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Solitaire (musician) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Solitaire (musician)
Solitaire from Baltimore, Maryland was a one-man project with pioneering live-electronics〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Various artists: echoes from our past )〕 created by James L. Callahan; who performed, wrote〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Copyright Catalog (1978 to present) )〕 and recorded 〔 solo synth-pop music between 1983 and 1986. James Callahan (aka Solitaire) was the first “truly computerized” artist in the Baltimore area. As Solitaire, Callahan played keyboards and electronic drum machines as a one-man show. ==Live Electronics Overview== Solitaire's performance system was manufactured by Sequential Circuits (SCI). It consisted of the Sequential Circuits Six-Trak a 6-voice, polyphonic, analogue synthesizer that was among the first MIDI instruments designed to be used with a computer. The computer and software allowed Solitaire to program the Six-Trak sequencer and SCI's Drumtraks to form one of the earliest known MIDI-based () performance systems. In 1984 the system used by Solitaire was said to ''"create instruments that have never been heard before,"'' at that time ''"musicians () just beginning to tap its potential"''. However, by modern computer standards the electronic rhythm section used by Solitaire was crude and had several limitations. For example, the SCI Model 64 Sequencer was limited to six voice sequencing. To playback more songs, required sequences be saved to disk (loading of disk sequences had to be done live, on stage, during the performance).〔
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