Russian synthesis

The ANS synthesizer

Arguably the first Russian synth, the ANS, was built and developed around 1938 and finished in 1958 by engineer Yevgeny Murzin (1914-1970).
Murzin was an engineer who worked in areas unrelated to music, and the development of the ANS synthesizer was a hobby which gave him many problems on a practical level. It was not until 1958 that Murzin was able to establish a laboratory and gather a group of engineers and musicians in order to design the ANS.

ANS Synthesiser at the Glinka Museum

The ANS was fully polyphonic and generated pure tones from rotating glass discs with 144 optical phonograms. The synth had 5 similar discs rotating at different speeds to produce 720 pure tones, covering the whole range of audible frequencies.

The user interface is a glass plate covered in non-drying opaque black mastic, which creates a drawing surface upon which the user makes marks by scratching through the mastic which allows light to pass through onto photocells that send signals to 20 amplifiers and bandpass filters.

The glass plate can be scanned left or right across the photocell bank, the scan speed is adjustable down to zero giving a continuous held note.

With 720 pure tones it is possible to get a high density synthesized sound with a smooth variance of pitch - the minimum interval is 1/72 of an octave (16.67 cents), or 1/6 of a semitone, which is only just perceptible to the ear.

This precision means that it is possible to synthesize a greater number of sounds per octave than the Western musical scale's 12 semitones.You could, for example, use a scale with 24 quarter-tones like the Indian Sruti scale.

Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin

Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin

Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin (1872-1915)

Murzin named his invention in honour of the composer Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin (ANS)

Scriabin was a Russian composer and pianist who was influenced by Frederic Chopin and composed early works characterised by tonal language. Scriabin was influenced by synesthesia (a neurological phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway), and associated colours with the various harmonic tones of his atonal scale.

Scriabin's work Prometheus: The Poem of Fire (1910), includes a part for a machine known as a "clavier à lumières", which was a colour organ designed specifically for the performance of Scriabin's tone poem. It was played like a piano, but projected coloured light on a screen in the concert hall rather than sound.

Scriabin keyboard

Scriabin keyboard

Theosophist and composer Dane Rudhyar wrote that Scriabin was "the one great pioneer of the new music of a reborn Western civilization, the father of the future musician", and an antidote to "the Latin reactionaries and their apostle, Stravinsky" and the "rule-ordained" music of "Schoenberg's group.

Eduard Nikolaevich Artemyev

Eduard Nikolaevich Artemyev

Eduard Nikolaevich Artemyev (1937-)

Eduard Nikolaevich Artemyev is an acknowledged leader of Russian electronic experimental music. In 1960 he met Yevgeny Murzin and used the ANS in his compositions for Andrei Tarkovsky's films Solaris, The Mirror and Stalker.

Artemyev found that the synthesiser is a possibility "to compose sound, timbre, to sculpt it, to lend form, colour, energy, duration. A most fascinating task for the musician with a creator's imagination, a colourist's talent and an inventor's intuition!"

The Virtual ANS - Spectral Synthesiser

Although there is only one example of the original ANS synthesiser, we are lucky that a free software simulator of the unique ANS synthesiser exists at warmplace.ru developed by Alexander Zolotov

The app is cross-platform and available for iOS, Android, Windows, Linux and OSX. The illustration below shows how it works.

How it works

How it works

Interface description (main window; ANS sonogram editor):

The user interface - ANS sonogram editor

The user interface - ANS sonogram editor

 

Here is a video that introduces the Virtual ANS

Virtual ANS is a software simulator of the unique Russian synthesizer ANS - photoelectronic microtonal/spectral musical instrument created by Russian engineer Evgeny Murzin from 1938 to 1958. The app is cross-platform and available for iOS, Android, Windows, Linux and OSX. More info: http://warmplace.ru/soft/ans
Virtual ANS is a software simulator of the unique Russian synthesizer ANS - photoelectronic microtonal/spectral musical instrument created by Russian engineer Evgeny Murzin from 1938 to 1958. The app is cross-platform and available for iOS, Android, Windows, Linux and OSX. More info: http://warmplace.ru/soft/ans

Made in Virtual ANS Spectral Synthesizer: http://warmplace.ru/soft/ans 100% ANS, no additional effects/synths were used.

The Stroh violin

Impact Soundworks has announced the release of The Stroh Violin, a free (for a limited time only) Native Instruments Kontakt sample library featuring the sounds of a rare Stroh violin acoustic instrument.

Stroh Violin

Stroh Violin

Apparently the Stroh violin is an interesting variation of the classic violin design, invented and patented by electrical engineer John Matthias Augustus Stroh back in 1899 it amplifies its sound through a metal resonator and metal horns rather than a wooden sound box. It’s often used by folk music players and other musicians including Tom Waits, Thomas Newman and Bat for Lashes.

There are three custom-mapped articulations and rhythmic sequencer.

THE STROH VIOLIN - KEY FEATURES

  • Authentic multisampled stroh violin

  • 3x dynamic layers / up to 5x round robins

  • Sustain, spiccato & pizzicato articulations

  • Customizable mapping

  • 3-layer rhythmic sequencer / gate

  • Quick controls for grit, dirt and vinyl

  • Lightweight and fun to use

  • FREE for Kontakt (full version) 5.4+

Staying in Key made even easier

Following my post from yesterday, this may be an even easier way to ensure that you are always playing notes from the right key.

CodeFN42 have released a FREE VST plugin called Cales.

20150206 key.PNG

Cales is a VST plugin that allows you to map your keyboard’s keys to a musical scale. This will ensure that you will always stay in key, and never hit a wrong note.

When "easy mode" is enabled, you can play any scale using only the white keys with "C" always being the tonic (or "root" note).

More than 20 scales are included, and you can easily add your own custom scales.
Get Cales here.

How to always choose notes from the key you are working in

When creating melodies, bass runs or chords you will probably want to choose notes that fit the key you are working in.

20150205 key1.PNG


If, like me, key theory doesn't come naturally to you here is a quick way to be sure that you can only choose notes which come from the key you are working in. 


This makes it a snip to focus on the creative work without having to stop and consider key theory.
Take the 'C minor' Midi file (or any other scale that you want to use) from Keys and chords and place it in the Session View.


Next select all the Midi notes and move them up or down until the Tonic (lowest note) matches the Key that you want to work in. For example moving to A# (Bb) will give you a key of Bb minor

20150206 key1.PNG

Press 'Fold' to collapse all the notes. Select all the notes and use Shift up/down arrow to select a suitable range for your song.


20150206 key2.PNG

Now delete all the notes and you are left with a grid which contains only the notes of the scale that you have chosen.

Now every note that you place in your song will be musically in-tune with your chosen scale.

Great for writing chords too.