Music is love

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

 Stylophone      

                    The Stylophone Could Be A Miniature Analog Stylus-Operated Synthesizer Fictional In 1967 By Brian Jarvis And Going Into Production In 1968. It Consists Of A Metal Keyboard Contend By Touching It With A Stylus — Every Note Being Connected To A Voltage-Controlled Generator Via A Different-Value Electrical Device - So Closing A Circuit. The Sole Different managements Were An Influence Switch And A Sound Control On The Front Panel Beside The Keyboard, And A calibration Management On The Rear. Some 3 Million Stylophones Were Sold-Out, Largely As Children's Toys.
                  The Stylophone Was Out There In 3 Variants: Customary, Bass And Treble, The Quality One Being Far And Away The Foremost Common. There Was Additionally A Bigger Version Known As The 350s With A Lot Of Notes On The Keyboard, Numerous Voices, A Completely Unique 'Wah-Wah' Impact That Was Controlled By Moving One's Reach A Photo-Sensor, And 2 Styluses.
                 In The Mid-70s A Replacement Model Appeared That Featured A Faux Wood Result On The Speaker Panel, And ,Additional Significantly, A Volume Management. (Previous Stylophones Had Been Infamous For Being Too Loud In Quiet Situations). This Was Shortly Before The Stylophone Ceased Production Altogether In 1975.
                Rolf Harris Appeared For Many Years Because The Stylophone's Advertising Interpreter Within The Uk, And Appeared On Several "Play-Along" Records Oversubscribed By The Manufacturer.


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