Optigan
Timeline
This is an evolving timeline
of the events in the Optigan's short life. Basically I'm going to put here
just about anything that has a date and seems remotely pertinent. Some of
the individual details may be mundane, but when you add them all together
you get a better overall picture of what was happening with the Optigan
over specific periods of time. I'll be adding more details as they surface
(I'm trying to keep guesswork out of this, so there will be very little
"probable" dates), and eventually I'll turn the whole history
into more of a formal historical article.
Jump
to: 1968-70 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976
1968-70
1968-70
hardware
R&D, early music recordings made in Cologne, Germany.
6/8/70
Patent application: "Disc
Drive"
11/2/70
Patent application: "Music
Instrument with Variable Amplitude."
12/10/70
Patent application: "Optical
Disc Drive for Organ."
12/11/70
Patent application: "Electronic
Organ wherein Musical Sounds and a Tremolo Effect are provided by Electro-Optical
Apparatus."
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1971
1/11/71
Patent application: "Cabinet
for Keyboard Instrument or the like."
1/11/71
Patent application: "Keyboard
for Musical Instrument or the like."
1/12/71
Patent application: "Radiation
Sensitive Readout Head with Circuit Board Construction."
1/22/71
Patent application: "Organ
Keyboard Switching System."
1/27/71
The World Premiere Presentation of the Optigan in the Los Angeles Room
of the Century Plaza Hotel in Century City. Johnny
Largo is brought onboard as Optigan's Musical Director.
2/71
A short, exclusive article about the Optigan, written by organist Bill
Irwin, appears in Modern Keyboard Review Magazine.
6/71
The Optigan is exhibited at NAMM in Chicago.
7/71
The Optigan is exhibited at CES in Chicago.
9/71
Johnny Largo gives presentations for a variety of magazine editors for
the purpose of encouraging press about the Optigan.
9/22/71
Idea of Automatic Beat Counter system is proposed as a sheet music format
to make Optigan's
music books easier to read by non-musicians.
10/5/71
Johnny Largo demonstrates the Optigan for the merchandising department
of Montgomery Ward.
12/71
Promotional cassette of Christmas music
played on the Optigan by Johnny Largo is
recorded and distributed.
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1972
1/1/72
Johnny Largo plays the Optigan on the
City of Compton float in the Pasadena Rose Parade.
1/20/72
Johnny Largo gives training seminar for Sears Music Schools instructors
on how to teach their customers how to play the Optigan.
2/72
Johnny Largo gives a presentation for new Optigan owners at the first
Sears Optigan Class.
3/7/72
Patent granted: "Electronic Organ wherein Musical Sounds and a Tremolo
Effect are provided by Electro-Optical Apparatus."
3/11/72
Johnny Largo demonstrates the Optigan for snowbunnies traveling on the
Amtrak Snowball Special bound for Sun Valley.
4/18/72
Patent granted: "Music Instrument with Variable Amplitude."
4/18/72
Patent granted: "Organ Keyboard Switching System."
5/15/72
Results
are tabulated from the musical preferences questionnaire issued with the
"New Highlight 6"
packs. These results directly influenced future disc-making plans.
6/17/72
Optigan is exhibited at NAMM.
7/11/72
Patent granted: "Cabinet for Keyboard Instrument or the like."
7/25/72
Patent granted: "Keyboard for Musical Instrument or the like."
9/72
Optigan launches a highly visual point-of-purchase promotional display
campaign, designed by the Selig J.Smith Company.
9/72
Optigan launches the largest TV ad campaign ever for a musical instrument,
produced by Carson/Roberts. The 30 second "Make Your Own Kind Of
Music" commercial ran for 10 weeks.
9/26/72
Patent granted: "Radiation Sensitive Readout Head with Circuit Board
Construction."
10/72
Optigan names Art Fromader Midwest Sales
Manager.
11/72
Johnny Largo demonstrates the Optigan on the "Newsday" show
on KBFI-TV in Dallas, Texas.
11/72
Optigan enters the holiday season by releasing the "Joyous
Sounds Of Christmas" Folio.
11/72
The Optigan "1972 Total Merchandising Program" wins the Best-Of-Class
award at the Point-Of-Purchase Annual Merchandising Awards Contest.
11/72
A national newspaper article/ad campaign is run to advertise the Optigan
for the holiday season.
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1973
1/13/73
The Optigan is demonstrated at the IHE (Independent Home Entertainment)
Show at the Conrad Hilton in Chicago.
2/5/73
Mattel announces its plans to dispose of the Optigan subsidiary, citing
"disappointing operating results."
3/1/73
Mike LeDoux announces near-completion of the "Country"
Style-Pak and Entertainment Folio #3. Both
of these products would not be released until after the Mattel/Miner switchover.
Also, plans for generating a "Beatles" Style-Pak as well as
a "50's Rock" Style-Pak are announced. Both of these projects
never got off the ground.
3/13/73
Patent granted: "Disc Drive."
4/73
By this point, Roy Chilton has formed a business partnership with General
Electro Music (the American wing of Galanti). Roy forms the Chilton Corporation
to develop the Chilton
Talentmaker (an improved version of the Optigan) to be produced by
GEM.
4/3/73
Patent granted: "Optical Disc Drive for Organ."
5/73
Full page ad for the Chilton Talentmaker appears in the Music Trades Magazine.
6/73
Chilton introduces the Talentmaker at NAMM.
6/8/73
Mattel sells Optigan to Miner Industries, which forms a new subsidiary
called "Opsonar" to commence production. Mike LeDoux is the
sole employee to remain with Optigan. Arrangements are made for his software
lab to remain on the west coast, while the rest of the "factory"
is moved to New Kensington, PA.
6/17/73
Opsonar issues public
warning in the NAMM Daily to Chilton Corp. for possible Optigan patent
violations in regard to the Chilton Talentmaker.
7/73
Optigan's software division, headed by Mike LeDoux, is moved from the
Compton plant to a vacant area inside the Circuit Drafting & Photography
building (Optigan's vendor for disc production).
12/73
Mattel announces $13 million in losses due to the Optigan.
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1974
3/74
Miner announces record sales and earnings for the past nine months, due
in part to Opsonar.
6/5/74
Opsonar
releases its newly revised Optigan merchandise price list.
12/74
The Optigan is demonstrated at CES in Chicago. Several prototype cabinet
designs are displayed, including the "baby
grand" and the "space
age" models.
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1975
2/75
A possible merger is proposed between Chilton Corp. and Opsonar which
would convert the existing Talentmakers into an "improved" version
of the Optigan. (This merger never occurred.)
3/75
Mike LeDoux becomes increasingly entangled in Miner's process of shutting
down their ill-managed Magnus Organ subsidiary on the west coast. Mike's
involvement with this process signals the beginning of the end for Optigan.
6/17/75
Opsonar establishes a Disc Warranty Program, which is advertised on the
Optigan dust jackets. Optigan owners could send in worn-out discs along
with one dollar per disc to obtain brand new copies.
8/27/75
By this date, all existing Optigan discs have been produced, and software
development effectively halts.
10/75
Optigan "Songs Of Praise" Style-Pak
is released.
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1976
3/76
The Optigan disc-production facility officially moves out of the CDP building.
5/76
Vako advertises the Orchestron
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