Otamatone [Sweets Series] “Minty” [Japanese Edition] Japanese Electronic Musical Instrument Synthesizer by Cube / Maywa Denki from Japan, Mint Green
The Otamatone is an electronic musical synthesizer. It was developed in Japan in 1998 by the CUBE toy company and the Maywa Denki design firm. The Otamatone is a singing toy whose body is shaped like an eighth note (it also somewhat resembles a tadpole, “otamajakushi” being Japanese for “tadpole”), with sound emerging from a “mouth” on the notehead. It requires two hands to play: while one hand holds and squeezes the “head”, the other hand controls the pitch of the tune by placing the finger on a ribbon controller on the stem; a higher position on the stem creates a lower sound. The ribbon controller is deliberately delinearized to resemble a guitar, so there is a shorter distance between higher notes than between lower ones. Varying the pressure on the head (thereby opening and closing the “mouth” of the Otamatone) creates a wah-wah effect, and shaking the neck (and thereby slightly changing pressure on the head) creates a vibrato effect. Switches on the back of the head allow users to change octave, turn it off or on, or change the volume. The sound made by this toy can be compared to the sound of a theremin, synthesizer, or jinghu.
Product Features
- BEST SELLER – One of Japan’s Best-Selling Musical Instrument Portable Synthesizer Toys!
- FUN & EASY TO PLAY – Slide Your Fingers Along The Stem to Vary The Pitch and Squeeze The Cheeks for Vibrato
- CREATE YOUR OWN SOUND – Play in a low, medium, or high pitch – get together with friends and create a harmony!
- GREAT FOR ALL AGES – Kids, teens, and adults all love the Otamatone! Whether you’re brand new to music or an expert musician, the Otamatone offers a fun, silly new way to make music!
- ※AAA Batteries ×3 ※Body Size: Approx 27 cm
Cube otamatone
Spend more money on a higher quality unit When I first put the batteries in this would not work. The place where the batteries and terminals meet doesn’t align properly. I had to mess with this quite a bit to get power to the unit.Once I got it working I was not impressed. Even at “loud” the volume is low, too low. I need to press on the touch board REALLY hard to make noises. Without my thumb directly behind the finger pressing down I feel like I’m going to break the stem off. You can definitely not play this like…