Claims
- 1. A musical instrument comprising a generator means for producing a series of signals corresponding to a plurality of musical tones, a keyboard, a set of key-operable switches operable by the keys of said keyboard; a series of control gates for selectively interconnecting the key-operable switches in circuit with said generator means for producing tones in response to operation of said control gates, and scanning means for sequentially scanning in an up-down sequence said key-operated switches and for operating said control gates for a predetermined interval in response to operated ones of said key-operated switches.
- 2. The combination according to claim 1, wherein is provided means for relatively slowly scanning by said scanning means during scanning of operated ones of said keys and relatively rapidly scanning by said scanning means through unoperated ones of said keys.
- 3. Apparatus according to claim 1, including means connected with said control means for operating successive ones of said control gates with substantially no delay between the period during which one such gate is operated and the period in which the next successive gate is operated, relative to the duration of operation of each gate, whereby an arpeggio is produced with substantially no delay between successive tones of said arpeggio.
- 4. Apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said instrument includes means for generating periodic timing signals for controlling the timing of certain ones of said control gates, including timing means connected to receive said timing signals and for controlling the length of said pre-determined interval in response thereto.
- 5. A musical instrument comprising:
- a. generator means for producing a series of signals corresponding to a plurality of musical tones;
- b. a keyboard;
- c. a set of key-operable switches operable by the keys of said keyboard;
- d. a series of control gates connected with said switches and with said generator means for selectively interconnecting the key-operable switches in circuit with said generator means for producing tones in response to operation of said gates;
- e. scanning means for sequentially scanning said key-operable switches and for sequentially selecting and operating said control gates in response to operated ones of said key-operable switches; and
- f. control means connected with said scanning means for temporarily preventing said scanning means from selecting another control gate for a predetermined interval each time an operated one of said key-operable switches is scanned.
- 6. Apparatus according to claim 5, wherein said scanning means comprises means for sequentially energizing a plurality of scanning lines, and circuit means interconnecting said scanning lines with said key-operable switches.
- 7. Apparatus according to claim 5, including means for connecting said key-operable switches with said gates, and means for connecting said scanning lines with said gates, whereby said gates are actuated in response to operation of said switches when their respective scanning lines are energized.
- 8. Apparatus according to claim 5, including an output system for producing musical tones in response to signals applied thereto, and a plurality of keyers connected with said output system and with said generator means for selectively connecting the signals from said generator to said output system, and means connecting said keyers individually with said control gates, said keyers being responsive to the operation of corresponding ones of said gates.
- 9. Apparatus according to claim 5, including a manually operable mode selector switch for selecting one of a plurality of operating modes of operation, said scanning means being connected with said mode selector switch and operable to scan said key-operable switches in one direction or in both in response to the condition of said switch.
- 10. An arpeggiator for an electronic organ, comprising means responsive to playing of a plurality of playing keys of said organ for generating a two-sided ramp voltage wage form having sides of equal slope, rising from a reference value to a peak value equal to a voltage increment times the number of said keys plus a fixed increment regardless of the number of said keys, and means responsive to achieving of each of said increments by said wave form for sounding a note corresponding with a different one of said keys.
- 11. An arpeggiator for an electronic organ, comprising a plurality of keys, said keys being grouped into adjacent groups of three keys, each of said groups of three keys having no duplications and no overlaps, respective gate means for each of said groups of three keys for transmitting tone signals corresponding to actuated ones of said three keys in response to control pulses, and sequential readout means for producing control pulses for causing said gate means to transmit tone signals corresponding to actuated ones of said keys in an up-down sequence established by a spatial distribution of said control pulses.
- 12. An arpeggio generator for an electronic organ, comprising an array of keys, means responsive solely to simultaneous actuation of any plurality of said keys from 2 to 5 for calling forth tones corresponding with all said plurality of said keys sequentially in an up-down sequence of equal time intervals and in increasing followed by decreasing orders of frequencies.
- 13. In an electronic organ, an array of keys corresponding with the notes of the musical scale, a source of spatially distributed sequential control pulses having a start point, means responsive to actuation of n keys simultaneously, where n is an integer, for generating said control pulses, means responsive to said control pulses for sounding tones corresponding with notes of the same nomenclature as actuated keys in an ordered time sequence of said tones, means responsive to attainment by said control pulses of a predetermined spatial position for causing said control pulses to reverse spatial direction and sequentially return to said start point so that tones corresponding with said actuated keys are sounded in an ordered up-down arpeggio sequence.
- 14. The combination according to claim 13, wherein said notes of the same nomenclature extend over plural octaves.
- 15. The combination according to claim 13, wherein the actuated keys are no greater than n while the notes of the same nomenclature extend to nm, where m is selected from among the integers 2, 3, 4, 5.
- 16. A musical instrument comprising a series of tone signal producing means having frequencies corresponding to a chromatic musical scale, a keyboard having a series of keys, a set of key switches actuatable by said series of keys, means responsive to actuated ones of said series of keys for providing keying potentials, a series of normally non-conductive key gates, respective ones of said gates being connected to corresponding ones of said series of tone signal producing means and respectively responsive to said keying potentials to render said key gates conductive of said tone signals, a plurality of control gates, respective ones of which are connected between said key gates and an output system, sequential readout means for successively applying pulses derived from said keying potentials to said control gates in a forward sequence, and switching means for initiating operation of said sequential readout means.
- 17. The combination according to claim 16, wherein said keying potentials correspond with notes of nomenclatures extending over at least one octave.
- 18. The combination according to claim 17, wherein is provided means for selecting the number of said octaves.
- 19. The combination according to claim 16, wherein is provided means for at will successively applying said pulses in either (a) only in a forward sequence to produce an up arpeggio, (b) in a forward sequence followed by a reverse sequence to produce an up arpeggio followed by a down arpeggio.
- 20. In an electronic organ, a source of a spatially distributed pulse train having a start point and positions corresponding to notes of the musical scale, a plurality of keys corresponding with distinct notes of the musical scale, means responsive to actuation of selected keys, including one key, for initiating said spatially distributed pulse train, means for terminating said pulse train at a position which is beyond the actuated keys, and means for sensing predetermined positions of said pulse train corresponding to actuated keys in an up-down time sequence, and means responsive to sensing of each of said positions corresponding to actuated keys for calling forth a sound.
- 21. In an electronic organ, an array of keys corresponding with notes of the musical scale, means responsive to actuation of a plurality of said keys for sounding tones corresponding with said keys in an ordered up-down sequence, said last means including a sequential readout operative to scan only all the notes called for by the actuated keys in said up-down sequence for a variable number of keys in said plurality.
- 22. In an electronic organ, an array of keys corresponding with notes of the musical scale, and means responsive to actuation of a plurality of said keys for sounding tones of nomenclatures corresponding with the nomenclatures of the actuated keys in an ordered up and thereafter down sequence, said last means including a sequential readout operative to scan all the notes of said nomenclature comprised in said organ in an up-down arpeggio sequence extending for at least one octave beyond notes called for by the actuated keys.
- 23. In an electronic organ, an array of keys corresponding with notes of the musical scale, means responsive to actuation of a plurality of keys for selectively (1) simultaneously sounding tones corresponding with said keys, (2) sounding tones of nomenclatures corresponding with the nomenclatures of the actuated keys in a unidirectional sequence only and (3) sounding tones of nomenclatures corresponding with the nomenclatures of the actuated keys in an up-down sequence, (1), (2) and (3) constituting diverse operating modes, said means including a sequential electronic readout.
- 24. The combination according to claim 23, wherein is included operator controlled switch means for selecting ones of said modes.
- 25. A musical instrument comprising:
- a. generator means for producing a series of signals corresponding to a plurality of musical tones;
- b. a keyboard;
- c. a set of key-operable switches in circuit with said generator means for producing tones in response to operation of said key operable switches;
- d. control gates responsive to operated ones of said key-operated switches;
- e. scanning means for sequentially scanning said key-operable switches and for operating said control gates; and
- f. control means connected with said scanning means for successively increasing the scanning time of said scanning means at operated ones of said key operated switches in comparison with the scanning time at unoperated ones of said key operated switches.
- 26. Apparatus according to claim 25, including means connected with said control means for operating successive ones of said control gates with substantially no delay between the period during which one such gate is operated and the period in which the next successive gate is operated, relative to the duration of operation of each gate, whereby an arpeggio is produced with substantially no delay between successive tones of said arpeggio.
- 27. In an electronic organ including at least two octaves of keys a plurality of keying circuits operated by the keys, tone generator means connected to respective ones of the keying circuits for generating tone signals corresponding to the notes of the at least two octaves of keys, and an electro-acoustic transducer, an arpeggio generator comprising:
- scanning means for scanning the keying circuits in an up and then down arpeggio sequence in response to actuation of any of said keys;
- gate means for transmitting tone signals from the operated keying circuits to the electro-acoustic transducer corresponding only to said actuated keys in an essentially evenly timed up-down arpeggio sequence in response to scanning by said scanning means.
- 28. An arpeggio generator as claimed in claim 27, further comprising octave control means for causing said gate means for transmitting to also transmit tone signals octavely related to said actuated keys in an essentially evenly timed up-down arpeggio sequence.
- 29. An arpeggio generator, as claimed in claim 27, further comprising means for adjusting equally the length of time between the beginnings of successive tone signals conducted to the electro-acoustic transducer.
- 30. In an electronic musical instrument including at least two octaves of keys corresponding to the notes of the musical scale, tone generator means for generating tone signals corresponding to the notes of the at least two octaves of keys, and an electro-acoustic transducer; a selectable arpeggiator comprising:
- mode selector means for selecting between an up-down arpeggio mode, an up only arpeggio mode, and a conventional percussive mode;
- scanning means for scanning said keys in response to actuation of any of the keys in an up and then down arpeggio sequence in response to said mode selector being in the up-down mode, in an up only arpeggio sequence in response to said mode selector being in the up only arpeggio mode;
- disabling means for disabling said scanning means in response to said mode selector means being in the conventional percussion mode;
- gating means for conducting to the electro-acoustic transducer said tone signals corresponding only to the actuated keys in an evenly timed arpeggio sequence in accordance with the selected arpeggio mode in response to scanning by said scanning means and when said disabling means disables said scanning means said tone signals corresponding to actuated key switches are transmitted to the electro-acoustic transducer simultaneously.
- 31. A selectable arpeggiator, as claimed in claim 30, further comprising octave control means for causing said gating means to also conduct tone signals octavely related to the actuated keys to the electro-acoustic transducer in an essentially evenly timed arpeggio sequence corresponding to the selected arpeggio mode.
- 32. A selectable arpeggiator, as claimed in claim 30, further comprising means for adjusting equally the length of time between beginnings of successive tone signals in a selected arpeggio sequence conducted to the electroacoustic transducer.
- 33. In an electronic musical instrument including a plurality of tone signal producing means having frequencies corresponding with a chromatic musical scale, a keyboard having a plurality of keys, a set of key switches actuatable by the plurality of keys, biasing means for providing keying potentials corresponding to actuated ones of the key switches, a plurality of keying circuits connected to respective ones of the tone signal producing means and respectively responsive to the keying potentials to conduct the corresponding tone signals, and an output system; an arpeggiator comprising:
- a series of control gates connected between respective ones of the keying circuits and the output system;
- sequential electronic readout means for successively rendering conductive those control gates associated with conductive ones of said keying circuits to pass tone signals corresponding with the actuated keys to the output system in an essentially evenly timed up-down arpeggio sequence.
- 34. An arpeggiator, as claimed in claim 33, wherein each of said control gates is connected to three adjacent keying circuits corresponding to three adjacent semi-tones of the chromatic musical scale.
- 35. An arpeggiator, as claimed in claim 33, further comprising means for causing octavely related ones of the keying circuits to be also rendered conductive in response to actuation of a corresponding key switch so that a multi-octave arpeggio sequence of tone signals is conducted to the output system.
- 36. An arpeggiator, as claimed in claim 33, further comprising means for adjusting equally the length of time between beginnings of successive tone signals associated with conductive ones of said keying circuits and conducted by the control gates to the output system.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 102,874, filed Dec. 30, 1970, and now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
102874 |
Dec 1970 |
|