Difference between revisions of "E-Mu Emulator Song List"
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| − | [[File:E-Mu Emulator (1981).jpg|alt=Hand-drawn illustration of E-mu Emulator I (1981)|none|thumb|E-mu Emulator I (1981)]] | + | [[File:E-Mu Emulator (1981).jpg|alt=Hand-drawn illustration of E-mu Emulator I (1981)|none|thumb|E-mu Emulator I (1981)|500x500px]] |
* Back to: [[Main Page]] (Synth Directory) | * Back to: [[Main Page]] (Synth Directory) | ||
* Alternatively: [[E-Mu Emulator Article Page|E-mu Emulator Article Page]] | * Alternatively: [[E-Mu Emulator Article Page|E-mu Emulator Article Page]] | ||
Revision as of 22:21, 6 March 2022
- Back to: Main Page (Synth Directory)
- Alternatively: E-mu Emulator Article Page
Currently the list is mixture of Emulator's I,II and III. Mention the version in the notes if known.
Tables of Songs featuring E-mu Emulator
| Artist | Song | Year | Notes | Reference | Media URL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OMD | Live 1986 | 1986 | Played by Paul Humphreys | Music Technology 1986 | YouTube |
| Peter Gabriel | Sledgehammer | 1986 | Factory Sample: Shakuhachi. Probably the most famous usage of this sound-to-be-overused sound. | WhoSampledWho | YouTube |
| Ultravox | Hymn | 1982 | Verse Strings "The triggered strings is from the Emulator (with a Synclavier 'strings' sample we've done).” - Midge Ure | E&MM 1983 | YouTube |
| Ultravox | Reap The Wild Wind | 1982 | Bass guitar samples. “Reap the Wild Wind' was the most percussive song from the LP with Warren Cann using a lot of Simmons SDSV modules. The bass line (as on 'Serenade' and several other tracks) is the group's own pre-recorded bass guitar sound in the Emulator. The PPG Wave 2.2 synthesiser made the main sounds for the piece, which was released as a single.” | E&MM 1983 | YouTube |
| Marillion | Real to Reel / Brief Encounter (album) | 1997 | Discogs | YouTube | |
| Ultravox | We Came to Dance | 1983 | Lead string melody. 'We Came to Dance' led quickly into the triggered Emulator vocal line of 'White China', with Warren Cann pushing an SCI Drumtraks to its limit to recreate the tuned bass drum patterns of the recorded version”. The Emulator is the first thing to be seen in the official video. | E&MM 1984 | YouTube" |
| Deep Purple | The House Of Blue Light (album) | 1987 | "Synthesizer [Yamaha Qx1, Emulator 2] – Roger Glover. Keyboards [Hammond B3, Minimoog, Yamaha Dx1, Cp70 (midi), Dx7, Emulator 2] – Jon Lord | Discogs | YouTube |