Quasimidi Sirius

The Sirius is a keyboard "groove-synth," featuring a subtractive hybrid-tone-generation synthesizer referred to as DTE ('Difficult To Explain') synthesis introduced in 1997 by Quasimidi. The unit featured a both real-time and step sequencers sequencer with pattern- and song-modes, capable of acting basic drum machine, groove-box, or sound-module. The units is thus 7x multitimbral and has 28-voice polyphony across it's 7 tracks, with track selecting a (track-specific) sound within 96 sounds (per bank) of preset- or user-writeable sounds. Track/voice structure was organized as follows:

  1. Kick drum- 1 voice sample through synthesis chain
  2. Snare drum - 1 voice sample through synthesis chain
  3. Hi-Hat - 2 voice samples (open/closed) through synthesis chain
  4. multi-sampled Percussion drum kit - 12 samples with common synthesis chain)
  5. (chromatic) Synth 1
  6. (chromatic) Synth 2
  7. (chromatic) Synth 3

...where all 3 (chromatic) Synth parts loading mono- or polyphonic keyboard patches.

In addition to level and pan controls, each track could also be routed to 2 effects engines; 1 for reverb/delay, 1 for modulation delays (delay/chorus/flanger). It also features an 11-band vocoder with flexible track routing to its carrier and/or modulator, and an advanced/programmable arpeggiator/gate-sequencer for automatic rhythms controlled by its 37-note keyboard.

The DTE synthesis method combines a basic sample playback tone generator with virtual analog-like controls. While some of the waveforms are sampled instruments, most of them are merely single-cycle samples of periodic waveforms common in analog modeling synthesizers. The unit is technically a rompler, but the it's marketing and technical documentation refer to it as virtual analog synthesizer. This is not entirely accurate, given the lack of any options to shape, sync, or ring-modulate VCO's common to real- and virtual-analog synthesis. While sequencing tools and the (preset) sounds of the Sirius were tailored toward 90's techno- and dance-music sounds and workflow, and the models in production held some unresolved limitations and bugs (being the last model produced before the Quasimidi company folded), the synthesis architecture and user interface of the Sirius feature unique innovations (many of which not seen on more modern/successor synthesizers) that may contribute to its niche appeal. Among these, include it's particular handling of...

See also

Notes

Manual

http://z-universe.dyndns.org/php/download.php?file_name=/manuals/sirius_manual_english.pdf

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