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EKO 700 “Spaghetti alla Bolognese”

By Vintage Italian GuitarsNo Comments

 

With this article, Classic2vintage gives space to a new collaborator, the young luthier Matteo Fontana, who presents us with one of his latest works, a splendid 'time capsule' Eko 700.

Lorenzo

But let’s Matteo speak:

«The Eko 700 series was produced from 1961 to 1965 and all models were characterized by the triple cutaway; the one placed on the underside of the guitar was designed to play seated, with the neck facing upwards, as per the classical setting. This idea of ​​the triple cutaway, typical of the 60s models, seems to be an invention of Bartolini and the Cingolani brothers.

The 700 series is rich in details and is the perfect example to remember the early days of Eko, when accordion pieces, in particular celluloid, were still used to build totally different guitars than those that were produced in USA.

The guitar in my possession is an Eko 700 model “Spaghetti alla Bolognese” and I bought it from a gentleman who had “forgotten” it for 58 years in its case, inside a wardrobe. Precisely for this reason, the instrument is in excellent condition, with still perfect colors and chrome.

The only interventions I had to do were a slight leveling of the fretboard, cleaning the electronics and, of course, a well-deserved string change.

GUITAR DESCRIPTION

This instrument was produced in the second half of 1963, dating is easy because during that year the Eko designers modified for the umpteenth time small details in the aesthetics of the guitar.

It is called “Spaghetti alla Bolognese” for the pink and gold celluloid top. The back of the instrument, also in celluloid, is in a color called “variegated with pink cherries”; the top and back are joined by a gold-colored metal binding that surmounts the two plastic covers.

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The neck is joined to the body with a 4 screw plate, the tuners are open, with white plastic oval buttons, (presumably Van Gent). The nut is in white plastic, the rosewood fingerboard has a white binding on the sides; the keys are 21, plus the zero key. A peculiarity of the Eko 700 is the white plastic fret marks, whose shape vaguely resembles that of spaceships.

The body, in plywood like almost all Eko solid bodies of the time, is surmounted by a burgundy pickguard with the Eko logo superimposed. It is precisely by observing the pickguard that it can be said that this guitar was produced in the second half of ’63 as, compared to the guitars produced in the first half, this pickguard is more rounded and a minijack with switch has also been added to remote the effects.

The electronic part is anchored all under the pickguard and consists of a 6-button pickup selector, a volume and a tone. The circuit is called “accordion” as it uses some parts, including selectors, which were previously used for the construction of the then antiquated accordions.

THE SOUND

The sound is that of a typical vintage guitar, four not very powerful single-coil pickups that force you to keep the strings very close; the nice thing is that the pickup selection works by presets and you have 5 different available.

With the first selector called M, all the pickups work simultaneously and you get a very balanced sound, perfect for arpeggios and melodic lines; it is what we could compare to the neck pickup of a Fender strat.

The second selector, called 1, works only the first pickup at the neck, the sound is very mellow and emphasizes the bass, at the expense of the higher frequencies.

The third selector, called 4, works only the fourth pickup, the one in the bridge. The sound is the opposite of the previous one, very sharp and the low frequencies almost completely eliminated.

The fourth selector instead is a combination between the neck pickup and the bridge pickup, in fact it is called 1 + 4; the sound is powerful and is very pleasant.

The fifth selector is the last combination and makes the pickups in the middle work together for this is called 2 + 3; also in this case the sound is sharp, similar to the sound of the third selector but with more volume, due to the combination of the two pickups.

Finally, the last selector is called 0 (zero) and is practically an Off, which, if selected, deactivates all four pickups.

CONCLUSIONS

As in all vintage guitars, there are flaws, but the best thing about this instrument, besides the sound that takes you to another era, is the aesthetics, a very particular and innovative aesthetic, extremely futuristic and that fully reflects the intentions of Eko in its early years, that is to differentiate itself from the then already widespread American guitars.

Another wonderful feature is the readjustment of the parts of the old accordions, from the celluloid cover to the electronics components. Everything has been done so well that it does not recall the old popular instruments, but rather leads to think of the guitar as a design object, full of details and peculiarities that have not been seen for many years now.»


-Matteo Fontana-

«Liuteria Fontana is a very young project, born after graduating from the Civica Scuola di Liuteria in Milan. I am a young luthier who wants to learn and improve, this article was a great opportunity to express my opinion about a truly unique instrument. If you want to see my works you can visit the pages Facebook and Instagram»

Demo of this Eko 700 “Spaghetti alla Bolognese”.

How a four pickup Eko 700 sounds in overdrive.

 

wandre etrurian

Wandré Etrurian Basso

By Vintage Italian Bass, Vintage Italian Bass, Historical Figures, Historical Figures, Historical Figures, WandrèNo Comments

 

We are pleased to launch the Classic2vintage "showcase" with this very rare piece of Italian production: a splendid Etrurian bass by Wandrè.

Lorenzo

As many enthusiasts know, Wandrè was the nom de guerre of Antonio Pioli, the genius of Cavriago, a small town located in the Po valley.

An engineering student and artist, before being a luthier, Pioli began to take an interest in guitars in the mid-fifties and in 1959 he built a revolutionary round factory, in which his particular “lutherie” was based.

Mr. Wandrè was the creator of some of the most shocking modern instruments, both electric (mostly hollow body instruments but also various solid bodies) and acoustic (the splendid Naika double bass).

Most of his instruments feature innovative solutions such as the aluminum neck covered with PVC resin and special pickups and electronics made by Davoli with a coil that changes the impedance of the pickup, so as to be able to obtain two very defined timbres from a single pickup, as if the pickups were two.

Thanks to this device, in combination with the tone control, the sound nuances become multiple and surprising.

But what immediately catches the eye are the absolutely new shapes and the extremely artistic and colorful decorations of his instruments.

Cover of the single “Chi lo sa” (1966) by the Beat group Im-Pact, on which two Wandré Scarabeo stand out with an Etrurian in the middle

This is the case of the splendid Basso Etrurian that is the subject of this article: an instrument that, as the name suggests, takes inspiration from the Etruscan civilization, re-proposing a typical bucchero vase in shape and color and using the deep double-cut as a reference to the handles of the bucchero itself, also giving it a curved shape reminiscent of the Etruscan Litui.

But also the neck, whose scale is 854 mm, has a shape vaguely reminiscent of Bach’s Lituo, a legendary trumpet with an extremely elongated shape that has recently been rebuilt.

Early editions had a single neck pickup, tone and volume control, and an on-off switch that works on the pickup itself.

The wood used for the body is Ayous or Obeche (a type of Central African essence) and has a large tonal chamber which gives the bass an extreme lightness.

The pickguards could be in white, black or pink plexiglass, or in wood-colored formica with sometimes a decoration in the shape of a Florentine lily.

Later the Etrurian was made also with two pickups.

For more information, please refer to the excellent book “Wandré – The artist of the electric guitar” written by Wandré’s greatest expert, dr. Marco Ballestri.

The Etrurian Basso, conceived by Wandrè in collaboration with the young designer Stefano Beltrami, is undeniably an example of conceptual art, where the modern style is admirably linked to the past and the design fits perfectly with the ergonomics of the electric instrument.

The result is an unforgettable work, which will continue its life over time, passing into the hands of present and future musicians: what could we want more for art, if not its continuous renewal to remain eternal?

The Etrurian that we present in the following images is owned by the collector Alessandro Marziali, it is a first run with a single pickup and pickguard in Formica, without the typical plastic head cover, also designed by the designer Stefano Beltrami in collaboration with Wandré, which will be applied starting from the second half of 1965. There is instead the stylized piece on the top of the headstock.

3 screws have been added, one to reinforce the neck plate and two to move the pins for the strap. Over time and use, a crack has formed in the PVC cover of the neck, between the third and fifth frets.

Since it was not possible to replace the piece, given the almost unavailability of spare parts, and since the neck is excellently playable at present, it was preferred to avoid invasive interventions

The instrument has therefore been totally cleaned and serviced, with new strings added, it works perfectly and with the typical excellent playability.

For further information and contacts, please contact Alessandro at marziali[email protected]

Credits

Thanks to the Facebook group Wandré Guitars who, in the person of Dr. Marco Ballestri, kindly provided us with information and photographic material.

A dutiful thanks then goes to the creator of everything, that Wandré who left us a heritage of art and innovation that never fails to make us remain in amazed admiration.

 

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Harmond De Luxe Viola Bass

By UncategorizedNo Comments

 

One of the most fascinating things about Italian vintage instruments is the fact of finding yourself, like an Indiana Jones, in a continuous and surprising discovery of unknown brands.

Lorenzo

It is the case of this Harmond De Luxe, with which we inaugurate the Basses section of Classic2vintage.

It is a very well made classic viola bass with absolutely captivating amber tones, which give off the typical warmth and fascination of the vintage instruments.

Its owner, the collector Massimo Bellomo, tells us something about its history:

“I bought this bass in 1975. It was my first bass, a cheap used bass, albeit in excellent condition. I played it (and mistreated it) until 1980, then it was stored in the attic, where it remained until March 2020 when , taking advantage of the lock down, it has been “exhumed”, cleaned up and set up at best.

Today the instrument is in almost original condition (except for the string retainer, which will soon be replaced with the original).

I have never seen a similar one with the same brand, but from research carried out online I discovered that the Harold-Jackson brand (Manlio Accoroni di Castelfidardo, owner of the former ELETTRA accordion factory, located in the old factory of Polverini Bros, later demolished) produced very similar models. “

No other information is currently available on this instrument but, as is our habit, we will continue the research and will keep you informed by updating the article as soon as news is found.

In the meantime, let’s enjoy other images and video tests of this fascinating bass.

Update:

During the research, a Harmond Del Luxe guitar also came up and is for sale. The images are at the end of the article. Anyone interested in purchasing can contact the owner, Mattia Benvenuti.

The Harmond De Luxe guitar is an offset instrument that immediately declares its Italian character, starting from the “zero fret”. It has the classic volume + tone controls and a rotary pickup selection control, with a “zero” position to mute the instrument without affecting the volume.

The adjustment of the truss rod is typically at the heel of the neck and you can act on it without having to separate the neck from the body, as happened on the Fender, with a notable increase in practicality and absolute time savings. This solution, of Italian origin, is found today, absurdly, almost only on the EKO and Ernie Ball Music Man instruments.

 

jolana

Jolana Big Beat, a piece of Futurism

By Czech Vintage Guitars6 Comments

 

The 60s marked a period of enormous innovation and imagination in design all over the world, clearly Eastern Europe could not miss the call.

Lorenzo

Going back in time, I remember that as children they talked to us about Eastern Europe as a dark place, totally closed to the West and its “deviances”, where there was nothing but poverty and backwardness … so it comes spontaneously ask yourself: where does all this Eastern European rock, funk, jazz music, that has been raging on thematic video channels from years on, come from?

And what about all these instruments with which it was played, not only absolutely Western but even from the USA, but also extremely expensive and difficult to find even in the “free” part of Europe? So, at this point, why be surprised by the existence of manufacturing industries that produced not only electric guitars but even in shapes that did not conform to the gray image that we had been told about those places?

We discover today, with pleasure, that in Czechoslovakia there was a factory called Jolana which produced an absolutely attractive and original instrument, the splendid Big Beat!

The Big Beat bears a big resemblance to Mark Erlewine’s famous Chiquita, a travel guitar made iconic by both ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons (his co-creator) and the movie Back to the Future, where the little yellow devil is well visible in a very close up in the famous opening scene:

The full setup consists of the actual guitar and an amplifier connected to it. A small amplifier housed in a portable typewriter case, the Jolana T6 Kombo, was also offered as an option containing the same circuitry as the one connected to the guitar.

The Big Beat present here, which belongs to our friend, the collector Gordy Ramz, is currently in a repair phase, made problematic by the difficulty to find the wiring diagram of this very rare instrument, therefore it was not possible to have a demo of the guitar sound. but as soon as there is a possibility the article will be updated.

UPDATE:

thanks to our friend Mattheus we got hold of the Big Beat amp schematic, they can be found at the end of the article.
Mattheus also informs us that the guitar is extremely rare and expensive and is highly sought after in the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Let’s enjoy it for the moment in this excerpt from a film of the time:

The following images are taken from jolana.info

Not much is known about the history of the Jolana Big Beat, except that it was the product of the brilliant mind and work of a very important figure in the development of the Eastern European electric guitar, Mr. Josef Růžička (1928/2004), rightly defined the Czech Leo Fender. Mr. Růžička was responsible for the birth, among others, of the beautiful Resonet Grazioso that we have seen in the hands of George Harrison and Jimmy Page.

A video gallery of the Big Beat and the optional “lunchbag” amplifier.

The schematics that Mattheus kindly provided us

 

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Didn’t You Hear…? (I Due Mondi Di Kevin) – 1971

By CinemaNo Comments

 

KARL KROGSTAD passed away exactly one year ago.On the occasion of the anniversary of his passage to another dimension, we want to pay homage to him with this article, with which the cinema section of Classic2vintage is officially lauched.

The Boss

Karl Krogstad

You may wonder who Mr. Krogstad was. Well, not only was he one of the most respected independent directors/screenwriters on the Seattle scene but he was, in fact, the writer and director of “Didn’t you hear …?”, that was Italian named as “I due mondi di Kevin” (something like “Kevin’s Two Worlds”).

Now you may wonder what “Didn’t you hear …?” is… okay, enough of this little game: it is one of the most particular and difficult films to find.

To begin with, it has a troubled history: declared as released in 1983, it actually dates back to December 1970 and was released simultaneously in some cinemas of the Seattle circuit on February 24, 1971, just in coincidence with a terrible snowstorm, so that it was viewed only by a very small group of people.

A broader theatrical release through Futurama International was apparently planned for July 1972, but actually, no evidence of any further screenings other than those in Seattle has been found.

The Skip Sherwood Productions renewed the copyright in 1983 (which is why it was mistakenly assigned 1983 as the year of release) and the film began airing late in the evening, finally beginning to garner a fan following.

It was then reissued in 1985 on VHS by American National Enterprises (A.N.E.) Home Video / Prism Entertainment, in such a small number, that it is really hard to find even in the USA.

It is not even clear whether a DVD version was produced or not.

In short, it’s the classic ghost film, of which perhaps all traces have been lost … if it wasn’t that Classic2vintage has what is certainly the only Italian language copy existing on VHS, patiently recorded over 25 years ago during a unique TV airing.

And it is also of quite good quality.

Honestly, we don’t even know how it is possible that there is an Italian edition of this film.

And after having done a bit of history, let’s go now to talk about the film itself.

At a time when psychedelic and experimental cinema was on the agenda, it was decided to launch “Didn’t You Hear” as ‘the first film with a totally electronic soundtrack! You will experience sounds and sensations that you have never had before’.

The soundtrack, in fact, was written and played by the electronic specialist Mort Garson, working it with his modular Moog, while the object/script and direction (erroneously attributed to the producer Skip Sherwood) were the work of our Mr. Krogstad.

The vynil cover

Mort Garson

But what is the film about?

Therefore, Kevin is a college student with a high sensitivity and with many problems in confronting and living in contact with his peers.

Practically, what today would be easily dismissed as a sociopathic nerd: extremely shy and with great difficulty in relating to the other sex, he lives in practice that difficult situation in which a person finds himself when he is more mature and sensitive than his own physiological age.

Unable to bond with others in reality, he takes refuge in psychedelic daydreams where he and his classmates (the friends he cannot have in reality) take possession of an abandoned sailing boat, a few meters from the shore, baptize him “Queen di Sheba” and play the life of pirates, crossing the length and breadth of an archipelago of islands (mainly Lopez Island and the San Juan Islands).

In these journeys, full of dialogues and interesting and symbolic philosophical considerations (“why do humans stop playing at some point in life?” – “they are robbing us our individuality”), they meet the inhabitants of the islands and situations often arise. surreal and colorful.

This is the noteworthy part of the film, along with psychedelic photography and ritual gestures devoted to symbolism.

As for the “reality” part, shot on the Washington University campus, it is certainly predictable but serves as an effective preamble to launch the dream part.

Krogstad also took care of photography and it is quite clear that the project was very close to his heart. The result is not bad at all, the soundtrack of Garson, full of particular sounds and vintage atmospheres, is dreamy and psychedelic and goes well with the surreal images of the adventures that the new psychic pirates live among the islands.

Let’s move on to the acting sector: Kevin is played by a very young Dennis Christopher, super prolific character actor and protagonist of some cult films such as “All American Boys” and “Dissolvenza in Nero” (Fade to Black), probably however in Italy his most famous role is that of Eddy Spaghetti in the first, excellent, version of “IT” by Tommy Lee Wallace and Larry Cohen.

James, Kevin’s only friend in the real world, is the well-known Gary Busey and Paige, Kevin’s dream partner, is the charming Cheryl Waters, making her debut here.

Dennis CHristopher

Gary Busey

Cheryl Waters

The only trailer available, however, is oriented on the scarce action scenes present and therefore does not give a real idea of the film.

The movie trailer

“Didn’t you hear?” is a film that, all in all, retains a good freshness and keeps alive the interest in the vision and in its youthful message, which actually applies to all ages.

Classic2vintage’s opinion is that the film is worth watching; the hope, at this point, is you’ll be able to find it.

Review of the film at the premiere

 

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The mysterious Serrini Bros

By UncategorizedNo Comments

We continue our journey through vintage instruments with another very rare example, probably one of the rarest in the world, with a good chance that it may even be a prototype that never went into production.

Lorenzo

It happens, all too often, that in the endless production of Italian instruments in the Marche region, prototypes or specimens left behind in a small artisan production for demonstration purposes and never entered production, it was common in that crazy cauldron of ideas that were the Italian 60s and 70s, where examples of excellent design were “wasted”, often literally (later others looking for ideas would have taken advantage of them and we can see very recent examples also in the furniture and lighting production of well-known multinationals in the sector).

It seems that this Serrini Bros was produced by a company that dealt, as was typical in the Marche area, with accordions. The scarce news found on the web indicates the probable belonging of the brand to Randolfo Serrini who, on his return from the USA, founded the Lira company in Castelfidardo, maintaining commercial ties with his former partner Zoppi in Chicago.

The instrument has an irregular and slender design, quite atypical for the Italian production of the time, reminiscent of the works of Jim Burns and Neal Moser and, in some details, also Wandrè and Dean Zelinsky. Also present here is the typical keyboard for the selection of the combination of pickups that we find in most of the instruments of Marche production of the time, very similar to those that were also installed on some Japanese instruments of Italic inspiration. Also typical are the four single-coil pickups installed in pairs.

What particularly draws attention are the headstock, which becomes forked at the top, the beautiful irregular shape of the body with the two boldly thin and slender horns and the particular sunburst of the finish. There is also a tremolo with an unusual shape. Overall, an instrument with a pleasant aesthetic and a strong personality.

The owner of the guitar, the collector Gordy Ramz, bought the Serrini Bros directly from Australia in 2011 and very kindly sent us images, videos and the documentation in his possession, a post from 2008 found on a forum and from which it appears that the instrument was found in 2007 in a dump.

The instrument has been subjected to a thorough maintenance and is currently in perfect working order.

That’s all for now, we hope to be able to update the article as soon as possible with new and interesting information and perhaps even with the discovery of other instruments from the Lira / Serrini.

Some Serrini Bros. videos

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Dedicated to Mario Maggi (third part)

By Mario Maggi, Mario Maggi, Mario Maggi, Vintage Italian Synthesizers, Vintage Italian Synthesizers, Vintage Italian SynthesizersNo Comments

 

I chosed the name after several sleepless nights, it had to be a short name that ended with an X, it is likely that Tex Willer also influenced me, at the time Bonelli comics drove me crazy...The graphics, on the other hand, were partly inspired by an electronic components company, with these horizontal cuts that caused a sensation; I submitted the idea to the graphic designer in Elka and they completed the necessary fonts.”

Lorenzo

The Synthex

And here we are at Mario Maggi’s historical masterpiece, the one that finally granted him revenge on Prophet and Oberheim, in the face of greater polyphony and great potential including the polyphonic sequencer, the multimode filter, the chorus, the ring modulator and a price, to say the least, advantageous over the competition. A masterpiece with a troubled genesis but which has finally seen our engineer triumph.

“The Synthex was the logical conclusion of over 12 years of working with synthesizers. To understand this well, you have to look far into the past. However, after planning the series production of the MCS70, I learned that a new device was about to hit the market: a polyphonic synthesizer called Prophet-5. This was the reason. Until then, we had a small workshop with a small number of freelance technicians, with whom we produced the MCS70. I was then forced to stop building 9 more MCS70s that were on schedule and started working on a polyphonic project myself… the Synthex project had begun. For the Synthex, it was clear that a consolidated company with a factory was needed for such a large project.

“I chosed the name after several sleepless nights, it had to be a short name that ended with an X, it is likely that Tex Willer also influenced me, at the time Bonelli comics drove me crazy…The graphics, on the other hand, were partly inspired by an electronic components company, with these horizontal cuts that caused a sensation; I submitted the idea to the graphic designer in Elka and they completed the necessary fonts.”

There was the prototype that was presented to Elka, with a very different panel from the current one: it had no chorus, there was no sequencer, there was the minimum: two oscillators, a filter with VCA, two envelopes and an LFO, the bare minimum. But it already had a sound that was recognizable.

The first draft of the program for the Synthex, a 1.5 Kb program, was made by handwriting the instructions on the paper and typing with the hexadecimal keypad on a low-cost development system, calculating all relative jumps in hexadecimal to hand, there was nothing at all. Then, as the project progressed, a first development system came out where there was an assembler. I equipped myself with this system which basically had 256 bytes of RAM, zero mass memory, there were no floppies, there were no hard disks … nothing.

Fortunately, there was a cassette interface and therefore, with two audio recorders, I could save the programs that otherwise I had to write on paper … in this way, you could save the programs and load them; loading time for a Synthex-style program was 5 minutes…unthinkable for today’s rhythms.

In the two years of realization of the Synthex prototype, (which finally had the microprocessor onboard) it is also necessary to understand the time needed to learn how to write software with primordial tools; at the beginning, to view the program, I had only a twenty-character display, with a single line…I had to read the program one line at a time, then I was able to build a first video card to be able to display more characters all together, but I had to start from scratch because there was nothing available. A few years later I managed to get my hands on the first floppy disc.

In the Synthex there is a single processor – in those days they cost a kidney and therefore its inclusion was considered a considerable luxury – with speeds equal to 1 mHz, the same processor as the Apple II and Commodore 64, the 6502 model still today. in production by the Western Design Center. The antagonist of those times was the Z80, contained in Prophet 5 and, before that, in the Spectrum Sinclair.

I initially offered the project to three other companies before ELKA eventually accepted. First I offered it to Galanti, owner of GEM, then to EKO and finally to Mario Crucianelli, owner of CRUMAR. Especially the negotiations with CRUMAR lasted several days, but luckily for me they finally gave up on the project.

After a few months, I was about to give up..

Then it happened that a friend decided to go to Castelfidardo to have his organ repaired by ELKA. I decided to go with him and bring the SYNTHEX prototype with me to make one last attempt to find him a manufacturer.

The director of Elka’s music department and also the council were extremely impressed with the sound and the many possibilities. And without wasting a second of time, they asked me if I wanted to present the Synthex at the next music fair to test the reactions of the visitors.

Two months later, together with Elka, we presented the Synthex at Musikmesse, with additional features and a new panel. I got to know Elka’s sales partners from all over the world and, in turn, the young Paul Wiffen, who had been hired by Elka UK, and who would also become the Synthex demonstrator in the future.

I arrived in Frankfurt two days late, due to the usual problems of the last second and as soon as I arrived on the stand there were already two distributors waiting to listen to the instrument, I didn’t even have time to leave my luggage at the hotel: I layed the prototype on a counter and I did the demonstration with the polyphonic sequencer.

And keep in mind that, in those days, a working polyphonic sequencer was a sensational thing, especially incorporated into a synthesizer, it was a new experience. Immediately after the Fair, there was a great credibility impact and, in Elka, the decision was made to start with the first series of fifty instruments.

My feeling was that they were too many, I panicked…I didn’t think it would be possible to sell them all (I would have proposed ten machines), they decided fifty and instead they hit the forecast in full because the instruments were literally swallowed by the music market.

Today, the first fifty Synthex can be recognized by a detail: very expensive black painted knobs, of English production, were used. This paint, with use, tended to scratch and lose its satin finish, revealing the black color below.

Later instruments had knobs made directly at Elka, by their trusted printer, which do not have this drawback. However, just to return to market forecasts, they did not have time to finish selling the first fifty that they were forced to launch a new order for another two hundred machines.

It was a continuous rising; there was no time to build and deliver them, the distributors were thirsty for machines, it was an almost tragicomic situation.

In Elka they had a great experience of home organs, and – to facilitate the production line – they immediately proposed the wooden cabinet with the possibility of attaching the independent legs; the instrument was available with a flight case, legs and legs case; dedicated pedals were never produced.

The Synthex price was five and a half millions of Lire at the time; at that time the alternative was represented by the Prophet 5, which in Italy costed seven or eight millions and then Oberheim OBx, in short, there were only much more expensive machines which, among other things, had a lower polyphony and did not have an internal sequencer”

“After the first series of 50, MIDI came out: a sensational novelty; so it became necessary to retrofit the machine. Fortunately, on the Synthex I had planned a multi-connector for the computer interface – before MIDI existed I was already aware of the possibilities of control offered by the microprocessor on the instrument’s voices, to make it do things that were unthinkable for an analog instrument.

Once MIDI arrived, a new printed circuit was made, the EPROMs of the software were replaced and the note on/note off compatibility was obtained, but above all the notes were received and transmitted to and from the internal sequencer.

There is a series of functional features that are now considered a standard, but which have been included for the first time in a musical instrument with the Synthex; I’ll list them: the multimode filter with polyphonic management, the analog chorus on board, the multi lines and multitimbral sequencer, the hybrid oscillators.

In short, the eighteen hundred and fifty instruments built by Elka at the time (and it is no mystery to anyone that, among the “noble” users it is possible to mention Keith Emerson, JM Jarre, Tangerine Dream, Stevie Wonder, Nick Rhodes, Geoff Downes…), today they are the object of a merciless hunt both by vintage collectors and by professionals…

So why, starting from that experience, not doing something even more powerful, analogical and definitive?

After all, I am the owner of the project, which I created together with the name, the logo, the panel layout, the circuit board design and the eprom code, so I registered the trademark in my name.”

This logically put an end to the dream of the Finnish Soundion (which after acquiring the Elka, hoped to be able to manufacture the Synthex as well) but not to Mario’s dream, which for years has been working on the new version of its creature, the Synthex 2, whose indicative images and the impressive specifications can be seen on Maggi’s website, again an authentic innovation in an area where almost everything has already been done and which we hope will soon see the light.

Always been one of the greatest and passionate users of the Synthex, Jean Michel Jarre explains the reason for his love for this synthesizer, which he also uses with the legendary Laser Harp interface.

Click and watch the video of Jean Michel Jarre talking about the Synthex and explaining the reason of his love for this synthesizer.

But what did Mario do, after the Synthex adventure, to what did he dedicate his brilliant inventiveness?

“After Synthex, I made several projects outside the musical world (testing equipment, medical equipment…) and then I made a parametric equalizer, controllable via MIDI, which has the possibility of morphing between the parameters; a sort of dynamic equalization that can be completely automated. On this project there have been long negotiations with Audio Kinetics and Solid State Logic…”

We were also able to find a fascinating testimony of his fraternal friend Templeton, who talks about the days of Synthex creation:

Artwork created by Roberto Bellucci of Elettronica Musicale Italiana, for the first edition of “Museo del Synth Marchigiano e Italiano”.

“Mario Maggi had his own personal philosophy and a unique way of studying and developing his projects. He was ahead of everyone else by at least 10 years. Absurd that the electronics industry has not wanted to support him in his brilliant research.

I still remember very well the problems with the purchase of the special integrated AD-DAs from Intersil and other manufacturers. I knew that fortunately Mario was supported in his research by other young people who helped him a lot, some of whom provided the components for free.

I still remember very well the problems with the purchase of the special integrated AD-DAs from Intersil and other manufacturers. I knew that fortunately Mario was supported in his research by other young people who helped him a lot, some of whom provided the components for free.

For my part, I raked in all the stocks of components of England to find integrated with the right features!

Many of those who still took the bottle in those years, and use this tool today, find it difficult to understand the harsh conditions under which this great and at the same time modest developer had to work in Italy. Hardly anyone can imagine how difficult it was to find a sponsor for a new project.

Mario Maggi has practically always had to self-finance his work, and this also applies to the SYNTHEX. Fortunatamanete has had little help from friends, such as small donations, logistic support, supply of tons of pastries (as fuel for the brain), supply of special components and much more.

But all this was just a drop in the ocean, compared to the dedication and investment that brought this disinterested man to realize his ideas.

It was almost never supported by public institutions and later, it was only exploited by the various companies. Mario Maggi was, is, and always will be, a capable and modest person, without great pretensions except to carry on his dream, kind and generous with everyone, a true idealist.

He is a man who you can trustfully entrust your credit card and wallet with the certainty that he will not take a penny.

He has collaborated with various companies in the field of electronic music (Crumar – Elka). Companies that had a great fortune to have him as a technical consultant, but like all profit-making companies they did not always understand him as a person and as a developer and ended up with wasting his work.

Electronic & Music Maker of the April 1983, article
about Synthex

 

Mario was and is a friend, a friend of the musicians, of all the musicians, even those he never met but who appreciate him and the tools he built. A person who lovingly commits to explaining the work he has done on Synthex.

If only once had you seen his laboratory, where he spent hours developing the software, reprogramming it, constantly erasing the Synthex eprom to correct this and that error.

If at least once you had spent one of the thousands of nights with him, sitting and destroying your eyes in front of the 14 “green phosphor monitor, at the constant, stubborn and patient work from 3 pm until 3 or 4 am… maybe then you could understand.

And to the friends who teased him about his “obsession” with his work he always answered with a pleasant smile and when he worked he was always in complete serenity: never a curse, not even when, very quickly, he worked simultaneously with the keyboards of two computers , soldered, unsoldered, controlled with the oscilloscope, programmed and reprogrammed the eprom without stopping.

Mario for me was happiness embodied, combined with a competence so unique that he could work in any large research center or at NASA.

But he preferred his world, the world of music and his cellar-laboratory.

Unfortunately, this world he loved so much has hardly supported him, only a few gentlemen among the musicians. Today he would at least receive the thanks of many. But Mario Maggi has not received any thanks from this world. If you look for it on the Internet, sadly you will find only 46 references in various languages ​​about him (starting from October 2004) that have also spoken mostly superficially and telegraphically.

I am convinced that if Mario Maggi had worked in America, his projects would have become much more popular. I don’t mean that it wasn’t really supported by anyone, but it was too ‘small’. Those who volunteered to work with him were, like him, the last idealists and will go down in history as illustrious strangers.

My last memory of Mario Maggi was when I heard it last time (for professional reasons I didn’t have the opportunity to come to Italy and meet him) and he told me he was tired, but he wanted to continue working with all his strength on the DIGITAL MODULAR SYNTH project (we imagine it’s talking about the project known as Synthex 2).

I still remember his eyes that radiated joy and our last banquet of sweets. In recent years, I have tried to find it and meet it again, but to no avail. Maybe he really went to work in another world, where he found more openness to his ideas.”

Music Maker cover (april 1985) – Keith Emerson with his Synthex

A review by YouTube channel SynthMania

A recent splendid demo video of the Synthex sounds, made by the collector and composer Reuben Jones, to whom all our respect for the passion dedicated to this synth goes!

The latest video made by our friend Reuben Jones is a jam with three of the most beautiful Italian synths, among which the very rare Logan Vocalist stands out

It is news these days of a Synthex put up for sale on the same online auction site where the modular guitar synth, Vemia, was sold, which was restored and developed by Mario himself, perhaps it is a sign that our dear engineer is finally back to work?

CREDITS

Many thanks to Roberto Bellucci, great and passionate connoisseur of Italian instruments, as well as curator of the important Italian Music Electronics Facebook page, for his generous advice and the kind concession of the material in his possession. Thanks also to Daniele, aka mr. VSMI, for the very rare photo of the mysterious mono synth.

Thanks to Enrico Cosimi, for his excellent interview with Mario Maggi and for his always illuminating articles and comments.

Thanks to Amazona, for the interview which was fundamental to clarify some points that were obscure, especially regarding the MCS70 and thanks also to Marco Molendi and Andrea Manuelli for bringing it back to life!

German Synthex brochure with full specifications

Thanks to Templeton for his passionate account of the moments he lived with Mario, which served to render a portrait of the man, as well as of the genius. Also on Robert Wittek’s beautiful site there is a beautiful article that covers the Synthex extensively, including the technical part.

Thanks to the excellent Tonehome.de site for the excellent photographic material on Syntar and to the Suonoelettronico.it site for specifics and technical information about it. Thanks to Francesco Mulassano of Soundmit for the images of the article on the Synthex of E&MM magazine.

Ending,

Thanks to all the contributions of the fans (including Reuben Jones and MrFirechild for their love and their beautiful Synthex demo videos) recovered in hours and hours of patient and persistent research on the web: writing an article on Mr. Maggi was one of the humanly more exciting, beautiful and formative experiences and, despite not having had the opportunity to meet him, this obstinate, humble and mythical pioneer seems to have always known him and we really end up loving him as the friend and brother we always wanted to have.

We therefore close with a last, fundamental thanks and a heartfelt wish:

THANKS AND LONG LIFE, MARIO MAGGI!

Click below and download Mario Maggi’s advice for using Synthex

 

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Dedicated to Mario Maggi (second part)

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Probably the most powerful and equipped monophonic designed and built at the time, the MCS70 was an innovation project: very easily the progenitor of the monophonic with memories (which can even be recalled in 5 milliseconds), made even before the first integrated circuit memories were available on the market, double filter, complex modulation routing, keyboard with infrared sensors which erased the mechanical problems.

Lorenzo

Absolute stability of the oscillators guaranteed by the best analog components ever produced, in that same period used only by Buchla and Roland. An unknown and obscure masterpiece of Italian engineering that has stood the test of time and technological evolution for almost 50 years.

But to better understand what we are talking about it is best to take a look at the specifications on the brochure:

It was a totally futuristic machine and Maggi thought big, so for the promotion he had the idea of creating a recording project that would produce an LP made entirely only with the MCS70: an authentic demo to be used as a promotional campaign for his creature, in view of the fairs of the following year.

Maggi contacted his friend Romano Musumarra from the group “La Bottega dell’Arte” and who was already under contract with EMI.

Musumarra introduced Maggi to the label, which accepted the proposal, granting his studies in Rome for only 4 weeks and suggesting Claudio Gizzi as a member to be added to the project, given his classical training and greater experience.

The two musicians took care of the composition of one side each, Gizzi the A side and Musumarra the B side, while Maggi himself took care of the programming of his synthesizer and thus Automat was born, a synth pop / dance album that has become a myth among fans and insiders.

At least two successful hits were drawn from the disc, one of which in particular, Droid, was subsequently used for a myriad of television themes in Italy and abroad (in Brazil, thanks also to the use that the Globe Network made of it, it became a hit from the charts): no surprise that it is still a cult record, which inspired many of the current revivalist synth bands.

Automat Album booklet

Automat complete (1978)

Jean Michel Jarre, who received a copy of Automat directly from Mario Maggi in 1978, was particularly impressed:

“During the Musikmesse, I met Mr. Cavagnolo. He invited me to Paris to present my MCS70 in a series of lectures. Cavagnolo had been contacted by Jarre a week before for other matters, so he had his phone number. The first meeting Cavagnolo organized for me after the event was in private with Jarre”.

Jarre was so astonished by the MCS70 that he wanted to buy one instantly.

The MCS70 had received so much praise that Maggi was now making plans for large production…but just then the Prophet 5 came out, which, due to the 5-voice polyphony (although according to those who have been able to examine both machines, the needle of the scales of quality was definitely in favor of the MCS), unfortunately, KOed the glorious MCS on the start, even if Maggi will later take an act of good moral revenge on the Prophet, but we will talk about it later.

Maggi’s description of his creature is interesting:

“MCS70 was a programmable monophonic synthesizer project, built at a time when there were still no microprocessors, it was built entirely with discrete logic and it was the year that the first microprocessors were arriving. Making software for new components was an adventure, there were no development systems, much less low cost.

After several years of building conventional synths only, with non-storable programs, in 1972 I realized that I could develop a fully programmable version of a synthesizer. I had to do without a microprocessor and without anyone’s help. As far as I can remember, I wrote the codes on a DIGITAL PDP 11 minicomputer.

It was the first programmable monophonic synth in history, with double filter; one of the two worked as low pass 24 db and high pass, always 24 db; the two filters could be connected in series or in parallel, three oscillators, one of which with the possibility of linear FM and, simultaneously, AM. The second modulator was used as a modulator for FM and oscillator 3 as an AM modulator; then there were two envelopes.

When I was presenting the MCS70 model, Tom Oberheim came to the Jen Electronics booth where I was staying and took a look inside the machine and was impressed because it was the first programmable synthesizer, fully programmable I mean, that was around.

He did something like that but it was a partial programmer, affecting only part of the parameters, the others still had to be repositioned by hand.

The MCS70 sounds, especially those in linear FM, were particularly new for that period, also because it was a synthesis between complex waveforms, not between simple sinusoids as would have happened years later with the Yamaha DX7.

The keyboard was four octave. Only one was released, which was then sold to Patrizio Fariselli from Area (if you want to hear it, you can listen to an album called Tic Tac).

The same instrument was also used to make the Automat album with Romano Musumarra, where I took care of all the programming and every sound came from my synth, including chords and electronic drums. Accidentally, the only outside help came from using one of the first Sequential Circuits sequencers, because I still hadn’t prepared one for the MCS70.

I recently heard from Patrizio and he confirmed to me that the instrument is still in his hands, jealously guarded, and it didn’t seem at all willing to give it back to me…”

Area – Tic & Tac (1980)

It seems that later the MCS 70 was also used in “Magie d ‘Amour” 1980 by Jean Pierre Posit, one of the stage names of Claudio Gizzi himself, and in other records of which we are not aware, however, before ending up in Fariselli’s arsenal and getting honored on “La torre dell’alchimista”, the song that opens the album “Tic & Tac”, and then later put to rest due to the dissolution of the Area project.

Jean-Pierre Posit ‎– Magie D’Amour  (1980)

Fariselli himself talks about it in his interview published on Musical Instruments, in the number 243 of June 2001:

“I remember the day when my Arp Odissey broke irremediably, it must have been 1975, before a concert in Rome: sound check in the afternoon, I turn it on and it doesn’t work anymore. Frantic round of phone calls and they suggest that I go and find a person who maybe could do something.

So it was that I met Mario Maggi, one of the greatest keyboard designers. He immediately realized that there was nothing to do for the Odyssey, because an essential part had to be replaced, and he showed me the machine he was designing, the prototype that I still own today and which is called MCS70. Prototype and the only remaining example, which I bought immediately because it was just a fantastic monophonic synthesizer, let’s imagine a Minimoog to the nth degree.

The quality of the components was excellent and above all it had 64 memories, which represented an absolute novelty at the time. Let’s think of the terrible work that both Paolo Tofani and I had to do in every situation, that is, having to calibrate and find certain sounds that had to be reconstructed each time, allowing us to develop no more than four or five sounds in concert. Suddenly I had 64 stored sounds available! ”

From what we learn from the interview released by Maggi to the Amazona.de website (https://www.amazona.de/interview-mario-maggi-der-elka-synthex-erfinder), of MCS had to be made at least 10, which had to be destined to various studios in Rome, and that the price at the time was about six million lire, so we hope to see someone else emerge soon!

Very recently the good Patrick published a post on his facebook page where he announced that his legendary MCS is in technical assistance preparing to be back in action soon, which can only make us happy. He also released three photographs of this mythological machine, of which images were unfortunately in short supply until now. Here they are:

UPDATE February 2020:
The MCS 70 has finally been restored to perfection thanks to the specialist Marco Molendi who, in collaboration with other operators, has released a first demo video that analyzes the construction structure and the sound capabilities of this splendid and impressive machine:

MCS 70 Restoration

Here are some audio tests made by Andrea Manuelli during the restoration of the MCS70 carried out by the great restorer and technician Marco Molendi:

MCS 70 Restoration Backstage

Marco Molendi and Patrizio Fariselli

Patrizio Fariselli – Andrea Manuelli – Marco Molendi

And here it is, finally back in action:
Patrizio Fariselli Trio – Caterpillar

The Syntar

Immagine di Daniele Marziali VSMI

 

The Jen GS-3000 Syntar is probably the integrated version of the monophonic guitar synth, of which Maggi spoke referring to the one still in his possession, the one presented at Musik Messe in 1978.

While it was designed specifically for use with the electric guitar, some keyboard players have had a conversion made to play it with a controller keyboard. Logically, in the case of this synth, there was no program storage and for the “presets” you had to rely on a series of boards to be superimposed on the panel, in which the various parameters of the sound you wanted to obtain were marked.

For a more in-depth description we have decided to re-propose the text on the Suono Elettronico website:

“The Jen Syntar can be used with any guitar to which the custom pickup supplied by Jen is applied, for single coil or humbucking measures.

The pick-ups are fixed to the guitar with double-sided tape, a convenient system because you don’t have to drill the body of the guitar, however, the fixing with the tape seems not to be sufficiently stable.

The pick-up is supplied with double-sided adhesive tapes of different thicknesses, for choosing the correct distance from the strings.

The pick-up is quite high and this forces the guitar strings to be raised a little.

The “Pitch to voltage converter” is a bit slow in the transition between distant frequencies but sufficient for a good use of the device.

A series of rear adjustments (to be calibrated with extreme care) allows you to adjust the signal coming from each string.

Six red leds indicate which string the synthesizer is controlling, a green led indicates the presence of the gate signal. When this does not turn on, the six input signals will have to be re-calibrated.

There is a lack of a “Sample and Hold” (the circuit that keeps the frequency stable even when the signal level supplied by the string drops below the minimum required for the synthesizer to function).

This also indirectly limits the use of the envelope generator, however, leaving the instrument a good versatility.

There are two VCOs with triangular waves, sawtooth, symmetrical square and three asymmetrical squares. Very convenient is the octave switch that allows the guitarist to place the synthesizer above and below the frequency produced by the string.

The two oscillators have separate volume controls.

An LFO (low-frequency oscillator) has a triangle wave, sawtooth, inverted sawtooth, square with two asymmetrical squares.

It can control VCO (vibrato), VCF (wha-wha), VCA (tremolo). It can be excluded using the footswitch supplied.

The filter (VCF) is equipped with frequency, cut and resonance adjustment, its performance is in line with the rest of the equipment.

The Syntar has two three sub-event envelope generators: attack, release, sustain. They separately control the VCF and the VCA allowing good freedom in the generation of sounds, even if partially limited by the lack of the “sample and hold” circuit.

The Syntar is not equipped with presets or memories.

The instrument is equipped with a hard case which also contains the accessories.

The tone in general is satisfactory, it is a pity that, lacking an input for the normal guitar pick-ups, it is not possible to mix the sounds of the instrument with those generated by the synthesizer.

The Syntar is monophonic despite the presence of two oscillators, is equipped with a “glide” and has two outputs: one for the amplifier and the other for the headphones, with convenient separate volume controls, the precedence of the strings for the frequency control is towards the highs. “

Jen Syntar by Maggi

Two Syntar’s demo.

 

-The article continues in the third part:- the Synthex

 

 

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Dedicated to Mario Maggi (first part)

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Maggi's name is inextricably linked to his masterpiece, the beautiful Synthex analog synthesizer. but the brilliant designer has had a past full of innovation, which places him alongside characters such as Moog, Buchla, Taro, Pearlman.

Lorenzo

With this article, the section of the site concerning the Synthesis is officially inaugurated.

The synthesizer, an electronic instrument through which we try to reproduce sounds already known and always create new ones, sees its best-known exponent in the products marketed by the famous American engineer Robert Moog but there are a whole series of inventors who have contributed more or less incisive to the development of the synth as an innovative instrument.

Music and the search for the imitation of sounds are as old as the world. In fact, a big part of terrestrial being, carries within itself the most ancient musical instrument, the voice, which reaches very high abilities in man, so much so that it can easily be considered the first synthesizer in history.

Over time the possibilities have been extended to truly fascinating levels, up to obtaining vocal polyphony, examples of this are found especially in Asian cultures but also in musicians closest to us.

This is the case of Demetrio Stratos, the late singer of Area, who gave a high demonstration of his exceptional vocal skills in some solo records dedicated to the theme of ‘playing the voice’ and which amply illustrate his incredible skills in vocal polyphony (diplophony, triplophony, two-tone and diphonic sounds, laryngeal whistle).

But there is a whole fervent movement of artists who are developing vocal polyphony, a leading exponent is the German musician Anna-Maria Hefele.

Demetrio Stratos – Flautofonie ed altro (Cantare La Voce – 1978)

Hanna-Maria Hefele – Polyphonic singing demonstration

However, we will come back to this subject later on and instead turn to Mr. Mario Maggi.

Anyone who has followed his work closely knows that Mario Maggi was at least 10 years ahead of everyone else and that the Italian electronics industry did not do much to invest in him and support his research as it would have been logical to do.

Yet his story, as we will discover, is that of a great innovator and, due to the determination and the enormous efforts he had to support to be able to give his masterpieces to the world, also of a real hero.

And it is not at all strange that, in Italian synth enthusiasts and experts, hearing or reading that slightly mystical name always awakens a mix of affection and national pride, that kind of feeling that warms the hearts of fans, as it happens for Alfa Romeo and Ferrari.

It is therefore absolutely necessary to pay him a tribute and, being a character far from the scene, of which it is not easy to find news and reconstruct history and chronology, this article will be updated over time, as further news will come to the surface so that we can make as accurate a picture as possible of the history of this fascinating person.

But let’s get started.

At the end of the 60s, a very young electronic engineer in love with the world of musical electronics sent his first projects to the sector magazines. The first of which is known to date, published in the CQ Elettronica magazine, is an effects circuit that connected to guitar or organ produces “spatial sounds”, probably something like a ring modulator.

Maggi’s first project

But we will let him himself tell the beginnings of his career:

“ When I was 17 I created an entire collection of guitar effects for a friend. One afternoon, he came to my house with an Emerson Lake & Palmer record and made me listen to Lucky Man. The sound of what he thought was a guitar solo, had so impressed him that he asked me to build an effect that could make his guitar that way.

What he thought was an effect, however, was not a guitar, but the most wonderful synth solo I had listened to until then. I immediately understood that this sound could not come from a guitar.

A week before, I had been in an electronics store and discovered a magazine with an impressive image on the cover. In the photo there was a large piano keyboard with an equally large control panel with a huge number of colored buttons on it.

Arp 2500

from the magazine, I discovered that it was an ARP 2500 exhibited in a modern art gallery in Milan. A few days later I contacted that gallery and managed to get an appointment. When I got there, I was completely alone for a few hours in the room where the ARP 2500 was on display and I was able to study it extensively.

I can barely find the words to express the emotions I felt in those hours, but it was then that I decided to dedicate all my work and my creation to the development and design of synthesizers.”

We move to the early 70s, when the monophonic prototype still in the possession and use of Enrico Olivieri of the progressive group Metamorfosi and his friend since school comes to light, and thanks to which the name of Maggi becomes part of the collective imagination of Italian and foreign enthusiasts.

“After the episode with my friend, I started building my monophonic synthesizer.

At first, I had trouble compensating for oscillator temperature fluctuations until I found an integrated circuit that was not used by anyone at the time. Probably because it was just very expensive. Using this integrated, I suddenly realized that my first synthesizer, in terms of oscillator stability, was far superior to any other device on the market.

This was the fundamental reason why I decided to continue building synthesizers. I wanted to make them better and better. ”

This synth clearly can be heard on the Metamorfosi records and in the concerts that the group still plays.

Enrico Olivieri with his monophonic synth by Maggi

Enrico Olivieri (Metamorfosi):

“It all started at school, in 1970, when my friend Mario Maggi and I attended the Enrico Fermi electronics technical institute.

At that time Rome was full of wineries and clubs where a multitude of bands found their space to rehearse and perform and, while I passed from one group to another (first accompanied by my inseparable Farfisa organ, then by the Pari organ and by the Crumar electronic piano, both amplified with a 250 watt Lombardi leslie), Mario delighted in modifying amplifiers, optimizing effects for guitar and vocals, and poking his nose into everything related to the electronics available for music, most of the times with exciting results.

One day Mario invited me to go to his laboratory and, without giving me further explanations, he told me that he wanted me to try a “bomb”.

Enrico Olivieri with his monophonic by Maggi and the Synthex

Once arrived, on a table that had nothing to envy to that of the famous Disney’s Gyro Gearloose, I saw a multicolored tangle of electric wires among which a sheet with some uncovered potentiometers was hardly distinguishable: it was of the first oscillator with a low-pass filter built by my friend.

We spent the whole night listening and watching on the oscilloscope sinusoids, saw teeth, modular brackets, filter envelopes and everything that that little devil could produce, with the same curiosity as a child struggling with the new toy.

From that evening, many were the meetings during which Mario made me try and listen to the result of the enlargements and improvements of his project; after a gestation period of many months, a true monophonic synthesizer was born, the first built by Mario Maggi, who entered by force to be part of my instrumentation. Even today, 35 years after its construction, it is fully functional and I use it in all the Metamorfosi concerts.”

An excerpt from the album Metamorfosi (Inferno – Introduzione)

Probably derived from the first, was this other mysterious monophonic, which is thought to date back to the first half of the 70s, also in a single copy, and of which unfortunately little is known, except that it was produced by Jen, in a few dozen specimens, with another panel graphic and the name ‘Synt-O-Rama’.

Of those dozens of specimens, to date we only know the one in possession of Lucio Kraushaar, who personalized it in walnut wood and who kindly provided us with an image, together with the brochures and this pleasant testimony:

«He designed the first synth here in my house where I hosted him for a few days. He had told his family that he was going on holiday to the sea, I left him the house keys, I had to fly (for work). He slept during the day and studied at night. I remember once for a shift I had to get up early but my alarm clock was broken. I had a cassette recorder, Mario in four and in a moment he made a circuit that, connected to the recorder, woke me up with music.»

Synths derived from these first two works were created, among others, for Vittorio Nocenzi of Il Banco del Mutuo Soccorso, Roberto Turbitosi, Mario Natali. The monophonic SYNTH designed by Mario Maggi was a real gem of stability: no trace of the contact problems of the Arp Odyssey, and it did not suffer from the chronic loss of intonation of the MiniMoog at low frequencies.
Maggi’s mono-synth was stable, extremely stable, and it’s no wonder that Enrico Olivieri still uses it today.

Then follows the modular guitar synth that Maggi created in 1975 (also in a unique example) which was requested by a client from Bologna and which should now be in France.

Maggi Modular Guitar Synth

According to the auction house that oversaw the sale (link), the technician who reviewed it argues that it is a highly superior work, in terms of design and organization of the circuits, to similarly designed PPGs.

How Maggi’s modular guitar synth sounds. For the original go to the link

Apparently, this same guitar synth also passed through the hands of Hank Marvin of the Shadows, as this rare photo of the time tells us.

However, Maggi had already sensed that things were changing and that the greater diffusion of synths, even for domestic use, had led to the need for machines with increasingly user-friendly interfaces, compared to being forced to continually modify the parameters to obtain the desired sound, and that musicians would have felt the need to be able to store their own sounds, without having to use only the factory presets.

At the time, however, low-cost microprocessors did not yet exist, so already in 1974 he had started working on a discrete components logic board project that would allow him to avoid the use of the unavailable processors and that, combined with the creation of a revolutionary keyboard with optical sensors, which allowed to avoid the troubles caused by electromechanical contacts, will lead in 1977 to the completion of MCS70, or Memory Controlled Synthesizer.

But we will talk about this in the SECOND PART.

 

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The history of Cosmosound, Silversound, Goldsound effects – Sandro Marchetti’s interview (second part)

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The interview with Sandro Marchetti, creator of the Cosmosound, Silversound and Goldsound pedals, continues

Lorenzo

C2V: “Sandro, how did the Fender-style pedals come about?”

SM: “In ’76 Baldoni had the idea of ​​taking up the Fender Blender case in extruded aluminum, also the principle of the effects was similar but actually the circuits were a bit different. we created the distortions (E-6 Powerful Sound and E-8 Wild Sound) and we added other effects as well (Ed. Cosmosound E-7 Fearfully Sound tremolo distortion, tremolo that was also done as a separate effect as E-5 Shaking Sound). Among other things, requests arrived from guitarists for an external reverb that could be connected to amplifiers that did not have one. Consequently I created a rack-style spring reverb module with multiple inputs and volume and tone controls for use with guitars and keyboards (CSE-10). Then came the electronic Leslie Cosmosound (CSE-18): at first we made them with ITT delay lines but the cost was high so we made a few pieces and in the meantime we studied one with the 741 opamps, much smaller, that practically was a double phasing with two waveforms that worked in opposition, simulating the leslie sound. Later we also recreated the speed change effect. In the beginning it was a bit difficult to adjust it but with practice it became extremely fast.”

C2V: “Well, talking about Leslie, did you only make electronic or mechanical ones too?”

SM: “No those were just electronic, I did a mechanical leslie in the early days at MET. Baldoni and Polverini (Logan, GIS) were looking for a suitable name and I came out with Rolling Sound, which they liked very much. We made some samples but then I stopped taking care of them because in the meantime, in 1975, I left EME to give life, together with Baldoni, to the company where I dedicated myself to pedals, the EF-EL, and the project of the Rolling Sound K200 was passed to the MAC of Carlo Mandolini, who renamed it SC200 R and changed the cabinet, while the one created by me was much more pleasant compared to the average of the other leslie, even other manufacturers copied my case… after all at the time it was normal. With the EF-EL I also created some Hi-Fi components and small 5w and 10w guitar amps, of which many were made. Of the Hi-Fi amps (ed. MARSAN brand, which stands for Marchetti Sandro) were produced two models, 25w and 40w and also a limited edition of seven pieces of 75 + 75w rms on 8 ohms, of which I did one for me and I still use it regularly.”

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cosmosound_logo3_cosmosound_marchetti_classic2vintage

C2V: “And going back to your pedals, for which other brands were they produced for?”

SM: “We made them for various brands, also for Meazzi and Vox.”

C2V: “And this explains why there are the same Cosmosound pedals under the Vox brand.”

SM: “Exactly, at the time in Montecassiano there was the EME of Ennio Uncini (the father of motorcycling champion Franco Uncini) who had many contacts abroad and which produced and imported for Thomas and also for Vox, even if I have no idea who made the amps (Ed. they were made by Eko). He asked me if I wanted to make my pedals for Vox and I accepted. But then I also made them for others, for example Crosio in Paris, a big shop that imported accordions, asked me for the pedals and I made them. But also DO RE MI (which later became C D E, by Alfonso Barabino) and Cavagnolo distributed Goldsounds and Silversounds in France. Later, however, problems arose with my partner Baldoni, furthermore the pedal market at that time began to decline and the production of pedals slowed down. It is to be understood that the market goes after fashions, once in the Marche it was all a production of accordions, then only guitars and you saw bands everywhere that only played guitars, Eko worked overtime in production. Then the moment of the organs began and all the other manufacturers were waiting for the new Farfisa model to study it and, even if not the circuits, at least they copied the general idea of ​​the instrument.”

C2V: “So what did you do next?”

SM: “In 1976 I left EF-EL to Baldoni and went to Logan, with whom I had already started collaborating for the organs. At the time, Logan was just started, at the beginning I went to give him a hand and then ended up staying with them. Logan, at the time, made a strings keyboard that was the best around, considering that, unlike other companies that only used 2 ITT delay lines (including Eminent, which had patented strings keyboards), it used 3. Logan’s chief engineer, Costantini, had done some experiments when he was previously working at Farfisa and realized that the more delay lines there were, the better the sound produced. Practically there were 3 oscillators out of phase of 120 ° with each other, with remarkable final results. In the end those who listened to it fell in love with it and it turned out that the best groups used this strings machine. The problem was that Elka was the first to produce the Strings and also the first to bring them to the Frankfurt fair, consequently it sold everything, so the Logan, which arrived late, was screwed for that year. But things went very differently the following year and Logan won on all fronts. Moral, I remained in Logan until 1982 and I finished my career in the world of musical instruments with them because afterwards there was the crisis, to which the Japanese contributed a lot: the first years they came to Frankfurt and photographed everything they saw, they donàt miss nothing. Later they presented themselves with products both aesthetically and technically improved, taking us by surprise and putting an end to the history of Italian musical production of the era. ”

C2V: “And this happened at the end of the 70s, a real shame …”

SM: “Oh yes, because until then it was great and there was a lot of work for everyone, we were overwhelmed by requests. After all, the Japanese had help from the government that we, as usual, did not have (it seems that the Japanese government paid the companies in advance for the instruments that were exported and then took care of managing the deferred payments from the various customers). ”

C2V: “And from now on we enter the story that we all know well in Italy. Back to the Pedals again, how it worked the construction process? ”

SM: “In the beginning, when I was still at MET, I designed the whole thing and started production. Later, when I started the EF-EL, MET (which had a mechanical workshop) continued the production of the mechanical part and I was in charge of having them painted and finished: assembly of the electrical part, finishing, testing and packaging. ”

C2V: “You were also in charge of applying the various brands, then. Which ones can you remember? ”

SM: “Eh, remembering them all is difficult … there were the G.I.S., which had the exclusive rights in Italy of various brands and the EUR that were for parallel markets.”

C2V: “There are also around JEI, GUN, WERSI, ZENTA, EMTHREE (which is always Meazzi), MAC and obviously your EF-EL.”

C2V: “And how did the promotion work instead? Did the instrument demonstrators already exist?”

SM: “Yes, all right, we had Johnny Charlton of the Rokes and also Peter Van Wood, who mostly took prototypes, all the “strange things”: we made a prototype of octaver with high and low octaves which was great, the intent was to perfect it and put it into production but he took it and we never saw it again, then in the meantime I was already gone. Another prototype we made was distortion, repeat and another effect that I don’t remember now, all controllable with the feet (ed. The description is very reminiscent of the Eko Multitone), but those were things that mostly didn’t go into production because they weren’t commercial. ”

C2V: “After the music sector, what did you focus on?”

SM: “I dealt with everything else, from electronic taps, both as mechanics and electronics, to the creation of plastic and aluminum prototypes of lighting equipment for Guzzini, the catalogs were made with those. Since retirement, I have cultivated the hobby of model aircraft and have built a dozen engines, two and four strokes, steam, compressed air, which have been published in specialized magazines. ”

C2V: “A life dedicated to the true and multifaceted craftsmanship, congratulations! Very well Sandro, thank you for this wonderful chat and for all the information you have given us! ”

SM: “Imagine, it was a pleasure!”

Credits

Thanks to ToneHome and ElectricMister for the kind concession of the use of some of the images in the article.
Thanks to our friend Sebastian Galassi for the Rolling Sound K200 picture.