Part of the secret to the Commodore's success was the SID, or Sound Interface Device. One of the first integrated sound chips on any home computer, the SID was a capable digital sound synthesizer built into a tiny chip, enabling programmers to include music soundtracks and sound effects miles beyond anything else available in 1985. The SID's distinctive, crunchy sound arguably did more to influence video game music than perhaps any other single piece of hardware. In fact, it's so coveted that a music synthesizer based on the SID, known as the SIDStation, was sold in the late 2000s by Swedish firm, Elektron:
The sad news is that the SID hasn't been made since 1987, and though its patent expired in 2007, no new SID chips are being made. Therefore, the only way to get your hands on a SID chip nowadays is to rip one out of a broken Commodore 64 - which is exactly what the creator of the MIDIBox SID did:
The MIDIBox SID is one of the more elaborate Commodore 64 hacks I've seen. (Still not as elaborate as the Commodore 64 Laptop, but close.) The body was created from a broken C64 body, with the MIDI and Serial ports on the side of the machine, and the keyboard replaced by a sophisticated adonized-steel front panel with 15 knobs and a small screen for data input. Its sound is hard to adequately capture with words, but let's just say it'll simultaneously remind you of a late-night rave in early-90s Detroit and a game of Montezuma's Revenge.
The MIDIBox SID is unfortunately not commercially available, but the plans are downloadable if you're savvy with a breadboard. They do, however, show up on eBay and other auction sites from time to time, but be prepared to burn a $1,000-sized hole in your wallet. I'd rather buy a used Commodore 64 and a program like MSSIAH or Cynthcart for a fifth of the price. Still a nifty piece of hardware hackery, though.
No comments:
Post a Comment