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Novachord

The Novachord is an electronic musical instrument often considered the world's first commercial polyphonic synthesizer.[1][2][3] Incorporating many circuit and control elements found in modern synthesizers, and using subtractive synthesis to generate tones, it was designed by John M. Hanert, Laurens Hammond and C. N. Williams, and was manufactured by the Hammond company.[4] Only 1,069 Novachords were built over a period from 1939 to 1942. It was one of very few electronic products released by Hammond that was not intended to emulate the sound of an organ.

Novachord

Hammond

1939–1942

72-voices

6-channel electromechanical vibrato

Subtractive analogue

Three bandpass filters, one lowpass filter, one highpass filter (in parallel with fixed frequency)

Envelope with seven preset shapes

Vacuum tubes

72 notes

History of production[edit]

While production of the Novachord began in November 1938, it was first heard at the 1939 New York World's Fair.[5] The Novachord Orchestra of Ferde Grofé performed daily at the Ford stand with four Novachords and a Hammond Organ. The first instrument was delivered to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January 30, 1940 as a birthday present.


The Novachord was not well-suited to the technique of organists or pianists and required frequent adjustments to controls on the front panel to create new sounds. Like many later analog synthesizers, it was much better-suited to producing "otherworldly" timbres. The instrument found its niche some years after production, shaping the sound of many science fiction film and television scores.


Production stopped because of a shortage of parts in 1942 and poor sales kept it from being built after the war.[6] It is estimated that fewer than 200 Novachords are still in existence and considerably fewer are still in operation. The vast majority of surviving examples are in North America, although one is known to be in the United Kingdom. As of November 2017, there is one in Australia.

A detailed restoration of a Novachord with sound clips

A modern recording of a 1939 Novachord recently restored in the UK

US Novachord restoration project

UK Novachord restoration project

Virtual Novachord Software

1942, 78 RPM recording of Parade of The Wooden Soldiers

Video of British pianist/composer Billy Mayerl playing his Marigold on the Novachord in 1941 (British Pathé film)