SYNTH × DRUM MACHINES | ROLAND, '80s
TB-303 • TR-505 • TR-606 • TR-808 • TR-909
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SYNTH × DRUM MACHINES | ROLAND, '80s
TB-303 • TR-505 • TR-606 • TR-808 • TR-909
ZOOM RhythmTrak RT-323 drum machine in transparent blue 2000 (x)
seeburg rhythm prince analog drum machine | source
ian pooley °
The story of the Akai MPC begins in 1988, when Japanese company Akai partnered with drum machine pioneer Roger Linn to release the Akai MPC60.
Technically, it was a sampler, sequencer, and drum machine in one. Culturally, it became something else entirely. The MPC transformed music production from a studio process into a physical performance.
What followed was less a product cycle and more a cultural shift. The MPC arrived at the exact moment hip hop was evolving from turntables and drum breaks into a fully formed production language. Its 4x4 pad grid allowed producers to slice fragments of vinyl records and rearrange them into new compositions, turning sampling into an art form of its own. Suddenly, a bedroom could function like a studio, and someone with a stack of records could build entire worlds from fragments of sound.
Over the following decades, the MPC became the quiet engine behind some of the most influential music ever made. Producers like J Dilla, DJ Premier, and Kanye West turned the machine into an instrument with its own personality.
Dilla famously disabled the quantization on his MPC to create loose, human rhythms that reshaped how beats could feel, proving the machine was not just a tool but a new kind of musical language.
In the heat of the night, in the heat of the day.
Cleo Murray of The March Violets