Thomas P. Heckmann presented the OSCar Synthesizer

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A really cool digital Synthesizers from the past is the OSCar because it comes with digital oscillators and an analog filter. The design was very unusual and these make it so special in my opinion. It has not that classical mass production Synthesizer look but a very unique design. The sounds are very versatile because you can create your own waveforms inside and it can “emulate” some best known Synthesizers sounds like the Moog or the PPG Wave.





Some more Informations about the OSCar Synthesizer (found at vintagesynth.com)

The OSCar is a classic mono-synth from British manufacturer Oxford Synthesiser Company (OSC). It came in 1983 and though it was in the same class as the Arp Odyssey and Minimoog mono-synths, its late arrival makes it one of the more advanced programmable mono-synths of its time! It’s got a really cool sound, digitally controlled dual oscillators with analog filters, and plenty of programmability all packed into a quirky little plastic case with 37 keys. MIDI also appeared on later revisions as well.

Its sound starts out from its two DCO’s. The synth is monophonic but can also achieve duophonic capability when using just one oscillator per voice. Waveforms offered include sawtooth, triangle, and square-, variable-, or modulated-pulse waveforms. In addition to these analog waveforms, there’s an additive-synthesis function allowing you to create your own custom waveforms by simply mixing the amplitudes of any of its 24 harmonics using the keyboard. Up to 24 of these custom waves can be stored and used with either oscillator.
Once you’ve got some sounds it’s time to hit the filter section – the real analog heart of this synth! It has two 12dB/oct filters which can be linked for a steeper 24dB/oct slope. It features switchable lowpass, highpass and bandpass filtering and your basic frequency cutoff and resonance type controls. The filter has its own ADSR envelope as well (a second ADSR envelope controls the amplifier section). The filter can also be modulated by the LFO. The OSCar’s LFO offers triangle, sawtooth, square, and other wave shapes and can also be used to modulate the amp, pitch, or pulse-width. There’s even a sample-and-hold function.

A simple built-in sequencer gave the OSCar duophonic capabilities! It could play a sequence on one of the oscillators while the keyboard can be used to simultaneously play along with the sequence. It stores up to 24 sequences. When MIDI came on later models after 1984, you could easily synchronize your OSCar and other MIDI gear together and patches stored in memory could be dumped via MIDI to more permanent offline storage mediums. MIDI models also offered 36 programmable memory patches which are assigned to the actual keyboard keys (pre-MIDI models had 12 preset and 24 user patches).

If you are interested in these particular sounds and can’t afford a vintage OSCar Synthesizer, than check out the lovely developed emulation of GForceSoftware. They created a nice sounding emulation of this Synthesizer.





More Informations here: ImpOscar2 Synthesizer

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