Articles in Vintage Synth Ads
The Moog Sonic Six was made by Bob Moog from 1974 to 1979. Moog had acquired Musonics, who made the Sonic V synthesizer, and Moog continued the series with the Sonic Six.
The Sonic …
The EMS Synthi A was a portable analog synthesizer made by Electronic Music Studios (EMS) in 1971. The Synthi A was basically the same as a VCS 3, rehoused in a Spartanite briefcase. The synthi …
The picture below is a scan from an old Roland ad from 1982. It depicts Oscar Peterson on the Roland PianoPlus!, with a Roland TR-606 and TB-303.
It’s pretty ironic how Roland saw the 303 …
The SynKey is a pretty classic polyphonic synthesizer with some pretty amazing technology for 1976. It’s got a huge sound because it has 13 oscillators! The oscillator are set up like this: …
The ARP 2600 was arguably one of the greatest analog synthesizers ever and has been used in just about every form of music. It’s a semi-modular, monophonic synth that was made to compete directly …
The Oberheim 4 voice was the first proper poly synth, and also the first synthesizer to us a digitally scanned keyboard. Each of it’s voices is a complete Oberheim SEM module, each functioning as …
This is the first part in a multi-part series on vintage synthesizer advertisements that appear in (usually old) magazines. I used to drool over some of these synthesizers and drum machines, as the closest …

