This modular synthesizer is one of world first modern polyphonic synthesizer (after historical Warbo Formant Organ (1937) and Hammond Novachord (1939-1942)).
In 1973, E-mu Systems independently developed polyphonic synthesizer technology (i.e. note assignment using microprocessor), and it was applied on their E-mu Modular System.
In afterwards, this technology was also licensed to other manufacturers, and the results are well known Oberheim 2/4/8-voices (1975,1977), and Sequential Circuits Prophet-5 (1977). [1]
Formula Filter Array 24. MATRIXSYNTH (2007-07-16). "Brandon7/16/07, 2:25 PM - That thing looks hot! We have Patrick Gleeson's old E-mu modular here in Calgary AB which is undergoing an overhaul by our technitian right now."
2010-12-09T04:13 clusternote 1024x768 (925700 Bytes) uploaded a new version of File:E-mu Modular System @ Cantos.jpg: blur bottom poster by 20x20 mosaic to avoid copyvio
2010-02-22T01:43 File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske) 1024x768 (563912 Bytes) {{Information |Description=totally forgotten what this is. Is it this (as per comments) ? [http://en-two.iwiki.icu/wiki/E-mu_Modular_System en-two.iwiki.icu/wiki/E-mu_Modular_System] Cantos Keyboard and synthesizer museum. Calgary AB. February 2010. |
{{Information |Description ={{en|1='''E-mu Modular System''' (mid 1970s) This modular synthesizer is one of world first ''modern polyphonic synthesizer'' (after historical Warbo Formant Organ (1937)...