Inside ARP Factory: Design Flaw that Destroyed Synth Empire

Аватар автора
Muz News
In 1970s, ARP Instruments ruled electronic music world. Founded by NASA engineer Alan Robert Pearlman, ARP captured 40% of global synthesizer market. Their legendary instruments gave voice to R2-D2, communicated with aliens in Close Encounters of Third Kind and fueled hits by Stevie Wonder and David Bowie. Yet, by 1981, this American tech empire was bankrupt. What went wrong? This video explores incredible rise and devastating fall of ARP. We uncover how company was destroyed from inside out by single disastrous bet: Avatar. Pushed through by management over Pearlman&fierce objections, this flawed guitar synthesizer suffered from crippling latency and diverted crucial funds away from keyboard innovation. Discover tragic story of how poor leadership and 40-millisecond design flaw silenced historic factory, leaving behind musical legacy that outlived company itself. Timecodes: 00:00 - Sunset of ARP Instruments 00:55 - Story of Alan Robert Pearlman 01:22 - Beginning of Perlman&Journey 03:33 - ARP Foundation 06:55 - Role of Pollock Family 08:37 - First ARP Instrument 10:37 - ARP 2600 11:04 - Multimode Filters & Semi-Modular 12:03 - First Models & Odyssey 13:11 - Advertising & Contracts 14:05 - Production in Lexington 15:47 - New Models 17:50 - Influence on Music 19:50 - ARP in Cinema 21:50 - ARP in Music 23:14 - Growth & Challenges of ARP 25:18 - Competition & New Technologies 26:14 - Idea of "Avatar" 28:22 - Technical Problems 29:50 - Implementation of Avatar Project 31:00...

0/0


0/0

0/0

0/0

0/0