ANTIC Interview 332 - Mike Matthews, Alien Group Voice Box

Published: April 16, 2018, 7 a.m.

Mike Matthews, Alien Group Voice Box \xa0 That voice you just heard in an Alien Group Voice Box II connected to an Atari 800. \xa0 Voice Box was a external speech synthesizer box for the Atari 400 and 800. Voice Box, and its successor Voice Box II, was marketed by "The Alien Group" starting in July 1982. The device used the Votrax SC-01A speech synthesizer chip to add speech and singing to the Atari. Versions were also available for the Commodore 64 and Apple II computers. \xa0 The Alien Group was actually an offshoot of Electro-Harmonix. Electro-Harmonix was founded by rhythm and blues keyboard player Mike Matthews in 1968. The company is still is business today, and is well-regarded for its guitar pedals and other musicians' gear. \xa0 For more background on The Alien Group and Voice Box, I recommend reading Bill Lange's blog post "Atari Says Its First Word." \xa0 This interview with Mike Matthews took place on November 13, 2017. \xa0 *** \xa0 One more thing: I talked with Scott Matthews, Mike's son. He told me in email: \xa0 "My first big software project was for my dad, when I was about 13. What I wrote was an Atari BASIC function that would take a number as input, and would output the phonetic equivalent of that number. The idea was that other people -- who wanted to write applications that would speak a number -- could use the function to convert application-generated numbers to a speakable string." \xa0 Scott also doesn't remember who, if anyone, won the $5000 contest for best talking software.\xa0 \xa0 Alien Group Voice Box II Demo on Atari 800 \xa0 Atari 8-Bit ads: Atari Says Its First Word \xa0 Photo of Mike and Voice Box\xa0 \xa0 Another Voice Box II ad \xa0 Electro-Harmonix Goes To Russia \xa0 Compute! magazine mentions Voice Box II