inventions to the Gulbransen Piano Company of Chicago to use in home electronic organs. In 1957, Peterson completed the world's first transistor organ for Gulbransen.[2] The company went on to produce other products for musical tuning, electronic organs, home security, and keyboards, and later developed and produced electronic and electro-mechanical equipment used in pipe organs.[1]

Expansion

In 1964, the Peterson company built a new 3,000-square-foot (280 m2) headquarters in Alsip, Illinois, on a plot of 2.5 acres (10,000 m2). They built two additional buildings totaling 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2) on the company site between 1975 and 1977.[2]

In 1985, the Conn Tuner company closed. Peterson bought their Strobotuner division, and continue to service the Strobotuner product line, which is now made in China.[1]

More recent years

In 1991 Dick Peterson's son Scott R. Peterson became Company President, after previously serving as Design Engineer, Production Manager, and Vice President.[2]

In 1998, the Peterson Company celebrated its 50-year anniversary by creating the "Beer Bottle Organ" prototype in the exhibit area of the American Institute of Organ Builders convention. The "BBO" used pipe organ components and beer bottles with liquid, precisely tuned with a Peterson strobe tuner, to produce a clear, flute-like musical sound when played with a keyboard or via recorded MIDI files.[2] Peterson Electro-Musical Products, Inc. is still family owned, and still has an active research and development program for tuner and pipe organ-equipment product lines.[2]

Tuner product history

The first Peterson tuner, the Model 150, was released in 1952, after Peterson developed it for their own use in tuning organs. The Model 150, and the Model 200 released in 1959 were the first products to carry the Peterson name.[2] These tuners used vacuum tube technology and produced a wide range of finely adjustable audio tones. The design advanced to solid state with the Model 300 in 1966.[1]

First handheld tuner

Peterson engineer, Bill Hass (born February 6, 1939, died May 3, 2008), built the first commercially available battery-powered handheld tuner, the Model 70, in 1964. The Model 70 was a chromatic tuner that generated twelve fixed pitch reference tones. The user tuning an instrument set the tuner to a pitch and matched the tone.[1]

First Peterson strobe tuner

In 1967, Peterson introduced its first strobe tuner, the Model 400. It was the first solid-state strobe tuner on the market, and did not require calibration. Musicians could select one-cent increments. The tuner was highly influential in Peterson Tuner's growing presence in the fledgling tuner industry.

Tuning in the 1960s and 1970s
Peterson Model 420 Strobe Tuner

The rise of popular music as a business force in the 1960s and 1970s brought increased demand for professionalism in performance and recording. The only commercially available tuners in that era were manufactured by Peterson and Conn, which led to their presence on most major records and live concerts. The Peterson models became highly popular among leading touring and studio musicians, and were frequently used onstage by such bands as the Jimi Hendrix Experience, The Rolling Stones, Grateful Dead, The Who, Pink Floyd, Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention, Queen, Neil Young and Crazy Horse, the Bruce Springsteen Band, and many others.[1] The tuner also became popular for precision tuning by school bands, top-level orchestras, and musical instrument manufacturers.[1][2]

World's first LED guitar tuner

In 1980 Peterson introduced the Model 100 tuner—designed exclusively for guitars. The tuner used the strobe concept to create a rolling LED display that indicated pitch error by the speed of the rolling LEDs. The Model 100 sold successfully in the early 1980s and stayed on the market for nearly a decade.[1]

Peterson Strobe Center 5000

In the 1990s, Peterson made the first significant change to the spinning wheel strobe since the late 1960s. They introduced the "Strobe Center 5000" (SC5000), which used twelve microprocessor-controlled digital stepper motors—one motor for each note in an octave. The strobe can change keys and temperaments, can store stretch tuning tables in a memory bank, and is a true polyphonic tuner.[1] Widely used by school bands for its visibility and by instrument makers for its ability to show harmonic content, the Strobe Center 5000 remains Peterson's flagship strobe tuner.

AutoStrobe tuners series

After the Strobe Center 5000, Peterson Tuners re-designed their mechanical strobe tuning line and introduced a line of AutoStrobe series tuners. These selected the note automatically and offered programmability for advanced users. Besides the Strobe Center 5000, the AutoStrobe tuners are the only mechanical strobe tuners still made.[1] Models include:

Virtual Strobe product line

In 2001, Peterson Tuners developed a line of Virtual Strobe electronic strobe tuners that use a LCD dot-matrix display to emulate a mechanical strobe disc wheel, creating a stroboscopic effect. Peterson began using the "Strobo" name for all of its new Virtual Strobe line of products. According to the company, this was a response to other manufacturers using the word "strobe" for non-strobe tuners. The Peterson 'strobo' tuner line guarantees 1/10th cent accuracy,[3] or higher by using patented technology.[4] Peterson claims the Virtual Strobe display delivers higher resolution than needle or LED-based tuners.[1]

Peterson Sweetened Tunings

Peterson Virtual Strobe tuners offer specialized tuning solutions for various instruments, referred to by Peterson Tuners as sweeteners. According to Peterson, "sweetening" a tuning means using consonance and dissonance to affect the sound of a specific instrument, ultimately aiding creation of tension and release in music.

Peterson strobe tuners are loaded with presets that see a particular tuning as a group of notes (not just individual pitches) and, because of their high tuning resolution, can optimize the notes within these groups, making them more consonant with one another.

Peterson coined sweetening to distinguish between temperaments and 'other' exclusive sets of offsets. A temperament, by definition, implies the use of no more than 12 offsets, one for each pitch in the 12-tone chromatic scale. These offsets form a "template" octave. C0, C1, C2 through C8 for example, all have the same cent offset defined for 'C'.

Peterson "sweetened" presets are not temperaments because they do not necessarily pertain to a scale. They are sets of offsets for a particular instrument. The GTR sweetener, for example, accommodates the specific, common tuning problems inherent to a 6-string guitar. Unlike temperaments, the sweetener offsets only have musical benefit when applied to their intended instrument.[1]

Virtual Strobe models

In 2001, Peterson introduced the model "VS-1" Virtual Strobe Tuner. The VS-II in 2003 had an improved display, additional features, and "sweetened" tunings. According to Peterson, it was also the first tuner to recognize and introduce dedicated tempered tuning presets for pedal steel guitar players. The V-SAM model, introduced later that year, added an audio output speaker and a metronome to the feature set of the popular VS-II.[1] The VS-II was superseded by the StroboFlip in 2006.

StroboStomp
StroboStomp tuner

In 2004, Peterson released the Virtual Strobe tuner model as a stomp box format. The StroboStomp2 replaced the first model in 2007.[1] Both models of the StroboStomp featured true-bypass technology that would not 'color' the tone of the connected instrument and offered a studio-grade, on-board DI (direct injection box). The StroboStomp was discontinued in 2007. The StroboStomp2 was discontinued in 2009 and replaced by the VSS-C Stomp Classic. The StroboStomp, according to Peterson, was the first true-bypass tuner and the first strobe pedal tuner available commercially.

VS-F StroboFlip Compact Strobe Tuner
Model VS-F StroboFlip

In 2006, the VS-II was replaced with the StroboFlip, a smaller version that could be used by musicians without a pedal board. It featured an innovative "Pitch Holder" that connected to the tuner with a tripod-like mount, allowing it to clamp onto music or mic stands. It is also the first tuner to specify the correct interval tunings for resophonic guitar and orchestral strings.[1]

VS-R StroboRack Rack-Mount Strobe Tuner

In 2007, the StroboRack was introduced and featured a large 7" tuning display that made it easily visible from a variety of angles and environments.[1] The StroboRack is the world's first single-space rack-mount strobe tuner.

StroboSoft Software-Based Strobe Tuner
StroboSoft 1.0 software screenshot

In late 2005, Peterson Tuners announced the release of the StroboSoft, a software based strobe tuner that can be used on Mac or PC to tune on your computer. StroboSoft provides the same tuning accuracy as the hardware products and can be used as a stand-alone tuner or as a VST/AU (StroboSoft 2.0) plug-in. The software package contains utilities for tuning and sound analysis, including a spectrum analyzer, oscilloscope, and linear pitch graph.[5]

VSS-C Stomp Classic
StroboClip Tuner

In 2010, the Stomp Classic replaced the prior StroboStomp2 product and added an improved DI, a larger display and multi-octave programmability. The stomp box design was also redesigned and modeled after the 1970s Conn ST-11 Strobotuner. It can connect to a computer via USB, and accepts altered tunings and sweeteners created on a special software editor made especially for the tuner.

SC-1 StroboClip Tuner

The StroboClip, introduced in 2010, is a clip-on strobe tuner. It contains preset sweetened tunings for a variety of acoustic instruments, but can be used for electric guitar and bass players during on-stage performance. According to Peterson, the StroboClip was the first hardware tuner to feature the correct interval tuning for not just guitars and basses, but also for such diverse instruments as bagpipes, oud, banjo, sitar and Arabic maqamat (Eastern temperaments).

Mobile Tuning Apps for Apple Devices

Virtual Strobe application being used on iPhone

Peterson Tuners released a Virtual Strobe tuning application in 2009 as a professional-grade tuning app for Apple's iPhone and iPod Touch. The application leverages the Virtual Strobe display and provides chromatic tuning with Peterson's renowned standard tuning resolution of 0.1 cent. In 2010, Peterson released a native iPad version that offers unique functions on the iPad platform that includes VGA output support for classroom usage and manual note selection. An adaptor cable designed specifically for use with the Apple devices was also introduced to support the app and offer users an entry-level package solution. Per the itunes store 7/14/2015, Peterson has renamed/created a new product for i devices called iStroboSoft.

Sponsors

The following is a short list of notable musicians who frequently use Peterson Tuners in their gear setup:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 "Tuning History". Peterson Tuners. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Peterson Company History". Peterson Tuners. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
  3. Glastetter, Bob (September 24, 2006). "Boss TU-2 Tuner Review". Recording Review. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
  4. Offard, Lynn. "Peterson Tuners: In tune with the needs of music educators". Musician's Friend. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
  5. "Product Spotlight: Peterson Tuners StroboSoft Tuning Software". Premier Guitar. November 2007. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
  6. Verheyen, Oscar (January 2009). "Carl Verheyen Interview". Premier Guitar. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
  7. "Axes Bold as Love The Gear of Experience Hendrix Tour 2010". Premier Guitar. 2010. Retrieved 2011-05-10.

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, July 15, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.