
Before it became viable to distribute and play music tracks on home computers, the use of FM and Wavetable synthesis was very common, with MIDI Wavetable-based devices like the Roland MT-32 and SC-55 still highly sought after today. The Creative Midi Blaster MB-10 that [Yeo Kheng Meng] reviewed and tore down for an analysis isn’t quite as famous or sought after, but it provides a good example of what Creative Labs was doing at the time in this space.
Released in 1993, it definitely has more of a popular style vibe to it than the utilitarian Roland devices, even if this means highly impractical curves. In the list of features it claims Roland MT-32 emulation, which would have made it quite a bit more useful to the average user, including gamers of the era. Games like DOOM supported these MIDI devices for audio, for example.
In terms of price only the Roland SC-55ST comes close to the MB-10, similarly dropping a screen and a host of features. In terms of features the MB-10 claims far fewer instruments than the SC-55 variants, with even with the slightly higher priced SC-55ST massively outgunning it in raw specs. So would you ever buy the MB-10 back then and consider it a ‘good deal’? If $100 in 1990s money was worth losing full MIDI compatibility for, then it seems the answer was ‘yes’.
During the teardown of the MB-10 we can find an 8051-based Siemens processor that handles the MIDI interfaces and a Dream SAM8905 effects processor. Most of the remaining ICs are ROM chips that contain the firmware and MIDI banks, with the ROM dumps found in this GitHub repository.
The analog output stage includes the venerable TL074CN opamp and TDA1545 DAC, as well as a TDA2822M power amplifier IC. All of which is typical off-the-shelf for the era and also not something where Creative spent big bucks. It also appears that the 20-note polyphony claims on the box are false, as the Dream processor can only do 16 notes, which a quick test confirmed.
Despite being the cheaper option, it seems that most people with the spare cash to splurge on an external MIDI Wavetable device opted for a Roland one. These days it’s correspondingly quite hard to find an MB-10 for sale, unlike Roland MT-32 and SC-55 variants, yet considering software compatibility you really want to just stick with MT-32 and SC-55 compatibility anyway.
