Genwave 12: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
*'''Sample Rate:''' N/A |
*'''Sample Rate:''' N/A |
||
*'''Sound Quality:''' N/A |
*'''Sound Quality:''' N/A |
||
+ | *'''Hardware ADC:''' N/A |
||
+ | *'''ADC Connection Type:''' N/A |
||
Revision as of 18:36, 19 April 2016
Genwave 12 was initially introduced by Drumware, later to become Interval Music Systems (IMS). It was the first 'Universal' MIDI Sample Editor for the TOS range, a blueprint which others followed, like SampleMaker, Turbosynth and Avalon. The history of Genwave 12 is somewhat confusing, but it is believed that it started life named as Genwave, first reported in 1987*. It supported mono editing of 12-bit Samplers like the Akai S900, Sequential Circuits Prophet 2000, E-mu SP-1200 and E-mu Emax, including support for MIDI SDS, and went through various sub versioned releases.
- *See STart Special Issue #1 - Page 72
Overview
- Name: Genwave 12
- Type: MIDI Sample Editor
- Sample Format: N/A
- Sample Rate: N/A
- Sound Quality: N/A
- Hardware ADC: N/A
- ADC Connection Type: N/A
--Atari74user 16:24, 13 March 2016 (CET)
Back to Sound Samplers