Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/oberheim-synthesizers

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Oberheim OB-Xa

Polyphonic analogue synthesizer

Oberheim OB-Xa

Summary

Polyphonic analogue synthesizer

FieldValue
imageOberheim OBX-a Front.jpgthumb
image_captionOberheim OB-Xa analog polyphonic synthesizer
synth_nameOB-Xa
synth_manufacturerOberheim
synthesis_typeAnalog Subtractive
polyphony4, 6 or 8 voices
timbralityBi-timbral (keyboard split/layering)
oscillator2 VCOs per voice
filterSwitchable 12dB/oct and 24dB/oct resonant low-pass
attenuator2 x ADSR; one for VCF, one for VCA
left_controlPitch
Modulation
lfo1
keyboard61 keys
velocityNo
aftertouchNo
memory32 or 120 patches
ext_controlOberheim system
fxNone
dates1980 – 1983
priceUS$4595 (4-voice)
US$5595 (6-voice)
US$6195 (8-voice)

Modulation US$5595 (6-voice) US$6195 (8-voice)

The Oberheim OB-Xa was the second of Oberheim's OB-series polyphonic analog subtractive synthesizers, replacing the OB-X with updated features.

History

The OB-Xa was released in December 1980, replacing the OB-X after only a year on the market. The OB-Xa was the first Oberheim product adorned with blue horizontal pinstripes on black background that would become standard trade dress for future Oberheim products. While the OB-Xa offered the same polyphony as its predecessor (4, 6 and 8-voice models were offered), its keyboard could be split into two halves (each with its own voice) or to layer voices to create thicker sound (essentially making two notes sound for every key pressed). The OB-Xa also added the ability to switch between 2-pole 12 dB and 4-pole 24 dB filtering. It offered Filter Envelope modulation for oscillator 2 (which allows the pitch to be modulated by the envelope) in place of the OB-X's ability to cross modulate (frequency modulation of the first VCO with the second VCO).

Interior view of Oberheim OB-Xa analog polyphonic synthesizer

Instead of the discrete circuits for oscillators and filters utilized by the OB-X, the OB-Xa (and the Oberheim synths to follow) switched to Curtis integrated circuits. This made the inside of the synth less cluttered, facilitating troubleshooting, and reducing the cost of manufacture. It was getting more difficult to service the OB-Xa due to the scarcity of Curtis chips; however, Curtis in June 2016, Coolaudio and Alfa all started re-manufacturing some of these chips which has breathed new life into the longevity of the OB-Xa and many other synthesizers that use these chips.

Notable OB-Xa users

  • The Carpenters
  • Miles Davis
  • Brad Fiedel
  • Calvin Harris
  • Billy Idol
  • Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
  • New Order
  • Gary Numan
  • The Police
  • Prince
  • Queen
  • Robert J. Walsh
  • Cliff Richard
  • Rush
  • Simple Minds
  • Rod Stewart
  • The Stranglers
  • Thompson Twins
  • Van Halen (main part of their 1984 single "Jump")

Hardware re-issues and recreations

In 2017, Behringer announced it would replicate the CEM3340 VCO chips used in the OB-Xa synthesizer. The widow of chip creator Doug Curtis released a statement clarifying that the replica was made without permission and that Curtis "would be deeply saddened by the attempt of others to trade on his name and to make unsubstantiated claims of equivalency to his original inventions". In 2018, Uli Behringer announced that Behringer would be producing a clone of the OB-Xa known as the UB-Xa, but a microprocessor shortage delayed the project. The following year, however, Behringer announced that the UB-Xa was ready for manufacture, and announced a desktop version. The first UB-Xa units were delivered in December 2023.

In May 2022, the Oberheim OB-X8, a new 8-voice analog synthesizer with the voice architecture and filters of four classic Oberheim models: the OB-X, OB-SX, OB-Xa, and OB-8, along with functionality and features not included on the original models, was announced. The new synthesizer is manufactured by Sequential in partnership with Tom Oberheim.

References

References

  1. Forrest, Peter. (1996). "The A-Z of Analogue Synthesizers Part Two: N-Z". Susurreal.
  2. (1993). "Vintage Synthesizers". Miller Freeman Books.
  3. "Blast from the past: Oberheim OB-Xa - MusicRadar".
  4. (2016-05-25). "The 10 Most Widely Influential Synths Ever".
  5. "Home".
  6. "V3340D Voltage Controlled Oscillator".
  7. "V3320 Voltage Controlled Filter".
  8. "Semiconductor production".
  9. (28 August 2020). "The Oberheim synthesizer: a playlist".
  10. CalvinHarrisVEVO. (2018-04-20). "Calvin Harris, Dua Lipa - One Kiss (Live on The Graham Norton Show)".
  11. "Oberheim OB Series".
  12. Bacon, Tony. (July 1982). "Fact File (EMM Jul 1982)". Electronics & Music Maker.
  13. (2017-03-22). "Curtis chip company speaks out against vintage synth cloning".
  14. "Behringer UB-Xa Synthesizer - Gearspace".
  15. "Behringer: Chip shortages worsened by Ukraine factory shutdowns, but could be relieved by 2023".
  16. "Behringer's long awaited UB-Xa synth is finally ready for production".
  17. Rogerson, Ben. (2022-05-10). "Superbooth 2022: Oberheim is back with the OB-X8, an analogue love letter to its '80s synths".
  18. Willings, Sam. (2022-05-11). "Superbooth 2022: Tom Oberheim's OB-X8 lands, carrying on the OB legacy from 1979 with help from Dave Smith".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Oberheim OB-Xa — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report