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Template:Nihongo, founded as Keio Electronic Laboratories, is a Japanese multinational corporation that manufactures electronic musical instruments, audio processors and guitar pedals, recording equipment, and electronic tuners. Under the Vox brand name, they also manufacture guitar amplifiers and electric guitars.

HistoryEdit

File:ErardHarpTuning.jpg
Tuning of a Sébastien Érard harp using the KORG OT-120 Wide 8 Octave Orchestral Digital Tuner

KORG was founded in 1962 in Tokyo by Tsutomu Kato and Tadashi Osanai as Keio Gijutsu Kenkyujo Ltd..<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It later became Template:Nihongo because its offices were located near the Keio train line in Tokyo and Keio can be formed by combining the first letters of Kato and Osanai. Before founding the company, Kato ran a nightclub. Osanai, a Tokyo University graduate and noted accordionist, regularly performed at Kato's club accompanied by a Wurlitzer Sideman rhythm machine. Dissatisfied with the rhythm machine, Osanai convinced Kato to finance his efforts to build a better one.<ref name="autogenerated52">Julian Colbeck, Keyfax Omnibus Edition, MixBooks, 1996, p. 52. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref>File:MiniKORG700S (1974).jpg</ref>

The company's first product was an electro-mechanical rhythm device, the Disc Rotary Electric Auto Rhythm machine, Donca Matic DA-20, released in 1963.<ref name=":0" /> The name "Donca" was an onomatopoeic reference to the sound the rhythm machine made. Buoyed by the success of the DA-20, Keio released a solid-state version of the Rhythm machine, the Donca matic DE-20, in 1966.

In 1967, Kato was approached by Fumio Mieda, an engineer seeking to build keyboards. Impressed with Mieda's enthusiasm, Kato asked him to build a prototype, and 18 months later Mieda returned with a programmable organ. Keio sold the organ under the name KORG, created by using the first letter of each founder's name plus RG from their planned emphasis on products targeted for the organ market (emphasizing the letters R and G in the word organ).<ref name="autogenerated52"/> In 1970 the firm name changed again to Keio Giken Kogyo Inc. (京王技研工業株式会社). Template:Multiple image Keio's organ products were successful throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s. Concerned about competition from other organ manufacturers, Kato decided to use the organ technology to build a keyboard for the then-niche synthesizer market. Keio's first synthesizer, the KORG miniKORG, was released in 1973.

During the 1970s, KORG's synthesizer line was divided into instruments for the hobbyist, and large expensive patchable instruments such as the PS series. In the early 1980s, KORG branched into digital pianos.

Template:Multiple image KORG is credited with a number of innovations. The key transpose function was Kato's idea after a singer at his club needed her accompaniment played in a lower key, which the accompanist wasn't able to do. KORG was the first company to feature effects on a synthesizer, and the first to use a sample + synthesis sound design. The M1 workstation, released in 1988, sold over 250,000 units, making it the bestselling synthesizer ever at that time.<ref name="autogenerated52"/>

Relationship with YamahaEdit

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Yamaha Corporation has always been a major partner of KORG, supplying them with circuitry and mechanical parts.

In 1987, shortly before the release of the M1 Music Workstation, Yamaha acquired a controlling interest in KORG. The takeover of the company was amicable, with Kato drawing up the terms, and the two companies continued to independently develop their product lines and compete in the marketplace.

In 1989, KORG recruited the design team from Sequential Circuits as they were relieved of their duties by then-Sequential owner Yamaha.

In 1993, after 5 successful years under Yamaha's control, Kato had sufficient funds to repurchase most of the Yamaha shares.

Recent historyEdit

KORG has since diversified into digital effects, tuners, recording equipment, electronic hand percussion, and software instruments.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1992, KORG acquired Vox, then primarily a manufacturer of guitar amplifiers.<ref>Dave Hunter, "50 Years of Vox",Template:Dead link Vintage Guitar, June 2010.</ref>

KORG was the exclusive distributor of Marshall Amplification products in the US for decades. This arrangement ended in 2010.<ref>Gordon Reid, "40 Years of Korg Gear", Sound on Sound, Oct 2002.</ref>

Kato died of cancer on 15 March 2011.<ref>"Korg Mourns the Passing of Chairman Tsutomu Katoh" (Template:Webarchive), Keyboard Magazine, 15 March 2011.</ref>

The new line of more accessible digital synthesizers, including the wavestate, modwave and opsix, are featuring a Raspberry Pi Compute Module 3.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In September 2022, Korg bought Darkglass Electronics.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ProductsEdit

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See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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