US3895554A - Tape activated keyboard-type instruments - Google Patents

Tape activated keyboard-type instruments Download PDF

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US3895554A
US3895554A US486967A US48696774A US3895554A US 3895554 A US3895554 A US 3895554A US 486967 A US486967 A US 486967A US 48696774 A US48696774 A US 48696774A US 3895554 A US3895554 A US 3895554A
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coupled
playback
key
signal
shift register
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Joseph Maillet
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10HELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
    • G10H1/00Details of electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H1/0033Recording/reproducing or transmission of music for electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H1/0041Recording/reproducing or transmission of music for electrophonic musical instruments in coded form
    • G10H1/005Recording/reproducing or transmission of music for electrophonic musical instruments in coded form on magnetic tape
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S84/00Music
    • Y10S84/29Tape

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  • This invention relates to a simplified and highly efficient system for recording piano or organ notes on a tape recorder and, thereafter, replaying the tape to activate the keys of the piano in similar manner to the socalled player-piano which utilizes punched paper rolls, or to activate the organ while illuminating the keys on the organ to indicate the notes being played.
  • the old roll-type player-piano had many disadvantages. Among these disadvantages were the large space needed for the storing of the paper rolls, the high cost of the rolls, the inconvenience of loading and unloading the rolls in the piano, the high cost of repairing the player-piano, and the complexity of the player-piano which required the use of bellows or vacuum pumps which, in turn, were subject to air leaks. As regards organs, the actuation thereof in accordance with prerecorded music has not heretofore been successfully accomplished.
  • tapes are used to record and play back the notes of a piano or organ.
  • the advantages of the use of such tapes are that the piano or organ is less complex and less expensive to build and maintain. There is no problem of fumbling and tearing of the recorded media; the tapes hold much more recorded media in a relatively small space and are, consequently, easier to handle and store; and they are much less costly and easier to produce than perforated rolls. Furthermore if a cassette type tape means is used, it is never necessary to touch the actual tape which is simply plugged in or out.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a simplified system of the aforesaid-type which is more efficient than systems of this type previously provided.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide tape-actuated player-type pianos and organs which are relatively simple in construction, easy to use, and inexpensive to manufacture and maintain.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a recording system embodying the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a somewhat diagrammatic view of the keyactuating arrangement.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic view of the recording pulses, including the sync groups.
  • FIG. 4 is a schematic view of the volume control system when the invention is used in conjunction with an FIG. 6 is a schematic view of the actuating portion of the play-back system.
  • FIG. 6A is a partial view of the system of FIG. 6 but withthe shown portion being a modification thereof.
  • FIG. 7 is a schematic view of thevoltage control arrangement in the play-back system.
  • a recording system comprising either a piano keyboard totaling 88 keys and three pedals on a full scale piano or as many as 200 keys on some organs.
  • Each key 12 (as best seen in FIG. 2) is mounted on a fulcrum (not shown).
  • a light bulb and photocell assembly Spaced above the key is a light bulb and photocell assembly, generally designated 16, having a photocell 18 and a lamp 20.
  • the output of the photocell is connected to a standard Darlington amplifier 19 which converts light energy from the photocell into a pulse suitable for entry into its respective shift register.
  • the angle of the lamp and the photocell are such that while the key is in its normal horizontal or rest position, light enters the photocell indicating to the recorder that this particular key has not been played.
  • An inverter 23 acts to place a ground potential on the circuit when the light is reflected into the photocell, thereby preventing the enable signal from passing.
  • This information is now stored in the appropriate stage of a shift register, generally designated 24, upon receipt of an enable signal. It will remain stored until it is shifted outby the oscillator generated, square wave clock pulse.
  • the shift register 24 is a parallel-in-serial-out type wherein each stage comprises a flip-flop unit which is set by a key pulse signal from a corresponding AND gate 26, which has an input from a corresponding key 12.
  • Each flip-flop consists of two transistors l and 0. When one transistor is conducting, the other is nonconducting. Normally, the O transistors are conducting while the l transistors are made conducting by the clock pulse. I
  • the clock pulse is generated by a free running multivibrator 28 producing a square wave signal.
  • the square wave signal is used to shift the information stored in one shift-register stage into the next stage and is also used by the binarycounter, generally designated 30, to ascertain when all the keys have been emptied out of the register. It is, in addition, used to enable an analogto-digital converter, of the standard Motorola MC 1408 type, such as shown in FIG. 4 to store the volume control setting in a manner hereinafter described.
  • the clock pulse is algabraecally added to the shift register pulses at the mixer 32 (output stage) and recorded on
  • the information leaving the final stage of the shift register 24 is passed into a standard type resistor mixing stage 32 where the amplitude of the signal is maintained at about +5V. However, only the shift register information remains at +5V, the clock pulse, which is also mixed with the shift register information, having an adjustable potentiometer 34 which is used to lower the clock pulse amplitude to +1 volt.
  • the information recorded on tape will be either a high amplitude or a low amplitude pulse.
  • the mixer 32 will insert a low amplitude pulse into the system so that the play-back system, hereinafter described, will recognize that there was no key played at that time and will still use this low amplitudesignal to keep the play-back system clocked for proper playback.
  • the last four stages of the shift register 24 has all four inputs tied to a +5V buss bar. This arrangement makes the last four stages record a one bit or a valid stored bit every time an enable pulse passes through. These extra four bits constitute a sync group which is detected in the play-back unit to indicate that this is the beginning of new information. These four bits are treated just like played keys information in the mixer stage and are recorded on the tape along with the rest of the shift register information.
  • the only restriction a piano player has when he is recording a tape is that he not hit any four consecutive keys. The player can hit all the white keys or all the black keys simultaneously if he so desires, but this does not constitute four consecutive keys.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates the rela- I tionship between the played key, as for example, key 4, "1 and the sync groups.
  • the pulses from the mixer 32 pass to a tape 36 on a tape recorder (not shown).
  • a reset pulse latch generally designated 38 is used to hold the reset signal long enough to reset the binary counter 30.
  • This latch 38 is in circuit with an AND gate 40 and an AND gate 42.
  • the latch 38 is of a standard type such as the Motorola 7475 Latch, and consists to two cross-coupled inverter AND gates 39 and 39A. Every time an output is received from the AND gate 40, this pulse sets the latch and the latch will remain set until the next clock pulse arrives. This produces a long pulse width for resetting the binary counter 30 and keeps the system in proper sync.
  • the latch also serves to bring the leading edges of the clock pulse and data pulse from the played key into coincidence with each other to generate the enable signal used to control the gating of information into the shift register 24.
  • the stages of the binary counter 30 used on a piano recorder would normally be about seven in number, which are enough stages to count to 88 keys plus the three foot pedals found on most pianos. However, if most keys are to be recorded, additional stages could be utilized. To double the number of keys it is simply necessary to add one additional stage to the binary counter and, of course, add the additional required shift register stage.
  • the output from AND gate 50, combined with the clock pulse, is fed into a binary counter 54 which counts up and passes the resultant 1 count back into a digital to analog converter 56, the entire system of 48 to 56 constituting a closed loop analog to digital system, and acts to cancel out the voltage present. If the organist continues to press down on the pedal 44, he
  • the pulses from the binary counter 54 are applied to the AND gates 26 as the key pulses.
  • the play-back system is illustrated in FIG. 5 wherein the output from a tape, such as tape 36, is fed to two amplifiers, designated respectively as 102 and 104.
  • Amplifier 102 is a low gain amplifier with only one state of amplification, and is selective to only very high amplitude signals.
  • the output from this amplifier 102 is designated as data and represents the signals recorded on the tape from either a piano or an organ as in the recording system described above.
  • Amplifier 104 is a high gain amplifier with four stages of amplification. It is selective to any amplitude recorded on the tape and treats all signals alike, whether they are large or small.
  • This amplifier 104 produces the clock pulse which is used throughout the play-back system to regulate its functioning]
  • the separation into two distinct channels of the data and clock pulses is based on the fact that since there are two distinct voltages on the tape, i.e. a low voltage for the clock pulse and a high voltage for the key or, as it is known on the tape, the data pulse, two discriminators are provided, one being the amplifier '102 and the other being the amplifier 104.
  • the amplifier 104 is a high gain amplifier andwill detect any level coming in and generate a pulse called the clock pulse.
  • the amplifier 102 is a single stage amplifier that will only respond to a high level signal and will ignore the low level signal.
  • the outputs from amplifiers 102 and 104 are coupled to a cross coupled inverter device 106 whose function is to go high (+5 Volts) when it detects .the leading edge of the data pulse and remain high until it-detects the leading edge of the clock pulse. This will the corresponding shift register 108. This shift register 108 will only accept data if the data pulse is in coincidence with the clock pulse that controls it; in other words, the leading edges of the two pulses must coincide. This is accomplished by the cross-coupled inverter 106.
  • Each shift register 108 is a serial-in-parallelout device, that is, the information is fed in one bit at a time in serial fashion until the arrival of a sync group from the tape.
  • the play-back unit detects the sync group it generates a sync pulse which, at this time, enables the output from all the shift registers 108 to be fed into respective latches 110 where the information is retained while the shift registers begin loading again.
  • the information is retained in the latches 110 until the arrival of another sync group from the tape. If upon receiving a sync pulse, the information applied to each shift register 108 is unchanged, the latch will do nothing.
  • the latch was set before on a preceding sync pulse it will remain set if the information is found to be the same, but if new information is loaded into the shift register 108, when the sync pulse arrives and finds no output, then the latch is permitted to reset.
  • the overall outcome is a signal fed out of the latch identical to the one'recorded on tape. If a piano player, for instance, plays a note and holds the key down for, say 5 seconds, then the output from the latch will be a signal high for 5 seconds.
  • FIG. 6 shows the output from a typical latch 110 r where the output goes to a take-off point. This indithe key. If it is an organ as shown in FIG. 6A, the output takes the center route 1 18 and the top route 120 to activate the mechanism inside the organ and simultaneously energize a lamp 122 on each key to indicate which key is playing while the sound is being produced.
  • each latch should have a small capacitor, such as shown at '124, to filter out any noise that may be present on the line or to ground out any RF signals present. This may be placed either at the shift register output or the latch input.
  • FIG. 7 shows a volume control voltage generating device. It comprises a digital-to-analog (D/A) converter 126 of a standard type such as the Motorola MC I406. It obtains its input from six different shift registers designated 1.28 which are coupled to the last shift register 108. The output of each shift register 128 is gated to the D/A converter 126 by means of an AND gate. Every time there is a sync pulse and there is an output from a shift register 128, the AND gate 130 produces a pulse which is fed to the D/A converter 126. The level of the voltage out of the D/A converter 126 is dependent upon the information stored in the shift registers. When no information has been stored, and
  • the voltage out of D/A converter When there is an output from the first shift register 128 and no outputs from the other shift registers 128, the voltage out of D/A converter would be about 0.25 volts. When there is an output from the first two shift registers 128, the voltage outof the D/A converter is about 0.50 volts, and so on.
  • shift register 132 There is one shift register shown in FIG. 7, which is designated 132, that is left blank. The purpose of this is to provide that any time four or more shift registers have a bit stored,-this constitutes a sync group. If the shift register system in FIG. 7 did not have this blank shift register and the A/Dregister in the recorder unit filled all six registers in a row, there would be no four-bit syncpulse generated in the playback unit.
  • the sync pulse is coded into thekey pulses; otherwise three level detectors would be required in the playback system; one for sync, one for data and one for clock.
  • the system of this invention requires only two level detectors.
  • FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram showing the sync pulse generator and a volume too high circuit. If the volume control on the tape'recorder being played back is too high, it causes all the information entering the system to look like data bits. This would fill all the shift registers and play each and every key. This is obviously undesirable. Therefore, any time the eight shift registers indicated in FIG. 8 go high (all bits stored), an output is obtained from both the AND gate 134 which is coupled to the last four latches and the last eight shift registers 1 08, as well as from the AND gate 136 which is coupled to the last four shift registers 108. They will, in turn, act through the respective amplifiers 1.35 and 137 to set off both one-shots indicated at 138 and 140. If the top one-shot 138 is fired, the output is fed back to the sync line to the input of the lower AND gate 142. This will put a low voltage at the input of the lower AND gate 142 inhibiting the sync signal from getting through.
  • the sync pulse is unable to get through the lower AND gate 142 because the top one shot 138 has fired, then the sync pulse cannot enable the latches to, in turn, activate the keys. Therefore, by setting off the top one shot 138, the sync pulse will be inhibited and I As indicated above, there is a transistor driving a light emitting diode to indicate sync. When the operator turns the volume control on the play-back system to the right position, the last four shift registers will fill with sync bits and will, in turn, activate the sync light.
  • the volum'eicontrol may be advanced further but would produce no further advantages and, if moved too high, will set off the top one-shot 138 which will extinguish the light-emitting diode and deactivate the entire system until the operator lowers the volume control.
  • An apparatus for recording and reproducing music on a keyboard instrument comprising a keyboard having a plurality of keys, each key having an actuating means, an electrical shift register comprising a series of stages, the actuating means of each key on said keyboard being coupled to a corresponding stage in said shift register through a corresponding keyboard signal gate, each actuating means being adapted upon depression of the corresponding key, to send a key pulse to the corresponding stage of said shift register through the corresponding keyboard signal gate, an electrical oscillator coupled to said shift register to send clock pulses through said shift register to shift signals from said keyboard signal gates from stage to stage of said shift register, a terminal group of stages coupled to each other in said shift register for generating a sync group signal, a mixer stage coupled both to said terminal group to receive key pulses therefrom and to said oscillator for receiving clock pulses therefrom, said mixer stage being coupled to a recording tape which records signals from said mixer stage, a binary counter coupled to said oscillator to receive clock pulses therefrom and having its output coupled to a latch means
  • said latch means comprising a pair of cross-coupled inverter signal gates, said latch means being adapted to reset said binary counter upon reception therefrom of a clock pulse, said latch means also being coupled to the keyboard signal gates to generate an enabling signal to control the gating of information into the shift register.
  • each actuating means comprises a light reflecting means on the corresponding key, a light emitting source constructed and arranged to direct a light beam onto said light reflecting means when said key is in the undepressed position, said light beam being offset from said light reflecting means when said key is in the depressed position, a photoelectric cell constructed and arranged to receive the reflected light beam when said key is in the undepressed position, said reflected light beam being offset from said photoelectric cell when said key is in the depressed position, said photoelectric cell being coupled to a corresponding keyboard signal gate to send a signal to said keyboard signal gate when said photoelectric cell does not receive a reflected light beam.
  • a volume control system is coupled to the keyboard signal gates, said volume control system comprising a foot pedal which is connected to a voltage varying means, an amplifier coupled to said voltage varying means, said amplifier being coupled to a signal gate means, said signal gate means being coupled to said oscillator to receive clock pulses therefrom, the output from said signal gate means being coupled to a binary counter, said binary counter being coupled to a digital to analog converter, and said digital to analog converter being-coupled to Said amplifier to form a closed loop system, whereby signals generated by said foot pedal are passed through said amplifier and through said signal gate means to said binary counter, said converter being adapted to cancel the voltage present at the output of the amplifier after each signal from the amplifier is stored in the binary counter.
  • the apparatus of claim 1 including a playback instrument having playback actuating means, said recording tape being coupled to said playback actuating means, said playback actuating means being responsive to actuating signals received from said recording tape.
  • the signals recorded on said recording tape include clock pulses, sync group signals and data pulses
  • said playback instrument is provided with a series of playback shift registers coupled to said recording tape through means to make the leading edges of said data pulses coincide with said clock pulses, each of said playback shift registers being coupled to a corresponding playback latch means, the coincident data pulses and clock pulses being serially fed into said'playback shift registers until arrival of a sync group signal, at which time the pulses are fed by the respective playback shift registers into the corresponding playback latch means, each playback latch means being coupled to a playback actuating means to activate said playback actuating means upon receiving a sync group signal.
  • each of said actuating means energizes a light source simultaneouslyhigher than a predetermined value.

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Abstract

A system for recording piano or organ notes on a recording tape and replaying the tape to actuate a reproduction of the music on a playback piano or organ, and when an organ is being played, means being provided to selectively control the volume and activate lamps on the keys of the organ to indicate which key is being played.

Description

United States Patent [1 1 I Maillet July 22, 1975 15 TAPE ACTIVATED KEYBOARD-TYPE 3,604,299 9/ 971 Englund 84/1.28 x INSTRUMENTS 3,647,929 3/1972 Milde, Jr 84/1.01 3,683,096 8/1972 Peterson et a1. 84/115 [76] Inventor: Joseph Maillet, 362 Th d 3,749,837 7/1-973 Doughty 84/1.01 x Hammonton, NJ. 08037 3,771,406 11/1973 Wheelwright 84/464 3,781,452 12/1973 Vauclain 84/l.28 [22] W July 1974 3,789,719 2 1974 Maillet 84/115 [21] Appl. No.: 486,967
, Primary Examiner-Richard B. Wilkinson Assistant Examiner--Stanley J. Witkowski [52] US. Cl. 84/115; 84/1.03; 84/462;
e 1 84/464; 84/DIG 29 Attorney, Agent, br Ftrm-Arthur A. Jacobs, Esq. [51] Int. Cl. Gl0f 5/00 in, [58] Field of Search 84/1.01-l.03, ABSTRACT 84/1.09, 1.1, 1.27, 1.28, 115, 461, 462, 464, A system fof irecording piano or organ notes on a re- 29 cording tape and replaying the tape to actuate a reproduction of the music on a playback piano or organ, [56] References C'ted and when an organ is being played, means being pro- UNITED STATES PATENTS vided to selectively control the volume and activate 3,045,522 7/1962 Markowitz et a1 84/1.27 lamps on thenkeys of the organ to indicate which key 3,277,245 10/1966 Sponga 84/462 X is being played. 3,513,247 5/1970 Anderson eta]. 84/1.27x 3,594,487 7/1971 Jones, Jr; 84/l.1 Clalms, 9 Drawing Figures Q I uQ RU but: 8 1 I "1 l L 1 man key SUSTAIN m4 1 5v art/50572870)? 1 9 lrzrza I 25 It. 1 1 v sm/c GENERATOR 1 I 1 rr 47 0 0 I EMILE new E/VAHLE SHEET PATENTED JUL 2 2 I975 TAPE ACTIVATED KEYBOARD-TYPE INSTRUMENTS This invention relates to a simplified and highly efficient system for recording piano or organ notes on a tape recorder and, thereafter, replaying the tape to activate the keys of the piano in similar manner to the socalled player-piano which utilizes punched paper rolls, or to activate the organ while illuminating the keys on the organ to indicate the notes being played.
The old roll-type player-piano had many disadvantages. Among these disadvantages were the large space needed for the storing of the paper rolls, the high cost of the rolls, the inconvenience of loading and unloading the rolls in the piano, the high cost of repairing the player-piano, and the complexity of the player-piano which required the use of bellows or vacuum pumps which, in turn, were subject to air leaks. As regards organs, the actuation thereof in accordance with prerecorded music has not heretofore been successfully accomplished.
In accordance with the present invention, tapes are used to record and play back the notes of a piano or organ. The advantages of the use of such tapes are that the piano or organ is less complex and less expensive to build and maintain. There is no problem of fumbling and tearing of the recorded media; the tapes hold much more recorded media in a relatively small space and are, consequently, easier to handle and store; and they are much less costly and easier to produce than perforated rolls. Furthermore if a cassette type tape means is used, it is never necessary to touch the actual tape which is simply plugged in or out.
It is, therefore, one object of the present invention to satisfactorily utilize a system, especially of the cassette type, for the purpose of recording and playing back musical data from either a piano or an organ.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a simplified system of the aforesaid-type which is more efficient than systems of this type previously provided.
Another object of the present invention is to provide tape-actuated player-type pianos and organs which are relatively simple in construction, easy to use, and inexpensive to manufacture and maintain.
Other objects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will be readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following description when read in conjunction with the. accompanying drawings wherein: 1
FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a recording system embodying the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a somewhat diagrammatic view of the keyactuating arrangement.
FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic view of the recording pulses, including the sync groups.
FIG. 4 is a schematic view of the volume control system when the invention is used in conjunction with an FIG. 6 is a schematic view of the actuating portion of the play-back system.
FIG. 6A is a partial view of the system of FIG. 6 but withthe shown portion being a modification thereof.
, FIG. 7 is a schematic view of thevoltage control arrangement in the play-back system.
. similar parts, there is provided a recording system, generally designated 10, comprising either a piano keyboard totaling 88 keys and three pedals on a full scale piano or as many as 200 keys on some organs. Each key 12 (as best seen in FIG. 2) is mounted on a fulcrum (not shown). Spaced above the key is a light bulb and photocell assembly, generally designated 16, having a photocell 18 and a lamp 20. The output of the photocell is connected to a standard Darlington amplifier 19 which converts light energy from the photocell into a pulse suitable for entry into its respective shift register. When the piano or organ is in its rest position, light energy from the lamp above the key strikes an aluminum reflective patch 22 placed on each key below the photo-detector. The angle of the lamp and the photocell are such that while the key is in its normal horizontal or rest position, light enters the photocell indicating to the recorder that this particular key has not been played. An inverter 23 acts to place a ground potential on the circuit when the light is reflected into the photocell, thereby preventing the enable signal from passing. As soon as the key is played the angle of the key with respect to the photocell is now changed and the light beam will be diverted away from the photocell, thereby indicating to the recorder that this key has been played. This information is now stored in the appropriate stage of a shift register, generally designated 24, upon receipt of an enable signal. It will remain stored until it is shifted outby the oscillator generated, square wave clock pulse.
The shift register 24 is a parallel-in-serial-out type wherein each stage comprises a flip-flop unit which is set by a key pulse signal from a corresponding AND gate 26, which has an input from a corresponding key 12. Each flip-flop consists of two transistors l and 0. When one transistor is conducting, the other is nonconducting. Normally, the O transistors are conducting while the l transistors are made conducting by the clock pulse. I
The clock pulse is generated by a free running multivibrator 28 producing a square wave signal. The square wave signal is used to shift the information stored in one shift-register stage into the next stage and is also used by the binarycounter, generally designated 30, to ascertain when all the keys have been emptied out of the register. It is, in addition, used to enable an analogto-digital converter, of the standard Motorola MC 1408 type, such as shown in FIG. 4 to store the volume control setting in a manner hereinafter described. The clock pulse is algabraecally added to the shift register pulses at the mixer 32 (output stage) and recorded on The information leaving the final stage of the shift register 24 is passed into a standard type resistor mixing stage 32 where the amplitude of the signal is maintained at about +5V. However, only the shift register information remains at +5V, the clock pulse, which is also mixed with the shift register information, having an adjustable potentiometer 34 which is used to lower the clock pulse amplitude to +1 volt.
The information recorded on tape will be either a high amplitude or a low amplitude pulse. In the absence of a key pulse (i.e. where a note is not played), the mixer 32 will insert a low amplitude pulse into the system so that the play-back system, hereinafter described, will recognize that there was no key played at that time and will still use this low amplitudesignal to keep the play-back system clocked for proper playback.
The last four stages of the shift register 24 has all four inputs tied to a +5V buss bar. This arrangement makes the last four stages record a one bit or a valid stored bit every time an enable pulse passes through. These extra four bits constitute a sync group which is detected in the play-back unit to indicate that this is the beginning of new information. These four bits are treated just like played keys information in the mixer stage and are recorded on the tape along with the rest of the shift register information. The only restriction a piano player has when he is recording a tape is that he not hit any four consecutive keys. The player can hit all the white keys or all the black keys simultaneously if he so desires, but this does not constitute four consecutive keys. FIG. 3 illustrates the rela- I tionship between the played key, as for example, key 4, "1 and the sync groups.
The pulses from the mixer 32 pass to a tape 36 on a tape recorder (not shown).
A reset pulse latch generally designated 38, is used to hold the reset signal long enough to reset the binary counter 30. This latch 38 is in circuit with an AND gate 40 and an AND gate 42. The latch 38 is of a standard type such as the Motorola 7475 Latch, and consists to two cross-coupled inverter AND gates 39 and 39A. Every time an output is received from the AND gate 40, this pulse sets the latch and the latch will remain set until the next clock pulse arrives. This produces a long pulse width for resetting the binary counter 30 and keeps the system in proper sync. The latch also serves to bring the leading edges of the clock pulse and data pulse from the played key into coincidence with each other to generate the enable signal used to control the gating of information into the shift register 24.
The stages of the binary counter 30 used on a piano recorder would normally be about seven in number, which are enough stages to count to 88 keys plus the three foot pedals found on most pianos. However, if most keys are to be recorded, additional stages could be utilized. To double the number of keys it is simply necessary to add one additional stage to the binary counter and, of course, add the additional required shift register stage.
When the present system is utilized with an organ, an important consideration is the volume control. Such control is provided by the arrangement disclosed in FIG. 4 whereby the organ foot pedal 44 is connected to a potentiometer 46. The pedal 44 is also coupled to an amplifier 48 which is an operational amplifier with two outputs producing either a positive going voltage or a negative output; I
When the organist steps on the volume control pedal 44, an increase in voltage is fed to the input of the amplifier 48. This produces a positive output which is fed to the AND gate 50. The AND gate 50 as well as an AND gate 52 receive clock pulses from the square wave generator 28.
The output from AND gate 50, combined with the clock pulse, is fed into a binary counter 54 which counts up and passes the resultant 1 count back into a digital to analog converter 56, the entire system of 48 to 56 constituting a closed loop analog to digital system, and acts to cancel out the voltage present. If the organist continues to press down on the pedal 44, he
generates additional voltage which passes to the amplifier 48 from where it also passes to the AND gate 50. When another clock pulse passes into the AND gate 50, another count is stored in the binary counter 54, resulting in a count of 2. This is applied to the converter 56 which again cancels out the voltage present at the output of the amplifier 48 until additional voltage is applied at its input. This continues with each count with the end result being a binary count equivalent to the analog input.
When the organist releases pressure on the pedal, the process is reversed by the AND gate 52 and causes the binary counter 54 to count down.
The pulses from the binary counter 54 are applied to the AND gates 26 as the key pulses.
The play-back system, generally designated 100, is illustrated in FIG. 5 wherein the output from a tape, such as tape 36, is fed to two amplifiers, designated respectively as 102 and 104. Amplifier 102 is a low gain amplifier with only one state of amplification, and is selective to only very high amplitude signals. The output from this amplifier 102 is designated as data and represents the signals recorded on the tape from either a piano or an organ as in the recording system described above. Amplifier 104 is a high gain amplifier with four stages of amplification. It is selective to any amplitude recorded on the tape and treats all signals alike, whether they are large or small. This amplifier 104 produces the clock pulse which is used throughout the play-back system to regulate its functioning] The separation into two distinct channels of the data and clock pulses is based on the fact that since there are two distinct voltages on the tape, i.e. a low voltage for the clock pulse and a high voltage for the key or, as it is known on the tape, the data pulse, two discriminators are provided, one being the amplifier '102 and the other being the amplifier 104. The amplifier 104 is a high gain amplifier andwill detect any level coming in and generate a pulse called the clock pulse. The amplifier 102 is a single stage amplifier that will only respond to a high level signal and will ignore the low level signal. There are three parameters in all, namely the clock pulse, the data pulse synonomous with the original key pulse and the sync pulse. By encoding the sync pulses together with the key or date" pulses, it is possible to record the three parameters using a single track tape recorder.
The outputs from amplifiers 102 and 104 are coupled to a cross coupled inverter device 106 whose function is to go high (+5 Volts) when it detects .the leading edge of the data pulse and remain high until it-detects the leading edge of the clock pulse. This will the corresponding shift register 108. This shift register 108 will only accept data if the data pulse is in coincidence with the clock pulse that controls it; in other words, the leading edges of the two pulses must coincide. This is accomplished by the cross-coupled inverter 106. v
Each shift register 108 is a serial-in-parallelout device, that is, the information is fed in one bit at a time in serial fashion until the arrival of a sync group from the tape. When the play-back unit detects the sync group it generates a sync pulse which, at this time, enables the output from all the shift registers 108 to be fed into respective latches 110 where the information is retained while the shift registers begin loading again. The information is retained in the latches 110 until the arrival of another sync group from the tape. If upon receiving a sync pulse, the information applied to each shift register 108 is unchanged, the latch will do nothing. If the latch was set before on a preceding sync pulse it will remain set if the information is found to be the same, but if new information is loaded into the shift register 108, when the sync pulse arrives and finds no output, then the latch is permitted to reset. The overall outcome is a signal fed out of the latch identical to the one'recorded on tape. If a piano player, for instance, plays a note and holds the key down for, say 5 seconds, then the output from the latch will be a signal high for 5 seconds.
It is to be noted that although the diagram in FIG. 5 shows only three shift registers 108 and three latches 110, actually the number of shift registers and associated latches will vary depending on whether the system is used in conjunction with a piano or organ.
If a sync pulse arrivesand at that time there is no output from the shift register to coincide with the sync pulse the associated latch'is reset. Whenever a sync pulse and a shift register output are simultaneous, the latch is set.
FIG. 6, shows the output from a typical latch 110 r where the output goes to a take-off point. This indithe key. If it is an organ as shown in FIG. 6A, the output takes the center route 1 18 and the top route 120 to activate the mechanism inside the organ and simultaneously energize a lamp 122 on each key to indicate which key is playing while the sound is being produced.
The input to each latch should have a small capacitor, such as shown at '124, to filter out any noise that may be present on the line or to ground out any RF signals present. This may be placed either at the shift register output or the latch input.
FIG. 7 shows a volume control voltage generating device. It comprises a digital-to-analog (D/A) converter 126 of a standard type such as the Motorola MC I406. It obtains its input from six different shift registers designated 1.28 which are coupled to the last shift register 108. The output of each shift register 128 is gated to the D/A converter 126 by means of an AND gate. Every time there is a sync pulse and there is an output from a shift register 128, the AND gate 130 produces a pulse which is fed to the D/A converter 126. The level of the voltage out of the D/A converter 126 is dependent upon the information stored in the shift registers. When no information has been stored, and
there will be no output from the D/A converter 126.
When there is an output from the first shift register 128 and no outputs from the other shift registers 128, the voltage out of D/A converter would be about 0.25 volts. When there is an output from the first two shift registers 128, the voltage outof the D/A converter is about 0.50 volts, and so on.
There is one shift register shown in FIG. 7, which is designated 132, that is left blank. The purpose of this is to provide that any time four or more shift registers have a bit stored,-this constitutes a sync group. If the shift register system in FIG. 7 did not have this blank shift register and the A/Dregister in the recorder unit filled all six registers in a row, there would be no four-bit syncpulse generated in the playback unit.
The sync pulse is coded into thekey pulses; otherwise three level detectors would be required in the playback system; one for sync, one for data and one for clock. The system of this invention requires only two level detectors.
FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram showing the sync pulse generator and a volume too high circuit. If the volume control on the tape'recorder being played back is too high, it causes all the information entering the system to look like data bits. This would fill all the shift registers and play each and every key. This is obviously undesirable. Therefore, any time the eight shift registers indicated in FIG. 8 go high (all bits stored), an output is obtained from both the AND gate 134 which is coupled to the last four latches and the last eight shift registers 1 08, as well as from the AND gate 136 which is coupled to the last four shift registers 108. They will, in turn, act through the respective amplifiers 1.35 and 137 to set off both one-shots indicated at 138 and 140. If the top one-shot 138 is fired, the output is fed back to the sync line to the input of the lower AND gate 142. This will put a low voltage at the input of the lower AND gate 142 inhibiting the sync signal from getting through.
If the sync pulse is unable to get through the lower AND gate 142 because the top one shot 138 has fired, then the sync pulse cannot enable the latches to, in turn, activate the keys. Therefore, by setting off the top one shot 138, the sync pulse will be inhibited and I As indicated above, there is a transistor driving a light emitting diode to indicate sync. When the operator turns the volume control on the play-back system to the right position, the last four shift registers will fill with sync bits and will, in turn, activate the sync light. The volum'eicontrol may be advanced further but would produce no further advantages and, if moved too high, will set off the top one-shot 138 which will extinguish the light-emitting diode and deactivate the entire system until the operator lowers the volume control. Y
The invention claimed is:
1. An apparatus for recording and reproducing music on a keyboard instrument comprising a keyboard having a plurality of keys, each key having an actuating means, an electrical shift register comprising a series of stages, the actuating means of each key on said keyboard being coupled to a corresponding stage in said shift register through a corresponding keyboard signal gate, each actuating means being adapted upon depression of the corresponding key, to send a key pulse to the corresponding stage of said shift register through the corresponding keyboard signal gate, an electrical oscillator coupled to said shift register to send clock pulses through said shift register to shift signals from said keyboard signal gates from stage to stage of said shift register, a terminal group of stages coupled to each other in said shift register for generating a sync group signal, a mixer stage coupled both to said terminal group to receive key pulses therefrom and to said oscillator for receiving clock pulses therefrom, said mixer stage being coupled to a recording tape which records signals from said mixer stage, a binary counter coupled to said oscillator to receive clock pulses therefrom and having its output coupled to a latch means,
, said latch means comprising a pair of cross-coupled inverter signal gates, said latch means being adapted to reset said binary counter upon reception therefrom of a clock pulse, said latch means also being coupled to the keyboard signal gates to generate an enabling signal to control the gating of information into the shift register.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein a means to reduce the amplitude of the clock pulses prior to entry thereof into the mixer stage is coupled between said oscillator and said mixer stage.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein each actuating means comprises a light reflecting means on the corresponding key, a light emitting source constructed and arranged to direct a light beam onto said light reflecting means when said key is in the undepressed position, said light beam being offset from said light reflecting means when said key is in the depressed position, a photoelectric cell constructed and arranged to receive the reflected light beam when said key is in the undepressed position, said reflected light beam being offset from said photoelectric cell when said key is in the depressed position, said photoelectric cell being coupled to a corresponding keyboard signal gate to send a signal to said keyboard signal gate when said photoelectric cell does not receive a reflected light beam.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein a volume control system is coupled to the keyboard signal gates, said volume control system comprising a foot pedal which is connected to a voltage varying means, an amplifier coupled to said voltage varying means, said amplifier being coupled to a signal gate means, said signal gate means being coupled to said oscillator to receive clock pulses therefrom, the output from said signal gate means being coupled to a binary counter, said binary counter being coupled to a digital to analog converter, and said digital to analog converter being-coupled to Said amplifier to form a closed loop system, whereby signals generated by said foot pedal are passed through said amplifier and through said signal gate means to said binary counter, said converter being adapted to cancel the voltage present at the output of the amplifier after each signal from the amplifier is stored in the binary counter.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 including a playback instrument having playback actuating means, said recording tape being coupled to said playback actuating means, said playback actuating means being responsive to actuating signals received from said recording tape.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein the signals recorded on said recording tape include clock pulses, sync group signals and data pulses, and wherein said playback instrument is provided with a series of playback shift registers coupled to said recording tape through means to make the leading edges of said data pulses coincide with said clock pulses, each of said playback shift registers being coupled to a corresponding playback latch means, the coincident data pulses and clock pulses being serially fed into said'playback shift registers until arrival of a sync group signal, at which time the pulses are fed by the respective playback shift registers into the corresponding playback latch means, each playback latch means being coupled to a playback actuating means to activate said playback actuating means upon receiving a sync group signal.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein the playback instrument is a piano and each of the actuating means is connected to a corresponding key on the piano keyboard.
8. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein the playback instrument is an organ and each of the actuating means is operatively connected to a corresponding organ playing means.
9. The apparatus of claim 8 wherein each of said actuating means energizes a light source simultaneouslyhigher than a predetermined value.

Claims (10)

1. An apparatus for recording and reproducing music on a keyboard instrument comprising a keyboard having a plurality of keys, each key having an actuating means, an electrical shift register comprising a series of stages, the actuating means of each key on said keyboard being coupled to a corresponding stage in said shift register through a corresponding keyboard signal gate, each actuating means being adapted upon depression of the corresponding key, to send a key pulse to the corresponding stage of said shift register through the corresponding keyboard signal gate, an electrical oscillator coupled to said shift register to send clock pulses through said shift register to shift signals from said keyboard signal gates from stage to stage of said shift register, a terminal group of stages coupled to each other in said shift register for generating a sync group signal, a mixer stage coupled both to said terminal group to receive key pulses therefrom and to said oscillator for receiving clock pulses therefrom, said mixer stage being coupled to a recording tape which records signals from said mixer stage, a binary counter coupled to said oscillator to receive clock pulses therefrom and having its output coupled to a latch means, said latch means comprising a pair of cross-coupled inverter signal gates, said latch means being adapted to reset said binary counter upon reception therefrom of a clock pulse, said latch means also being coupled to the keyboard signal gates to generate an enabling signal to control the gating of information iNto the shift register.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein a means to reduce the amplitude of the clock pulses prior to entry thereof into the mixer stage is coupled between said oscillator and said mixer stage.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein each actuating means comprises a light reflecting means on the corresponding key, a light emitting source constructed and arranged to direct a light beam onto said light reflecting means when said key is in the undepressed position, said light beam being offset from said light reflecting means when said key is in the depressed position, a photoelectric cell constructed and arranged to receive the reflected light beam when said key is in the undepressed position, said reflected light beam being offset from said photoelectric cell when said key is in the depressed position, said photoelectric cell being coupled to a corresponding keyboard signal gate to send a signal to said keyboard signal gate when said photoelectric cell does not receive a reflected light beam.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein a volume control system is coupled to the keyboard signal gates, said volume control system comprising a foot pedal which is connected to a voltage varying means, an amplifier coupled to said voltage varying means, said amplifier being coupled to a signal gate means, said signal gate means being coupled to said oscillator to receive clock pulses therefrom, the output from said signal gate means being coupled to a binary counter, said binary counter being coupled to a digital to analog converter, and said digital to analog converter being coupled to said amplifier to form a closed loop system, whereby signals generated by said foot pedal are passed through said amplifier and through said signal gate means to said binary counter, said converter being adapted to cancel the voltage present at the output of the amplifier after each signal from the amplifier is stored in the binary counter.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 including a playback instrument having playback actuating means, said recording tape being coupled to said playback actuating means, said playback actuating means being responsive to actuating signals received from said recording tape.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein the signals recorded on said recording tape include clock pulses, sync group signals and data pulses, and wherein said playback instrument is provided with a series of playback shift registers coupled to said recording tape through means to make the leading edges of said data pulses coincide with said clock pulses, each of said playback shift registers being coupled to a corresponding playback latch means, the coincident data pulses and clock pulses being serially fed into said playback shift registers until arrival of a sync group signal, at which time the pulses are fed by the respective playback shift registers into the corresponding playback latch means, each playback latch means being coupled to a playback actuating means to activate said playback actuating means upon receiving a sync group signal.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein the playback instrument is a piano and each of the actuating means is connected to a corresponding key on the piano keyboard.
8. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein the playback instrument is an organ and each of the actuating means is operatively connected to a corresponding organ playing means.
9. The apparatus of claim 8 wherein each of said actuating means energizes a light source simultaneously with the actuation of the corresponding organ playing means.
10. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein inhibiting means are coupled between the recording tape and the playback actuating means to inhibit passage of the sync group signal when the volume of the signals received by the playback instrument from the recording tape is higher than a predetermined value.
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US4070942A (en) * 1975-12-11 1978-01-31 Nippon Gakki Seizo Kabushiki Kaisha Tone generator
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US5440072A (en) * 1992-09-25 1995-08-08 Willis; Raymon A. System for rejuvenating vintage organs and pianos

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US4043240A (en) * 1975-06-23 1977-08-23 Nippon Electric Company, Ltd. Electric instrument comprising a binary counter cleared when counts therein reach integers representative of a melody
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