Leo was fired.
Leo did the unthinkable. He bought a used TS-10 from a pawn shop on Santa Monica Blvd using his rent money. He spent 72 hours straight re-sampling. He survived on cold pizza and Jolt Cola. On the final hour, he triggered a low C on the "ResoReese" bass patch. The sound was a perfect, snarling, detuned monster. He saved the final SF2 file. Total size: 148MB. He named it . Ensoniq TS-10 SoundFont -SF2-
Today, the Ensoniq TS-10 SoundFont lives in the dark corners of thousands of hard drives. You can hear it if you know where to listen. It’s the warm, unstable pad on that lo-fi hip-hop track with 2 million YouTube views. It’s the brittle piano on that indie game soundtrack that made you nostalgic for a childhood you never had. It’s the bass in that techno track that shakes the subwoofer at 3 AM in a warehouse in Detroit. Leo was fired
But the internet is a digital graveyard that refuses to stay dead. In 2002, a bedroom producer in Ukraine uploaded “TS10_Legacy.sf2” to a forgotten FTP server. In 2005, a tracker forum in Sweden embedded it into a keygen. In 2011, a sample library curator on Reddit named VintageSamples_Archive found a pristine copy on a Zip disk at a flea market in Berlin. He spent 72 hours straight re-sampling
Leo’s workstation was a beige Pentium II running Windows 98. His tools: a Turtle Beach Pinnacle sound card with a proprietary S/PDIF input, a copy of Chicken Systems Translator , and a mountain of pirated RAM. His process was monastic.
Leo Focht is 73 now. He builds model ships and has perfect hearing for his age. He does not own a computer. But once a year, his grandson brings a laptop over. The grandson, a music producer named Leo III, loads up a DAW and pulls up a file. It’s always the same file. He plays a middle C. The "DreamPad" swells, its noisy, imperfect loop cycling forever, the ghost of the TS-10 breathing through a 26-year-old SoundFont.
He connected the TS-10’s main outs to the Pinnacle’s inputs. He disabled the noisy internal fan on his PC. At 3 AM, with the studio dark, he began. He loaded the TS-10’s legendary preset, “DreamPad” —a cavernous, evolving swell that used two Transwaves, one reversing, filtered through a resonant low-pass. He triggered a middle C, let it sustain for 47 seconds, and hit record. He did this for every note from C-2 to C-8. He did this for the "Stereo Grand Piano," the "Warm Strings," the "ResoBass." He filled a 4GB hard drive with raw, 16-bit, 44.1kHz stereo WAVs.