Original Korg technology
presents the ideal live performance vocoder. Your voice
turns into a chorus;
male voices become female vocals- with polyphonic chorus
keyboard.The vocoder was originally developed
as an academic tool for analysing and recreating human
speech. But on this device, even simple vowel variation
took time to synthesize.
Then, in April 1978, Korg unveiled the VC-10, the first
vocoding musical instrument that was practical for use on
the live stage. Much easier to operate than a
synthesizer, anyone can use the VC-10 on the very first
try. Just talk into the microphone while playing the
keyboard and you'll hear polyphonic music with the unique
characteristics of your voice. A wide range of controls
lets you mix the "dry" microphone sound with
the simulated sound, add vibrato, and even use the octave
switch to change a male voice into a female chorus
effect.
Instead of playing the keyboard, it's also easy to take
any other kind of audio signal (synthesizer, electric
guitar, tape recorder, etc.) and make it talk. This is
unquestionably the most unique and exciting new
instrument in years.
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