E-MU Proteus/1: Difference between revisions

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(took off the one stop music shop - seems to be based on the e-mu soundengine module than the p/1. deserves a page though)
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===Digidesign MacProteus===
===Digidesign MacProteus===
The MacProteus is a computer sound card version of the Proteus/1 produced by Digidesign for Macintosh computers in 1990.<ref name=protologic-macproteus />
The MacProteus is a computer sound card version of the Proteus/1 produced by Digidesign for Macintosh computers in 1990.<ref name=protologic-macproteus />
===One Stop Music Shop===
The One Stop Music Shop is an Amiga sound card produced by Blue Ribbon Soundworks based on the Proteus/1 in 1992. It uniquely features GM support unlike the rest of the Proteus series.<ref>[https://amiga.resource.cx/exp/onestopmusicshop Amiga Hardware Database, One Stop Music Shop]</ref>


==Oddities==
==Oddities==
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==External Links==
==External Links==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060701062130/https://www.emu.com/support/files/storage/proteus.pdf Proteus Operation Manual]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060701062130/https://www.emu.com/support/files/storage/proteus.pdf Proteus Operation Manual, via Wayback Machine]
**[https://www.synthmind.com/proteus_ProductManual.pdf synthmind.com mirror]  
* [https://youtu.be/ZlIcY1uMgNc?si=jkemPZ-0Q6I-R_tk&t=22 Proteus/1 Demo Sequence]
* [https://youtu.be/ZlIcY1uMgNc?si=jkemPZ-0Q6I-R_tk&t=22 Proteus/1 Demo Sequence]


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 08:46, 18 July 2025

E-MU Proteus/1
W × H × D (mm) 482.6 x 44.45 × 215.9[1]
Rack units 1U
Weight 2kg[1]
Type Fully-editable ROMpler sound module
Manufacturer E-MU Systems
Release date 1989
Parts 16[2]
Max polyphony 32[2]
Normal presets Original
192[3]
XR
384[3]
Expansion 4MB Expansion Board
Orchestral Expansion
Invision Protologic Expansion

The E-MU Proteus/1 is a 1U rackmount sound module synthesizer created by E-MU Systems in 1989, made to the likes of units like the Roland U-220, being E-MU's first foray into making a rackmount synthesizer module. And much like the U-220 takes from sampled content from the S-series samplers, the Proteus/1 takes a lot of its sampled content from the Emulator III sampler.

Presenting itself with an average 16x2 character display and uniquely being made of plastic, the Proteus/1 takes another major economical measure of having no realtime effects, but did have a notable quantity of sound contents and 16-part multi-timbrality.

The Proteus/1 would be labelled the "Pop/Rock" module with later produced units, since the Proteus/1 focuses on a large range of instruments for contemporary production, and would be followed up by the Proteus/2 and Proteus/3, focusing on Orchestral and World instruments respectively.

The sounds of the Proteus/1 and the rest of the Proteus series would find themselves on later E-MU products and software. A digital version of the Proteus/1 is officially offered in Digital Sound Factory's "E-MU Proteus Legacy" Kontakt library, however the sound is often inaccurate.[4]

Sound Generation

The Proteus/1 is fully editable ROMpler synthesizer. Presets are made up of 2 oscillators known "pri" (primary) and "sec" (secondary) that can hold one of Proteus/1's 125 instrument tones. An instrument tone can have its sound reversed. Along with a preset having its own global volume envelope/ADSR, each oscillator has pitch/tuning, panning, chorus and ADSR available.

Each oscillator also features 2 programmable LFOs with 5 waveshape options.

The two oscillators can also be split to different parts of the keyboard or interact with an editable crossfade across the keyboard range. Up to 4 presets can be linked together and split simultaneously.

Variants

Proteus/1 XR

The Proteus/1 XR features more RAM than the original module, adding an extra 192 user-programmable preset locations (with 128 of those being new presets), bringing the overall total to 384 (256 RAM; 128 ROM).

Protologic Invision Proteus/1

There was an expansion board created by Invision that would add 4 MBs of sounds to the Proteus/1, featuring 70 instrument tones and 128 presets of sounds like basses, keyboards, horns, percussion, synths, etc.[5]

There were also Proteus/1s that had the expansion pre-installed, which had a distinctive yellow squiggle graphic to the side of the "PROTEUS/1 16 BIT MULTI-TIMBRAL DIGITAL SOUND MODULE" text on the module.

Proteus/1 Plus Orchestral

A Proteus/1 Plus Orchestral is another variant that features an extra 4 MBs of sounds, and all of the instrument tones and 128 ROM presets from the Proteus/2.

There was also an expansion board that upgraded a standard Proteus/1 to this model that was hinted at and eventually announced at an E-MU Audio Engineering Society exhibit in Los Angeles in September 1990.[5] This was offered by E-MU for installation at their service centers.

Proteus MPS / Proteus MPS Plus Orchestral

The Proteus Master Performance System, or better known as the Proteus MPS is a keyboard version of the Proteus/1 that adds 2 effects processors with 32 effects, featuring 200 presets and is expandable to 300 with a RAM card. The piano preset from the original Proteus is also replaced with a mono version of the piano sound from the Proformance/1 piano module.[6]

The Proteus MPS Plus Orchestral, similarly to the Proteus/1 Plus Orchestral, adds all 4 MBs from the Proteus/2 and more ROM presets utilizing them. And much like the Proteus/1 Plus Orchestral, there was an expansion board to upgrade a standard MPS to a Plus model as well.

Digidesign MacProteus

The MacProteus is a computer sound card version of the Proteus/1 produced by Digidesign for Macintosh computers in 1990.[5]

Oddities

  • The Proteus/1 responds to the standard MIDI panning message, however it is divided into 17 segments going in either a negative direction/left (-1 to -8) or a positive direction (1-8) with 0 being center and each value corresponds to an arbitrary MIDI panning number. Though, for some reason these values are slightly offset - a center panning message (0) is actually +1, or slightly right on the Proteus/1.

External Links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Proteus operation manual, pg. 117.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Proteus operation manual, pg. 7
  3. 3.0 3.1 Proteus Operation Manual, pg. 74-75.
  4. E-MU Proteus vs. Kontakt Library by Gale Sosa (Youtube)
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 SoundOnSound "The Shape Shifter: Digidesign MacProteus And InVision ProtoLogic" by Kendall Wrightson
  6. "E-mu have made one change to the Proteus/1 samples which the MPS comes fitted with, replacing the original grand piano with a mono version of the superior sampled grand from their Pro/formance stereo piano module. " - SoundOnSound E-MU Proteus MPS Review by Simon Trask, March 1992