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  2. List of Yamaha Corporation products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Yamaha_Corporation...

    Yamaha recommend that this device be used with the Yamaha VL70m Virtual Acoustic Tone Generator. The WX7 was the first model that Yamaha produced, beginning in 1987. [ 43 ] This was followed by the WX11 in 1993, [ 44 ] and then the WX5 in 1999—2001. [ 45 ]

  3. Yamaha Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_Corporation

    Yamaha Corporation (ヤマハ株式会社, Yamaha Kabushiki gaisha, / ˈ j ɑː m ɒ ˌ h ɑː /; Japanese pronunciation:) is a Japanese musical instrument and audio equipment manufacturer. It is one of the constituents of Nikkei 225 and is the world's largest musical instrument manufacturing company.

  4. Wind controller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_controller

    The VL70-m is able to connect directly to the Yamaha WX series of controllers and via MIDI to the Akai and other wind controllers. Similarly, an example of a software synthesizer with support for wind controller playing is the Zebra synthesizer from Urs Heckmann, Apple's ES2 softsynth, Korg's Mono/Poly softsynth, Audio Modeling 's SWAM ...

  5. Lyricon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyricon

    None of the Lyricons were engineered to use MIDI (which was invented after Computone went out of business in 1980 when Yamaha started to develop their WX7 MIDI wind instrument [8]), although external MIDIfication modules were produced by JL Cooper and STEIM.

  6. Talk:Yamaha DX7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Yamaha_DX7

    Nope, these are not FM synths. Yamaha WX5, WX7 and WX11 were wind controllers which were specificaly designed for dedicated virtual acoustic synthesizers like Yamaha VL1 and VL7 keyboards and VL1-m and VL70m synth modules. WX5 and VL70m could be connected through a proprietary Yamaha interface; all of WX series could also control regular synths ...

  7. Category:Yamaha synthesizers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Yamaha_synthesizers

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  8. Yamaha Motif - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_Motif

    In 2011, Yamaha introduced an entry-level variant of the MOTIF XS: the 61-key MOX6 and 88-key MOX8. Though containing half the polyphony and fewer insert effects of the XS, the MoX series contains all the MOTIF XS Wave ROM and voice presets, along with arpeggios and a song and pattern sequencer.

  9. Yamaha DX1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_DX1

    The Yamaha DX5 is a derivative of the DX1, introduced in 1985 with a list price of US$3,495. It has the same synth engine, but lacks the DX1's fully weighted keys, polyphonic aftertouch, aesthetics (rosewood case and wooden keyboard), and user interface features (parameter displays).