120 Years of Electronic Music
Electronic Musical Instrument 1870 - 1990
The Wurlitzer "Side Man" (1959)
The Side Man was the first commercial electronic drum machine, designed and built by Wurlitzer from 1959. The Sideman was intended as a percussive accompaniment for the Wurlitzers organ range. The side Man allowed a choice of 12 electronically generated predefined rhythm patterns with variable tempos. The sound source was a series of vacuum tubes which created 10 preset electronic drum sounds. The drum sounds were 'sequenced' by a set of rotating discs with metal contacts on the edge spaced in a certain pattern to generate parts of a particular rhythm. combinations of these different sets of rhythms and drum sounds created popular rhythmic patterns of the day -waltzes, fox trot etc., these combinations were selected by a rotary knob on the top of the Sideman box. The tempo of the patterns were controlled by a slider that increased the speed of rotation of the disc.
The Wurlitzer Sideman (open casing showing internal speaker, rotating disk and circuitry)
The sideman had a panel of 10 buttons to manually trigger drum sounds and a remote player to control the machine while playing from an organ keyboard. The Sideman was housed in a wooden cabinet that housed the sound generating circuitry, amplifier and speaker.
The top panel of the Sideman showing (L-R) pattern select control, tempo slider and manual triggers
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