Music Thing: The Technos Acxel
Each week, Tom Whitwell of Music Thing highlights the best of the new music gear that's coming out, as well as noteworthy vintage equipment:
The Technos Acxel had the
coolest interface of any synth, ever. Cooler than the
Fairlight light pen or the ballbearing
switches of a Latronic Notron,
possibly even cooler than the wall of knobs on an old Moog Modular.
Developed in Quebec and launched in 1987, the Acxel came in two parts - a huge monolithic rackmountable cube (called
the Solitary) and a touch-sensitive control panel (called the Grapher) covered in 2114 LEDs and a two-line
vacuum-flourescent text display. It looked exactly like something from a really good science fiction film.
You could draw waveforms on the Grapher with your finger, and control the synths unusual workings. It used additive
synthesis, a kind of brute-force system where (in this case) up to 1024 individual sine waves could be combined to
create complex sounds. The system can sound great, but few manufacturers tried because it demanded so much processing
power. The Acxel was the also first machine which could do resynthesis. This is where a sound is analysed and
artificially recreated with an algorithm - but not digitally sampled. The machine took 30 seconds to analyse sounds and
created results which most users describe as interesting.
Acxels were very expensive, and production was difficult and intermittent. Technos struggled on for a few years then,
inevitably, went bankrupt. Today, Acxels are very rare. The last time one appeared on eBay was in 2003. Boring
touch-screen LCDs have made cool LED-matrix displays obsolete. But resynthesis is now more popular than ever, because
computers and on-screen interfaces have made it workable with soft synths like
Cameleon 5000 and
Virsyn Cube.


















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
gocy @ Dec 19th 2005 12:13AM
I used to have a friend in the eithies that had one of these things, he was 17 and he had a fairlight II as well. For a being 17 he was the shadiest m.f. I've met and his fairlight used to crash all the time. Never knew how he got the cash. I remember this was likean astromic sum of 15 000 USD or more. I heard he got put in jail later for trying to stealing his own fairlight in some insurance scam. I remeber him trying to show me how the Acxel converted a sampled sound to synthes and it came out completly different or can I say turd like.