T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1638.1 | Do DIR/PRICE=$350,000... | JAWS::COTE | I'm not making this up... | Mon Aug 22 1988 17:08 | 3 |
| ;^)
Edd
|
1638.2 | ??? | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Mon Aug 22 1988 17:46 | 8 |
| > Well, I'm opening up my beginner's mouth for my foot, but I have a
>question. And DON'T TELL ME TO DIR/WHATEVER! Note 6xx says a little tidbit
>about the Fairlight CMI Series III, and from what I gather it's either a
Might I ask why you started a new topic on this if you already found a topic
dedicated to the subject?
/Mitch
|
1638.3 | Dedications from your Fairlight? | TOOK::DDS_SEC | Weather Fairlight drizzle... | Mon Aug 22 1988 18:04 | 11 |
| < Note 1638.2 by HPSRAD::NORCROSS >
>Might I ask why you started a new topic on this if you already found a topic
>dedicated to the subject?
>/Mitch
Well, from the comments in that note it doesn't seem like they were
too dedicated.
--mike--
|
1638.4 | So what's the answer ? ? ? ? ? ? | TOOK::DDS_SEC | A cute baby Seil! | Tue Aug 23 1988 13:39 | 4 |
| C'mon, someone has to know something about this beast? Is everyone
ignoring me? WHAT IS FAIRLIGHT?
--mike--
|
1638.5 | in general... | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Tue Aug 23 1988 13:48 | 4 |
| While I admit to knowing 0 details about the beast, I'm pretty sure it is
a high end synth/sampler/sequencer/sound processor (music workstation).
/Mitch
|
1638.6 | Fairlight... | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Pyramid Shipping Co. | Tue Aug 23 1988 14:26 | 21 |
| The earlier Fairlights (Series I and II) had a MicroVAX inside them;
they were A/D-->DSP-->RAM-->D/A mostly but the MicroVAX could
(and usually did) diddle with the values in RAM. One of the early
Fairlight tricks was to connect the A/D input transducer(s) to
something like a crystal goblet, and then excite the goblet with
feedback from a nearby speaker. Can you imagine Hendrix playing
a goblet in feedback? :-)
The Series III machines are based on the 68020 CPU. They still
do about the same thing- sample, mung, store, replay; but the users
are moving more toward better munging and less toward sampling.
-----
And it does have a sequencer in it (as well as some pretty good
software to sync to SMPTE and compress/expand/slide tempo to fit
a score _exactly_ to a movie scene that's exactly N seconds long,
etc.)
Enough?
-Bill
|
1638.7 | check out Herbie | SUBSYS::ORIN | AMIGA te amo | Tue Aug 23 1988 16:10 | 6 |
| --mike--
Herbie Hancock uses a Fairlight. It is a high end MIDI workstation with lots
of processing power, memory, storage, terminal, etc.
dave
|
1638.8 | More ``historical'' perspective. | PANGLS::BAILEY | | Tue Aug 23 1988 16:33 | 7 |
| Everybody that has (or had) the money uses (or at least used) a
Fairlight. Thomas Dolby uses one almost exclusively. It is a high-end
audio workstation commonly found in large studios. Good for soundtrack
work.
They are designed by some Australian, and their main competition
are the Kurzweil 250 and the Synclavier.
|
1638.9 | never played one | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Wed Aug 24 1988 05:33 | 9 |
| Peter Gabriel can be seen occasionally lurking with a large,
heavy-looking, two-manual job with a vt100 on top. Makes all the
odd noises that loiter menacingly in the background on "So".
Many people play fairlight on the record, and Yam on T.V. (except
Pet Shop Boys, who seem to do it the other way round). They cost
a fortune, and are often the major asset of a studio that's going
out of business.
Richard.
|
1638.10 | Buy one, Buy one | RDGENG::JEWELL | Big ideas, small budget | Wed Aug 24 1988 12:16 | 14 |
| Can anyone out there give me some info on the old Series IIx.
There seems to be a number of these flooding on to the second
hand market at around 3500 - 4500 pounds. Are these machines
still a viable proposition, compared with the Emulator III's
etc in that price bracket. I know some of the limitations, e.g.
size, limiting sampling quality and simple sequencer (by todays
standards), but a little voice in the back of my head still says
"Buy one, buy one", purely for je ne sais whatsit of owning a
*FAIRLIGHT*
Thanks,
Tony.
|
1638.11 | In a nutshell, and I don't know | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad ... DTN 433-2408 | Wed Aug 24 1988 13:06 | 10 |
| From what I can remember from a Keyboard article, the Fairlight was
originally designed by an Aussie telephone company as an afterthought.
The Series II is still a nice board - have seen them from $4500 - 10K
here (shape unknown). There are still many in use in the studio.
Series III starts at $32K, with a full blown (whatever that means)
system running somewhere around $97k. A bit pricey for me, thanks.
-b
|
1638.12 | | SRFSUP::MORRIS | I got the Bailey Quarters blues | Wed Aug 24 1988 17:57 | 16 |
| re: .11
The afterthought was adding sampling. Originally it was just going
to be a music workstation, and then Kim Ryrie said "hey, we can
do this sampling thing, why not".
Thus was born the orchestra hit.
Everything I've heard lately says that the series II is a dog, compared
to what's out now. The Page R sequencer is supposed to be the best
in the business, though; and the series III is supposed to be
marvelous.
I'll take a Synclavier.
Ashley
|
1638.13 | What do _you_ want ??? | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | This is a _professional_ relationship. | Wed Aug 24 1988 19:31 | 7 |
| I'd go the other way around; I'd prefer the Fairlight over the
SinkYerBeer. At least the older hardware of both (I haven't touched
one of either that's less than 7 years old).
Go take a long play and a long listen, and decide if you like it!
-Bill
|
1638.14 | What's in a Name? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Aug 25 1988 11:20 | 12 |
| Everybody knows how Fairlight got its name?
Seems Kim and his cofounders were somewhere harborish one afternoon
consuming business planning fluid when this super neat yacht goes
by, with the name Fairlight. "What a neat name for a company" and
the rest is history.
The instrument itself is called the CMI, for "Computer Musical
Instrument".
len.
|
1638.15 | It happened at BIM!! | JAWS::COTE | I'm not making this up... | Thu Aug 25 1988 11:28 | 5 |
| > Business planning fluid...
All right!!! A deduction!!!
Edd
|