The new PK-6 Proteus Keys is a sleek keyboard with E-mu's Proteus 2000 sounds and features. The PK-6 comes with the Proteus's 32 MB 'Composer' soundset, and additional Proteus expansion ROM soundsets can be added up to 128 MB. The sounds cover the whole spectrum of synthesizer type sounds, from real instruments to bizarre sounds and effects.
Synth Name: | Proteus |
Synth Manufacturer: | E-mu |
Synthesis Type: | Sample-based synthesis |
Polyphony: | up to 128 voices |
Timbrality: | up to 128 notes |
Oscillator: | Digital |
The E-mu Proteus was a range of digital sound modules and keyboards manufactured by E-mu Systems in the late twentieth century.
E-mu Systems came to prominence in the early 1980s with their relatively affordable Emulatorsampler, and subsequently pioneered sample-based synthesis technology with the Proteus range. Unlike the true synthesiser, sample-based equipment does not derive its raw sounds from electronic oscillators but from recorded sounds held in read-only memory (ROM) chips. These sounds may then be layered, filtered, modulated by low frequency oscillation and shaped by envelopes. However, unlike a true sampler, such devices do not allow the user to record sounds but instead offer a range of factory sounds suitable for any given use. This type of sound production dominated electronic music production for several years in the late 20th century. The exclusive license for re-formatting and managing historical E-MU Proteus sound content has been acquired by Digital Sound Factory.
The Proteus range was developed into several models, some differing from each other only by the sound banks they contained, which were optimised for different purposes. However, since most allowed four ROM chips to be mounted, and these chips were available separately, real differences might be simply cosmetic. The available ROM chips included the Composer, a work-horse set of sounds useful for popular music production, three orchestral ROMs, the Vintage Keys collection of electric organs, pianos and classic synthesisers, a chip dedicated to the Hammond organ and a drum ROM as well as the Orbit and Mo-Phatt collections, aimed at dance and urban genres and the Xtreme Lead, optimised for monophonic synthesiser soloing. The original Proteus trilogy contains 192 patches each (Proteus 1, Proteus 2 and Proteus 3). However, they could be also upgraded by obtaining XR versions, having extra read-only memory (ROM) for more sound patches, that would have 384 each.
Proteus 1 Pop/Rock (1989) |
Proteus 1 Plus Orchestral (1989) |
Proteus 1 XR (1989) |
Proteus 2 Orchestral (1990) |
Proteus 2 XR (1990) |
Proteus 3 World (1991) |
Proteus 3 XR (1991) |
Pro/Cussion (1991) |
Proteus FX (1994)[1] |
Planet Phatt [Hip-Hop] (1997) Orbit [Techno/Electronica] (1996) |
Xtreme Lead-1 [Techno/Electronica] (2000) Mo'Phatt [Hip-Hop] (2000) Turbo Phatt [Hip-Hop] (2002) |
Though the Proteus was mainly known as a keyboardless MIDI sound module, E-mu also marketed the Proteus MPS (Master Performance System), a 61-key keyboard version of the Proteus module.
The Proteus 2000 released in 1999 was a 1U rack sound module based on Audity 2000 released in 1998. It contained many 'bread and butter' sounds,[2] among just over a thousand waves utilising 32 megabytes of ROM. It featured up to 128 voice polyphony and 32-part multi-timbrality.[3] It could be expanded with slots for three additional sound ROM cards. A cheaper Proteus 1000 model was also introduced with the same soundset and ROM but only 64 voice polyphony and fewer individual sound outputs. The Proteus 2000 also has Protozoa ROM expansions that contain the first 128 patches of the original Proteus trilogy that were faithfully re-mastered digitally from scratch that could be purchased to add onto the module, consisting a total of 384 patches of up to 16 MB of memory.
This 4U rack model was designed to function as a rack-mounted, front-panel-programmable sound source. It was equipped with sixteen multi-function pads and the same number of programmable knobs and had an onboard sequencer. Franka solida iii manual.
In 2001 the Proteus line of modules was repackaged in the form of a line of tabletop units, the XL7 and MP7 Command Stations, broadly similar to the rack-mounted 2500 in features but featuring touch-sensitive pads suitable for recording drum patterns.
In 2001-2002, E-mu/Ensoniq released a trio of entry-level keyboards, essentially the keyboard versions of the Proteus 2500 module. The E-mu MK-6, XK-6, PK-6 and Ensoniq Halo featured the same 61-key keyboard and controls layout, but slightly different soundset.
prodatum[4] is a cross-platform software editor for the Proteus 1000/2000, Command Stations and keyboard versions. prodatum is free software.
Proteum[5] is a free Windows software editor for Proteus and Command Stations.
Since Creative withdrew their provision of historical OS updates and manuals for most of the older E-Mu gear sometime around August 2011,[6] many of these files have been made available elsewhere, such asSynth Gear Docs Archive and the E-Mu Legacy Archive.
The following artists have used an E-mu Proteus series sampler in their recordings.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article 'E-mu Proteus'.
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Contains update patcher and update notes to update Unisyn 2.0 or 2.01 to Unisyn version 2.02.
This is a maintenance update of Unisyn 2.02. Please refer to update notes for improvements.
Double-click onto Unisyn 2.0.2.updater and follow on-screen instructions.
Update profiles only for use with Unisyn 2.0x. Update profile list includes: Alesis: QuadraVerb 2, Emu: E-Mu Audity 2000 rev 2, E-Mu Audity 2000 v1.0, E-Mu B-3, E-Mu B-3, E-Mu B-3 Turbo, E-Mu Halo, E-Mu MK-6, E-Mu Mo'Phatt, E-Mu Mo'Phatt Turbo, E-Mu MP-7, E-Mu Orbit 3, E-Mu PK-6, E-Mu Planet Earth, E-Mu Planet Earth Turbo, E-Mu Proteus 1000, E-Mu Proteus 2000 Generic, E-Mu Proteus 2000 Standard, E-Mu Proteus 2500, E-Mu Vintage Keys (kbd), E-Mu Vintage Pro, E-Mu Virtuoso 2000, E-Mu XK-6, E-Mu XL-1 Turbo, E-Mu XL-7, and E-Mu Xtreme Lead-1.
Copy profiles to your Unisyn Profiles folder.
This is the standalone Unisyn version for N1 and N5 owners who received the Unisyn N1/N5 bundle with their keyboard. This version will not work with other devices. This update correctly transmits patches and banks without deleting effects settings.
Copy profile to hard drive.
This installer will update profiles that shipped with Unisyn 1.14 and earlier. It will not install newer profiles that were only available with the Unisyn 1.5 upgrade.
Copy profile(s) to hard drive.
This installer will update profiles that shipped with Unisyn 1.5. This installer will not work on Unisyn 1.14 or earlier.
Copy profile(s) to hard drive.