Sequential (company)

[2] When no instrument emerged, in early 1977, Smith quit his job to work full-time on a design for the Prophet-5, the first fully programmable polyphonic synthesizer.

He demonstrated it at the NAMM International Music & Sound Expo in January 1978 and shipped the first models later that year.

[4]: 385  The Prophet-5 became a market leader and industry standard,[6] used by musicians such as Michael Jackson, Madonna, and Dr Dre, and by film composers such as John Carpenter.

[9] Smith and the Sequential engineer Chet Wood designed an interface using Roland's Digital Control Bus (DCB) as a basis.

[11][12]: 20  The protocol was named Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI)[13]: 4  and unveiled by Kakehashi and Smith, who received Technical Grammy Awards in 2013 for their work.

[2] In 2008, Dave Smith Instruments launched the Prophet '08, conceived as an affordable eight-voice analog synthesizer.

[2] In January 2015, Yamaha returned the Sequential Circuits brands to Smith in a goodwill gesture.

Kakehashi said: "I feel that it's important to get rid of unnecessary conflict among electronic musical instrument companies.

For this reason, I personally recommended that the President of Yamaha, Mr. Nakata, return the rights to the Sequential name to Dave Smith.

Sequential founder Dave Smith in 2015
The Prophet-5 (1978), the first Sequential synthesizer. The specific model pictured above is the "Rev 3", first released in 1980.
Prophet 600 (1982), the first Sequential Circuits synthesizer with MIDI functionality
Various Sequential products [top to bottom]