The Akai S1000 is a 16-bit, 44.1 kHz professional stereodigitalsampler, released by Akai in 1988. The S1000 was among the first professional-quality 16-bit stereo samplers.[3] Its abilities to splice, crossfade, trim, and loop sound in 16-bit CD quality made it popular among producers in the late 80s through to the mid 90s. The S1000 used 24-bit internal processing, had digital filters and an effects send and return, and came with 2MB of RAM (expandable to 8MB, and 32MB after the introduction of the EXM008 RAM boards for the S1100 in 1990).
Version 2.0 of the S1000's operating system introduced primitive timestretching, allowing a sound's pitch and length to be altered independently of one another. Far from seamless, this distinctive sound became popular in its own right, featured on songs such as "Higher State of Consciousness" and "RipGroove".
Variants
Several variations of the S1000 were produced:
The S1000HD included an internal 40MB hard disk
The S1000KB was built into a keyboard, and included room for an internal 80MB hard disk
The S1000PB was a playback-only version that couldn't create new samples[4]
The S1100, released in 1990, was an expanded and enhanced version of the S1000 including effects and SCSI interface, original MSRP $4,999[3]
The S1100EX (EXpander) was an playback-only polyphony expander rack module unit for the S1100 without its own front panel interface, also increased multitimbrality and effects, original MSRP $2,999.
Expansion cards
The following expansion cards are available to upgrade the abilities of any S1000 series sampler:[5]
EXM005 2MB RAM (additional three can be fitted, for 8MB RAM in total)
EXM008 8MB RAM, released in 1990 (up to four can be fitted, for 32MB RAM in total)
The S1000 quickly displaced the S900 as the studio standard sampler. Many bedroom producers could make music using little more than an S1000 and an Atari ST to sequence it, and in the UK this combination was a popular way of producing music in genres from jungle to speed garage.
In an interview taken over ten years after the S1000's release, Boards of Canada's Michael Sandison said "We have five or six samplers, but my favorite by far is still the Akai S1000. It's an old tank now, and the screen has faded so that I almost can't read it, but I know it inside out. It's the most spontaneous thing for making up little tunes."[6] Conversely, Portishead's Dave McDonald simply called it a "horrible thing" due to its primitive interface.[7]
^Collins, Mike (Jun 1991). "Beat Dis". Sound On Sound. United Kingdom. pp. 24–30. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
^Goodyer, Tim (Jul 1991). "Beats Working". Music Technology. United Kingdom: Music Maker Publications (UK), Future Publishing. pp. 26–32. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
^Cogan, Steve (Jan 1991). "Meet the Beat". Music Technology. United Kingdom: Music Maker Publications (UK), Future Publishing. pp. 54–58. Retrieved 2021-02-28.
^Trask, Simon (Oct 1991). "All Systems Go". Music Technology. United Kingdom: Music Maker Publications (UK), Future Publishing. pp. 36–42. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
^Rue, Dan; Goodyer, Tim (June 1990). "Tears for Fears". Music Technology (Jun 1990): 48–53.