ribbon controller

{{short description|Tactile sensor used to control synthesizers}}

{{More citations needed|date=September 2020}}

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A ribbon controller is a tactile sensor used to control synthesizers. It generally consists of a resistive strip that acts as a potentiometer. Because of its continuous control, ribbon controllers are often used to produce glissando effects.

Early examples of the use of ribbon controllers in a musical instrument are in the Ondes Martenot and Trautonium. In some early instruments, the slider of the potentiometer was worn as a ring by the player. In later ribbon controllers, the ring was replaced by a conductive layer that covered the resistive element.

Ribbon controllers are found in early Moog synthesizers, but were omitted from most later synthesizers.{{Cite web|date=2004-07-09|title=Ribbon Controller {{!}} Sweetwater|url=https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/ribbon-controller/|access-date=2020-09-12|website=inSync|language=en}} The Yamaha CS-80 synthesizer is well-known for its inclusion of a ribbon controller, used by Vangelis to create many of the characteristic sounds in the Blade Runner soundtrack.{{Cite web|title=A photographic journey inside the mighty Yamaha CS-80 polyphonic synthesizer.|url=https://secretlifeofsynthesizers.com/the-yamaha-cs-80/|access-date=2020-09-12|language=en-US|website=secretlifeofsynthesizers.com}}

Although ribbon controllers are less common in analog later synthesizers, they were used in the Moog Liberation and Micromoog.

There was a resurgence of ribbon controllers on synthesizers in the mid-1990s, beginning with Korg's physical and analog modeling performance synthesizer Prophecy (1995), incorporating a unique pressure/position ribbon mounted on a modulation wheel ("log"), and their Trinity (1995) workstation (which could accommodate a Prophecy counterpart SOLO-TRI option board), as well as Kurzweil's K2500-series workstations (keyboard versions, 1996), which incorporated both a 4-inch pressure/position ribbon and a separate 600mm-long position ribbon programmable into multiple zones. Roland incorporated a ribbon controller in their JP-8000 (1996) synthesizer.

{{As of|2020}}, ribbon controllers are available as control voltage and MIDI peripherals. An example of a modern synthesizer that uses a ribbon controller is the Swarmatron.

Later in 2010/2011, Korg released a series of minisynths called Monotron using the ribbon controller, it became so popular that it still in production in 2023.

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Category:Sensors

Category:Electronic musical instruments

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