Hey all, This doesn't fit the 'chip' mold very well, more of a gray area like a retro/old skool game music sound. You decide
So for a long time there have been projects that use a WaveBlaster daughter cards as a stand alone General Midi voice, somewhat like a Roland MT 32 or a Yamaha MU 80 tone generators. I've wanted to build one on and off since I ran across these projects years ago, but just couldn't drop the coin on a nice db50XG card.
So just recently I learned of a (new to me) chip, the Dream synth SAM 2195 (was ASAM 2195) that is a compact midi voice!.
The first time I had run across the Fluxamasynth, I thought is was like the shields that use the VS1052 MP3/Wav/Midi decoder chip. The VS chip sounds ok but not great; good for a portable device but not for the studio.
Well I was wrong, very wrong. The Dream chip is sweet
Here's a sample from Wavetable.nl
Duke Nuckem 3D Intro
There are lot of examples there to check out
There is a Belgium company, Serdaco BVBA, is producing a Waveblaster board as well as a connector-less version.
DreamBlaster Synth S1
Stateside Modern Device has an Arduino shield, the Fluxamasynth, based on the Dream synth chip
Fluxamasynth
They are about the same price, $35 USD, so the shipping was the deciding factor for me.
Both boards are super easy to interface: TTL Midi in, Vcc and GND and BANG out comes stereo line level goodness. With 250 plus midi sounds (GM bank and MT 32 bank) And effects And filters, theres lots to play with. 32 to 68 voice poly depending on the effects used.
Here are some links to check:
Midibox.org thread
and
Electro-Music.com
So I'm off to build up an opto coupler Midi In and PSU so I can fire up this bad boy
Yogi
PS- the manufacturer has replaced the chip with a new model, so ATM prices for the boards have dropped (guessing till NOS is depleted). Hoping that boards will be redesigned for the new chip, but who knows.