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Remembering Dave Smith, inventor of MIDI and the Prophet-5 synthesizer

Dave Smith, center, photographed attending the 2015 North American Music Merchants convention in Anaheim, Calif.
Dave Smith, center, photographed attending the 2015 North American Music Merchants convention in Anaheim, Calif.
(
Pete Brown
/
Wikimedia Commons
)

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The sound of pop music in the '80s was shaped by synthesizers – and one of the most impactful people behind that sound was inventor Dave Smith, creator of the Prophet-5 synthesizer and founder of Sequential Circuits, the instrument's small-scale production company. Though his most well-known inventions were decades in the past, Smith, who died last week at the age of 72, is still remembered with reverence.

"He always knew more about what a musician wanted, or needed, than they did," says keyboardist Roger O'Donnell, who has played synths in some bands you might have heard of – The Cure and The Psychedelic Furs among them. But the legacy of the Prophet-5 is at least, if not eclipsed, by that of another Smith invention: the Musical Instrument Digital Interface, or MIDI, which allowed digital instruments to speak the same language for the first time. The technology remains in wide use today – thanks in no small part to it being made totally free.

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