S950
Put it through the S950 then stretch it, to create the great type of shit to fit
— Large Professor, "The Mad Scientist", 1996
S950 tech specs
- Released: 1989
- Company: Akai
- Type: Sampler
- Polyphony: 8 voices
- Timbrality: Multitimbral
- Sample rates: 7.5 kHz — 48 kHz
- Sample resolution: 12-bit
- Audio out: 8 + stereo pair
- Control: MIDI
- RAM: 750 KB — 2.25 MB (750 KB ×3)
- Storage: 2HD/2DD 3.5" floppy disk, ACSI (optional), up to 60 MB SCSI (optional, £89[1])
- Display: 40×2 character LCD
- Features: Pingpong looping, timestretching
- Size: 3U
The S950 was a sampler released by Akai in 1989.
This was a minor improvement on the S900, bringing it cosmetically inline with the then-new S1000. Its memory could be increased to a more comfortable amount, and it gained the S1000's most prominent feature: timestretching. Like the S900, it can still perform pingpong loops, something the flagship S1000 can't do. It also improved upon the S900's sample rate, although that was already more than sufficient to begin with.
Accessories
RAM
Interface boards
Quotes
S950
On "Voodoo [Ray]", you can hear a girl called Nicola singing. We went into a studio in Manchester called Jonny Roadhouse and she sang everything normally and I put her voice into the S950 and reversed it.
— Gerald Simpson (A Guy Called Gerald), 1989[5]
As far as sampling's concerned, there's an Akai S900 for the sequencer sounds — that is, all the shorter samples that are rhythmical or have to be triggered repeatedly by the sequencer: percussive sounds and sampled basslines, things like that. Then we have the S950 which is used for all the keyboard triggered parts, which are the most prominent samples on the record. And that's it, really, but I'm very happy with what we've got. The samplers in particular have been brilliant. Everything's so easy on them, even the S950. They have some brilliant functions, and it's all, basically, pretty obvious. They seem to work in the same way that people's minds work.
— Mike Edwards, Jesus Jones, 1990[6]
The vocal sample on "Playing With Knives" is timestretched — about 83%, I think.
— Carl Turner, Bizarre Inc, 1991[7]
If you want drums tight then get an S950, S900, or any Akai sampler. The S1000 isn't as tight as the 950, but it's still good.
— Gamble, Rhythmatic, 1992[8]
There's even an argument about Akai S950s and S1000s: some people think that when you play a 950 sample in the S1000 it loses its character. That's why a lot of people do a basic loop on the S1000, and when it comes to the bass drum and snare, they put them over the top on a 950. It has a snappier, brighter quality.
— Jimi Goodwin, Sub Sub, 1993[9]
The S900 was fairly rudimentary. The S950 you could and still can do pretty much anything you want.
— Norman Cook (Fatboy Slim), 2017[10]
One of the reasons I stuck with the 950 rather than moving onto an S1000 was it had reverse loop and it was much easier to get a smooth loop because it becomes like a vibrato warble rather than a click click click. You could just move the loop point fractionally by millionths of a second until it sounded right.
— Norman Cook (Fatboy Slim), 2017[10]
My two favorite instruments in the '90s were the samplers from Akai: S950 followed by S3000. I could use these almost blindly. The lowpass filter on the S950 is so unique that I acquired another S950 on the used market this week. The filters are the most important part of all the instruments for me.
— Biosphere, 2021[11]
Notable users
- Biosphere[11]
- Bizarre Inc[7]
- De La Soul[12][13]
- Equinox
- Fatboy Slim[10] (×2)
- Fluke[14]
- Global Communication[15]
- A Guy Called Gerald[5][16]
- Richie Hawtin[17]
- Jesus Jones[6]
- Moby[18][19]
- Nightmares On Wax[20]
- Sub Sub[9] (×2)
References
- "Turnkey" Turnkey (Vendor), Sound On Sound, Nov 1989, p. 85
- "Akai Professional Musical Instruments Catalogue 1988-1989" Akai, 1988, p. 7
- "Akai Professional Sampler Catalogue 1989" Akai, 1989, p. 4
- "Solving Akai Sampler SCSI & CD-ROM Compatibility Problems" Paul Farrer, Sound On Sound, Nov 1997
- "A Guy Called Gerald" Vie Marshall, Micro Music, Oct 1989, pp. 75—76
- "The Gospel According to Jesus Jones" Nigel Lord, Music Technology, Jan 1990, pp. 50—56
- "Strange Changes" Simon Trask, Music Technology, Dec 1991, pp. 30—36
- "The Rhythm Method" Simon Trask, Music Technology, Jan 1992, pp. 50—53
- "Sub Culture" Phil Ward, Music Technology, Jul 1993, pp. 18—21
- "Classic Tracks: Fatboy Slim 'Praise You'" Tom Doyle, Sound On Sound, Jan 2017
- "In the Studio With Biosphere" Headphone Commute, Jan 2021
- "The Perfect Beat" Rock & Roll, 1995
- "The Making of 'The Magic Number' by De La Soul" Tom Pinnock, Uncut, Feb 2023
- "Age of Chance" Simon Trask, Music Technology, Jun 1990, pp. 34—37
- "Calling Occupants" Maff Evans, Future Music, Mar 1995, pp. 61—63
- "Voodoo Chile" Simon Trask, Music Technology, Apr 1990, pp. 50—54
- "Signal Path: Richie Hawtin on His Origins as F.U.S.E. and How He Made Techno in the Early '90s" Maya-Roisin Slater, Fact, May 2019
- Everything Is Wrong Moby, 1995
- "Recording Moby's 'Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad?'" Tom Flint, Sound On Sound, Feb 2000
- "Waxing Lyrical" Simon Trask, Music Technology, Sep 1991, pp. 36—39
External links
Reviews
- "Akai S950 Digital Sampler" Vic Lennard, Music Technology, Jan 1989, pp. 50—52
- "Akai S950" Vic Lennard, Home & Studio Recording, Mar 1989, pp. 12—13
Downloads
Documentation
- "S950 manual" Akai
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