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Polivoks information


A working Formanta Polivoks synthesiser
Polivoks
ManufacturerFormanta Radio Factory
Dates1982 - 1990
Technical specifications
Polyphony1-2
Oscillator2 with triangle, saw, square and two different pulse settings
LFOTriangle, square, noise, S&H
Synthesis typeAnalog Subtractive
FilterLowpass or bandpass
AttenuatorADSR for VCF, ADSR for VCA
Aftertouch expressionNone
Velocity expressionNone
Storage memoryNone
Input/output
Keyboard48-key
External controlNone
A short demonstration of sounds created by a Formanta Polivoks synthesiser

The Polivoks (also occasionally referred to as the Polyvox; Russian: Поливокс) is a duophonic, analog synthesizer manufactured and marketed in the Soviet Union between 1982 and 1990. It is arguably the most popular and well-known Soviet synthesizer in the West, likely due to the uniqueness of both its appearance and sound.

The Polivoks was designed at the Urals Vector plant, but actual production was handled at the Formanta Radio Factory in Kachkanar, Russian SFSR.[1] It was intended to appear and sound similar to American and Japanese synthesizers from companies such as Roland, Moog, and Korg. The Polivoks was engineered by circuit designer Vladimir Kuzmin with the appearance of the instrument influenced by his wife Olimpiada,[2] who took inspiration from the design of Soviet military radios. Its retail price upon release was 920 roubles and over its lifetime around 100,000 Polivoks were manufactured - sometimes with a production rate of up to 1,000 units a month.[3] But accordingly to information shared by Vladimir Kuzmin only 200-300 Polvokses were produced per month.[4] It means that total number cannot be more than 32000.

The Polivoks has some features that are either unusual or uncommon on most analog mono synthesizers including a filter that can be switched from low pass to bandpass and two envelopes that can be looped over the AD sections.[5]

Due to its unique history and relative rarity, the Polivoks has become popular as much for its unique sounds as for its aesthetics. It is often used by bands who take inspiration from the Soviet chic movement, as well as the ostalgie phenomenon in the former East Germany.

  1. ^ "The A-Z of Analog Synthesisers Part Two: N-Z" by Peter Forrest, page 290.
  2. ^ Interview with Vladimir Kuzmin at http://analogik.com/instrument_polivoks.asp Archived 2006-05-03 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "The A-Z of Analog Synthesisers Part Two: N-Z"
  4. ^ Kuzmin, Vladimir (2009). ""Polivoks". History of a one synthesizer". "Zvukirejisser" ("Sound Engineer") (in Russian). 9.
  5. ^ "Formanta Polivoks Synthesizer". Sound On Sound. July 2010. Archived from the original on 8 June 2015.

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