T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
860.56 | Roland GP-8 | CCYLON::ANDERSON | | Tue Jan 26 1988 16:12 | 7 |
| I am considering the purchase of a rolland GP8 signal processor
and am looking for any comments/suggestions/alternatives to look
at. This unit seems phanominal. Am I right or is this just tunnel
vision at work.
Jim
|
860.57 | | RANGLY::BOTTOM_DAVID | Feats don't fail me now | Wed Jan 27 1988 07:56 | 4 |
| I thought that distortion sound was a bit lacking...kind of like
a poor fuzz box...other than that it seemed pretty nice.
dbII
|
860.58 | Another approach | CCYLON::ANDERSON | | Wed Jan 27 1988 11:03 | 5 |
| If I were then to get a DSP-1 for all of the other effects. Then,
which distortion box is the most versitile to compliment the DSP-1.
Jim
|
860.59 | a few | ERASER::BUCKLEY | Street Lethal | Wed Jan 27 1988 12:25 | 10 |
|
Re: .2
I would have to say the Rat by Proco is the best distortion unit
available in a floor-type box.
I haven't heard what is coming from Scholtz R&D these days, but
he has a few half-rack distortion units.
wjb
|
860.60 | Rack mount only for me... | CCYLON::ANDERSON | | Wed Jan 27 1988 14:24 | 5 |
| I am only looking at rack mount units. for several reasons. Ease
of access not being the least.
Jim
|
860.61 | | RANGLY::BOTTOM_DAVID | Feats don't fail me now | Thu Jan 28 1988 08:07 | 4 |
| re: -.1
I have the sholz rockmods for sale if they interest you...
dave
|
860.62 | What did you decide? | RANCHO::HACK | | Tue May 17 1988 16:05 | 4 |
| What finally happened? Did you get the DSP-1 or the GP-8?
How do you like it? Who makes the DSP-1? What are the comparative
costs?
Peter
|
860.63 | Digitech DSP-128 | MARKER::BUCKLEY | William J. Buckley | Tue May 17 1988 16:45 | 6 |
|
he got the DSP-128.
From what I hear they're great units.
wjb
|
860.64 | Final decision... | CCYLON::ANDERSON | | Wed May 18 1988 14:04 | 18 |
| Hi
The DSP-1 is made by Yamaha and is repackaged and sold by several
others (KORG and Roland to mention a few). The DSP-1 runs about
$899 and the others are more than $1K. The DSP-128 is made by Digitech
and runs about $300. The difference is that the DSP-1 has six outputs
for stereo a center and subwoofer output. All to create the sonic
dimensioning for surround sound and other hall effects. The DSP-128
is setero in/out and does the same job cheaper. If, howeve this
were for my stereo system I would use the DSP-1 although I plan
some experimints with the DSP-128. I Use the Rockman sustainor for
distortion effects along with several other fuzz/distortion units
and wah-wah pedals.
So far I am very pleased with this decision.
Jim
|
860.65 | Features table | RANCHO::HACK | | Wed May 18 1988 22:45 | 43 |
| I'm afraid the decision is getting tougher by the moment. I
only plan to use this effects box with a guitar. My first priority
is sound quality. Preset programming is important so I don't have
to fiddle with a hundred knobs between songs. I'll summarize what
I've seen in ads in the table below. Comments, suggestions,
corrections would be very helpful.
The Boss ME-5 is supposed to come out in 1-2 months. It looks
mighty good from the numbers. It includes 16 bit digital reverb/delay,
chorus/flanger, distortion/overdrive, equalizer (3 band), compressor,
and an external effects loop. It also includes a noise suppressor.
It's in a floor box with 5 foot pedals. You can add an EV-5 pedal
to the chorus/flanger. It has 64 presets (patches) and has MIDI.
The digital delay goes up to 500 ms. If the box matches the numbers,
this thing sounds great!
I have no info on the Yamaha DSP-1. I know the Roland GP-8 has
two more effects but I can't remember what they are.
Roland Roland Digitech Boss Yamaha
GP-8 DEP-5 DSP-128 ME-5 SPX-90 II
S/N ??? 80dB ??? ??? ???
Presets Y ??? Y Y Y
Effects compressor compressor compressor
distortion distortion
EQ EQ EQ
chorus chorus chorus chorus chorus
delay delay delay delay delay
???
???
reverb reverb reverb reverb
flanger flanger flanger
pitch-
transpose
List $1050 $1095 $425 $875 $895
Cheapest $799 $699 $599
I've seen
-Peter
|
860.66 | Updated Chart | CCYLON::ANDERSON | | Thu May 19 1988 16:30 | 47 |
|
Roland Roland Digitech Boss Yamaha
GP-8 DEP-5 DSP-128 ME-5 SPX-90 II
Inputs Left/Right
Outputs
Dry Left/Right
Wet Left/Right
S/N ??? 80dB >85db ??? ???
THD 0.08%
Freq Resp
Dry 20-20k
Wet 20-12k
Resolution 16 bit PCM
Presets Y ??? Y Y Y
# of 128
MIDI Y Y Y
Effects compressor compressor compressor
distortion distortion
EQ EQ Filter EQ
chorus chorus chorus chorus chorus
delay delay delay delay delay
Range 0-1800ms
Multi-tap
??? Bounce
??? Stereo image
Stereo Pan
reverb reverb reverb reverb
reverse revb
flanger flanger flanger
pitch-
transpose
List $1050 $1095 $425 $875 $895
Cheapest $799 $699 $299.9 $599
I've seen
The DSP-1 Has all of the above effects including pitch shift has
RCA type plugs for a stereo and NO MIDI bit has a hand held IR
remote. As I said previously Korg has repackaged it with less
outputs and a MIDI interface for about $1200
Jim
|
860.67 | More updates... | RANCHO::HACK | Peter Hack, Workstations Consulting | Sat May 28 1988 00:43 | 48 |
| Roland Roland Digitech Boss Yamaha
GP-8 DEP-5 DSP-128 ME-5 SPX-90 II
Inputs Left/Right Left/Right
Outputs
Dry Left/Right Mono(tuner)
Wet Left/Right Left/Right Left/Right
S/N ??? 80dB >85db ??? ???
THD 0.33% 0.08%
Freq Resp
Dry 20-20k
Wet 40-12k 20-12k 30-10k
Resolution 16 bit PCM 16 bit PCM
# of Presets 128 99 128 64 90
MIDI Y Y Y
Effects filter filter
compressor compressor compressor
overdrive
distortion distortion
phaser
EQ EQ EQ
chorus chorus chorus chorus chorus
delay delay delay delay delay
Range 0-1000ms 0-1800ms 0-500ms 0-2000ms
Multi-tap
Bounce
Stereo image
Stereo Pan
reverb reverb reverb reverb
reverse revb
flanger flanger flanger
pitch-
transpose
List $1050 $1095 $425 $875 $895
Cheapest $799 $699 $299.9 $599
I've seen
The DSP-1 Has all of the above effects including pitch shift has
RCA type plugs for a stereo and NO MIDI bit has a hand held IR
remote. As I said previously Korg has repackaged it with less
outputs and a MIDI interface for about $1200
Jim
|
860.68 | Ibanez Metal Charger | RANCHO::HACK | Peter Hack, Workstations Consulting | Tue May 31 1988 19:10 | 6 |
| Re: .3
A friend recommended the Ibanez Metal Charger over the Proco Rat.
I haven't had a chance to play with one yet. Any experience/comments
with that box?
Peter (the) Hack
|
860.69 | Problems with GP8 | KBOMFG::MARTINEK | The guy from Germany | Mon Jun 13 1988 03:48 | 24 |
| Hi All!
First I'd like to introduce myself.
I'm a guitar player (sometimes also playin' keyboards :-)) here
in Germany. My home is nearby Munich. I'm a member of a band playin'
'Top 40 Hits' and the whole stuff of 'dance music'.
Now my problem:
Last week I purchased the GP8 with Midi Foot Controller and the other
other pedal(can't remember the type:-( ). Before I purchased it, I checked
it out. The sounds were great!!
The problem now is, the one I took home doesn't have this great sounds!!!!
Now, what's the matter with my GP8??
Any suggestions??
Is someone out there who's willing to share his 'great sounds'??
Please post the patches here or send me mail on KBOMFG::MARTINEK
Many thanks to all of you.
Best Regards
Wolfgang (the guy from Germany)
|
860.70 | Maybe you're hearing the naked truth... | JAWS::COTE | Hey Pachelbel, can I shoot that? | Mon Jun 13 1988 09:17 | 7 |
| Was it running through an effects rack at the store??
....sounds reminiscent of a recent Keyboard soundpage touting the
WX-7 wind controller. Seems that much of the sound was attributable
to SPX-90s...
Edd
|
860.71 | Only the 'GP8' | KBOMFG::MARTINEK | The guy from Germany | Tue Jun 14 1988 02:59 | 26 |
| >< Note 480.15 by JAWS::COTE "Hey Pachelbel, can I shoot that?" >
> -< Maybe you're hearing the naked truth... >-
>
> Was it running through an effects rack at the store??
>
Hi Edd!
No, there were no other effects!
Here is the 'set up':
guitar------->GP8------->Power Amplifier
For example, in the store I've played a sound called '12string acoustic' or
'Fender Strat'(f.y.i. I've played a 'Gibson Les Paul') and it sounds like
a '12string acoustic' or 'Fender Strat'.
I think its only a problem of the GP8 parameters.
What do you think? Any suggestions?
Regards
Wolfgang
|
860.72 | | JAWS::COTE | Hey Pachelbel, can I shoot that? | Tue Jun 14 1988 09:43 | 15 |
| Well that would leave 2 places to look...
I forgot if you said you were using the same amp as the demo
set-up, so that could be one place.
Also likely is the synth itself. The only way to verify this is
to compare all the parameters of a given patch at home to whatever
they use in the store, and adjust accordingly.
Less probable would be the room acoustics, but something to take
into consideration none the less...
Good luck!
Edd
|
860.1 | ME5 manual mode | ANT::JACQUES | | Fri Sep 23 1988 16:25 | 8 |
| I forgot to mention one thing on the ME5. It has a manual mode
that you can use. In order to enter the manual mode (you guessed
it) you need yet another defeat-type foot switch (again the Boss
FS5L would be the recommended switch). Once in the manual mode,
you can tweak any parameter, and switch each effect on and off
using the 5 foot switches
Mark
|
860.2 | More facts !!! | ANT::JACQUES | | Fri Sep 23 1988 22:26 | 80 |
| I went to Union Music after work and got more info and some lit
on both units.
Corrections to base note:
GP8 has "Dynamic Filter" rather than Envelope Follower, however
the 2 are pretty much the same.
ME5 accepts an expression pedal, however, it only controls the Flange
or chorus depth, period (not too versitile).
The footswitches recommended for the ME5 for switching groups or for
manual mode are FS5U, rather than FS5L (momentary, unlatched type, as
apposed to latch type)
Additions to base note:
Both units have midi in and out. The GP8 also has midi through.
Both units have an electronic tuner output. On the GP8 model, the
tuner output is on the FC100 foot controler unit. This is a nice
feature, and a great way for Roland to push their TU12 tuners.
The expression pedal connects to the FC100 foot controller unit.
Without the FC100, you apparently can't use the pedal. (In other
words, if you buy a GP8, plan on buying the FC100 along with it).
The expression pedal can be programmed to control almost any parameter
on the GP8 (ie, volume, eq, delay length, feedback, distortion,
wah, etc). By programming the pedal assignment differantly for differant
patches, it can control a differant parameter depending on which
patch you choose (this can be extremely useful).
The ME5 has a headphone jack for practicing without an amp.
Surprisingly, the GP8 does not appear to have a headphone jack.
The effects loop on the GP8 is placed between the EQ section and
the Digital delay section, so that the delay is the last thing in
the signal chain. The effect send also contains two control lines
for switching external effects on and off via a programming parameter.
These would connect into a footswitch jack on any effects unit.
The patch scheme on the GP8 is 8 banks, 8 sounds in each bank, and
two groups for a total of 128 patches.
*** One thing I found out tonight that seems like a major disadvantage
on both units is that they do not work well in an effects loop of
an amplifier when using the distortion channel of the amp. According
to 2 salesmen in Union Music, they tried doing this with both units
using a few differant amps, and got a great deal of noise with the
amp in the distortion channel, especially when using certain effects
like compression or dynamic filter. They could be wrong about this,
but I wouldn't plan on buying either unit without checking this
out first. I would hate to sacrifice the ability of useing one of
these units in my effects loop. I suspect that the units may work
ok with amps feating a buffered effects loop with level adjustments.
Both units still have a certain apeal to me. The more I look at
the GP8, the more I can understand the high price tag. This box
seems to offer about the most flexibilty available in effects
processors, while still being fairly easy to use. In the case of
the GP8, a person could buy one of these and not even use a guitar
amp, but go straight into a PA via the line level outputs. This
could help make the price a little more digestable knowing that
you don't necessariily have to have an amp besides. It would be
nice to show up at a gig with your guitar and
a GP8 in a 19" effects rack and simply plug into the PA.
Hope I'm not boring anyone with all this raving about these these
2 units. Now that I have entered the first 3 notes, I'll wait for
someone else to reply.
Mark Jacques
|
860.3 | Sounds good, but... | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Back in Black | Sat Sep 24 1988 01:03 | 7 |
| Definitely not boring, Mark. Thanks for the information. I'd briefly
looked at the ME5 in a store and it looked pretty interesting.
I'm afraid they are both way out of the price range I could justify.
Especially considering that neither do *everything* I might need.
Greg
|
860.4 | Another ME-5 review: thumbs up | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Sat Sep 24 1988 17:19 | 62 |
| I demo-ed the ME-5 last night.
I was VERY impressed. Mark is quite right in that with an ME-5 you
really don't need an amp or really anything besides the guitar and
the ME-5.
A key factor in this is that the ME-5 distortion/overdrive is both
quite good, and quite versatile. I heard lots of "classic" heavy
sounds in the presets that come with the unit. I did NOT hear a
"singing Boogie" of course, so I'm not about to sell my Boogie,
although with an ME-5, I doubt my Boogie would get all that much
use.
One thing that Mark didn't mention (or I didn't notice) was that
the ME-5 also has a noise gate, which is very important if you're
running lots of serial effects.
Also note, that for the same reasons you might not need an amp (except
for monitoring of course), this unit is also EXTREMELY useful for
recording as you wouldn't need to mic an amp. How many of us
4-tracksters have the control room facilities to really do a
good job mic'ing an amp? I don't!) With this device and a good
pair of monitors, you can really get exactly what you want out
of it.
Another factor folks ought to consider. The unit is stereo. I'm
a long term advocate of stereo efx (delay mainly) - I think it's the
biggest single improvement you can make in overall sound (going stereo
that is).
I demo-ed the unit in stereo using the two channels of a Roland JC-120
(which is the amp I use). I also A/B-d it against itself in mono,
and the difference was quite dramatic (when a stereo effect was in
use, it was hard to tell which effects were stereo, certainly the
chorus/flange were).
In fact, the salesman all came over and listened - one even said,
"it never sounded that good before".
Anyway, I was very impressed. It may seem like a lot of bucks, but I
consider it a bargain. You could easily pay that much in separate
boxes (yuck) and not end up with a nice integrated effects rigs
(not to mention it's other nicities like headphones, tuner output,
MIDI, etc.
In summary, if you:
o Got the bucks
o Like that "processed" guitar sound
o Hate boxes, patch cords, noise, etc
This is really a great product and to the best of my knowledge, there's
nothing like it in it's price range. The GP-8 is both beyond my limit,
doesn't add enough value to justify it's price when compared to the
ME-5, and the ME-5 is "one piece" that's easy to carry and
setup, whereas the GP-8 is generally more hassle. In fact, with the
headphone output, the ME-5 would function very well as a sorta "Rockman"
even if you can't quite wear it on your belt.
I may pick mine up today.
db
|
860.5 | The are both beauty's !! | ANT::JACQUES | | Sun Sep 25 1988 01:21 | 44 |
| In all fairness to GP8 owners, they are worth the money if you've
got that kind of money to spend. I suppose most any working musician
could justify the expense. The single biggest advantages of the
GP8 over the ME5 are:
1. The Dynamic filter - really a funky effect, especially with
an expression pedal. If anyone is into the Grateful Dead, I
would bet you could get a pretty good Jerry Garcia wah sound from
this. In fact, if I don't buy a GP8 (most likely I won't), I
will probably look for either a Boss dynamic filter with expression
pedal, or something comparable. This type of unit really is
everything a wah-wah pedal should be. You can use it automatically
in which case, it works similar to an envelope follower without
having to pump a pedal to get the wah effect. Or, for custom
accents kick in the pedal.
b. The ability to program the expression pedal to control any
parameter your little heart desires. Imagine being able to
use the same pedal as a wah-wah,master volume pedal, delay
length controller, flange/chorus sweep rate control, effect
mix controller for fading in certain effects, the possibilities
are almost endless.
Admittedly, the GP8 is a really nice package, too. Rack mount
is definately where it's at these days. This unit does not leave
you at the mercy of the generic midi controllers on the market.
They offer you an easy to use pedal board with plenty of presets
to save you from having to hit more than one switch on the fly.
Only one midi chord is needed to connect the FC100 the the GP8.
The guitar plugs right into the front of the GP8 so your not
climbing behind an effects rack.
Some people can't see spending a grand to 1500 on a guitar,
or amp, but then there are the people with the PRS, Ibanez JEM's,
Mesa Boogies, Marshalls, etc. etc. Like people have said in previous
notes, if it makes your job easier, makes your playing sound better,
inspires you, etc, only you can decide whether it's justifiable or not.
Mark Jacques
|
860.6 | I have a workaround | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Tue Sep 27 1988 18:37 | 17 |
| When I said "it didn't add enough value to justify its price" I had
thought it was clear that I was saying "for my needs and priorities".
I would highly value an expression pedal to control more than just
chorus or flange. Remember the trouble I went to in my rig to put
the effects on a volume pedal.
Actually, with a little creativity and a pan pedal, I think you
bring in the ME-5 gradually in and out as an effect. I've already
designed a signal path that would let you do that.
If Boss would have just made the expression pedal control the
effects mix level, they'd probably sell more expression pedals.
At least ONE more ;-)
db
|
860.7 | GP8 !! CAN'T BEAT IT !! | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Wed Sep 28 1988 07:25 | 25 |
|
I'm a GP8 owner and love it. I went all out and got a 1300 dollar
loan and bought the whole nine yards. Instead of getting the boss EV5
expresion pedal I got the MORELY equivilent. It's just a volume pedal
with the right electronics. I found you can use headphones with this
unit. You plug into either of the lineout's. Now the sound will only
come out of one side unless you have a monoral headphone set. I over
came that problem by buying two male plugs and a stereo female. To
comment on the question of GP8 through effects loop. It does not work
good at all. In fact it is so bad I could say simply it does not work.
I started out using the GP8 through a Peavey M-2600 stereo power
amp and Peavey 4x12 flight cab split to be stereo. This eventually
became a hassell becuase some effects are louder than others so there
is alot of volume ajusting. It was not as flexible as I thought it
would be. In fact I think it was more of a problem. I then went back
to my old faithfull Peavey Road Master. This turned out to be for me a
killer combonation. The Road Master had two channels and two seperate
EQ's. Both channels I used cleaned with one louder than the other.
Thats one thing I liked about Peavey is that you can dial in the
distortion instead of having it or not. On the Road Master the lead
channel had a nob called pump which aloud you to dial in the distortion
on others I've seen it's called saturation. I talk more tonight i'm
having system problems.
Tim Hastings SHR1 operator
|
860.8 | GP8 YOU CAN'T BEAT IT !!! | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Thu Sep 29 1988 01:00 | 5 |
| I got a reply by mail asking if a play in a band called TRAZOM.
Answer: Yes. I tried send mail back but you disk quota was exceeded.
F.Y.I. Tim Hastings
|
860.9 | GP8 CAN'T BEAT IT | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Thu Sep 29 1988 08:10 | 8 |
| More on my setup with the GP8.
My next venture will be a Peavey Stereo Chorus Head with two 4x12.
This should prove to be a killer because of the versatility of the
head unit. Well thats it for my anventures with the Roland GP8. I will
write again to tell about my new system.
GP8 lover Tim Hastings
|
860.10 | GP8 CAN'T BEAT IT !! | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Fri Sep 30 1988 00:43 | 5 |
| Buckley, are you the one who did sound for us ?
I still can't send you mail. Disk Quota..
Tim
|
860.11 | Another GP8 lover!! | KBOMFG::MARTINEK | The guy from Germany | Fri Sep 30 1988 03:37 | 18 |
| I'm a 'GP8 lover' too!!!!!! :-)
For me, this kind of stuff sounds great.
My setup is as follows:
+----------------+
+------------>| |
| left | Soundcraft |
Dean Markley(Preamp)----->GP8---+ | 24/4/2 |
| right | |
+------------>| |
+----------------+
Best regards
Wolfgang
|
860.12 | !! GP8 CAN'T BEAT IT !! | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Wed Oct 05 1988 05:00 | 5 |
| Refrence to 860.11 I havn't heard of soundcraft. Could you fill me in?
I was in Germany this time last year... It's great over there !
Tim
|
860.13 | SOUNDCRAFT --> mixing console | KBOMFG::MARTINEK | The guy from Germany | Thu Oct 06 1988 03:37 | 22 |
| >< Note 860.12 by MPGS::HASTINGS > <
> -< !! GP8 CAN'T BEAT IT !! >- <
> <
> Refrence to 860.11 I havn't heard of soundcraft. Could you fill me in? <
> <
> I was in Germany this time last year... It's great over there ! <
> <
> Tim <
Hi Tim!
The 'soundcraft is a 24 channel mixing console with 4 subgroups. It's price
range here in germany is very high. (I think about 15.000 .- DM ) The owner
is one of the band members I'm playing in. The mixing console of it's own sounds
very, very great. So the GP8 hasn't to do a hard work :-) !!
Wolfgang
P.S. What's about the bavarian beer :-) :-) ???? My home is in bavaria!!
|
860.14 | think about this | ANT::JACQUES | | Fri Oct 07 1988 10:44 | 9 |
| re. .9 Why not just buy a stereo power amp in stead of getting
into a Peavey stereo chorus head. The GP8 has all the preamp
cabability you need, why run the signal into another preamp
stage for nothing. Get a power amp and go straight to the
speaker cabs. This way, you could rack the GP8 and power amp
together as well.
Mark Jacques
|
860.15 | How much $$ is a good deal | AQUA::OCONNOR | The law dont want no gear-gammer | Mon Oct 10 1988 14:37 | 9 |
| Hi,
I've been reading the Gp-8 notes for quite a while. Recently, I
have seen Gp-8 rigs in various local music add books and I am getting
tempted. What I am really interested in is how much people paid
for the whole gp8/fc100/ev5 setup. If you want send me mail.
ADVAthanksNCE
Joe
|
860.16 | GP8 CAN'T BEAT IT | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Tue Oct 11 1988 04:37 | 24 |
| I've been to route of a stereo power amp. I peviously had a Peavey
M-2600 steroe power amp with 130 watt's per at 4 ohms. I like to have
two clean channels, one louder than the other, in order to have a
rythem and lead volume. This way I could play a solo clean or dirty
with the boost in volume. On most amplifiers the second channel is
just a dirty channel.
With the GP-8 power amp combonation it was not easy, to me anyways, to
produce this desire. There was much and constant change in the effects
volume level becuase different effect combonations would be louder or
softer depending on the effects used. Example. The Overdrive is louder
than the distortion.
My original plan was to use a power amp and for awhile I thought it
was the greatest thing. Maybe the power amp was not powerful enough I
don't know. My original setup was a Peavey Road Master. This had two
seperate channels, lead and rythem, but the lead did not have to be
distortion, you could dial in. This worked super becuase you could
crank it up with little distortion. Of course you next to always have
a little distortion running at 160 watts. Unfortunatley this head got
stolen. So now I'm looking into this Stereo chourus head which has the
same idea as the Road Master plus it's stereo adn 130 watt's per.
Well that's why i'm going with a steroe head. Anymore questions ?
Tim
|
860.17 | GP-8 CAN'T BEAT IT | MPGS::HASTINGS | | Tue Oct 11 1988 05:30 | 12 |
| > Note 860.13
Are you using this live or studio? sounds studio to me.
I was staying in Zirndorf with my girlfriend from the states, she
was pregnet with our kid. I tried all the Zirndorf and liked them all
except for the Vicen, I think that's how you spell it. I'm refering to
the one were the yeast is still fermenting. The other I tried was
Pilsoner and liked that as well.
Thanks for the input !
Tim
|
860.18 | A stage setup | KBOMFG::MARTINEK | The guy from Germany | Wed Oct 12 1988 04:20 | 21 |
| < Note 860.17 by MPGS::HASTINGS >
>>>> Are you using this live or studio? sounds studio to me. <<<<
Hi Tim!
I'm using this setup on stage. If you have any questions, please feel
free to send me mail.
Best Regards
Wolfgang
P.S. The beer with the yeast is called 'Weizen'. You're right, it's
a special trend of taste.
|
860.19 | New GP8 owner | PENPAL::DUBE | Dan Dube 264-0506 | Thu Jan 12 1989 13:02 | 14 |
| I just bought a GP8 with the whole works today - I can't wait to get
home and try it out. I was really blown away by the whole package.
Someone asked about prices - this is the deal I got (I'm brutal on
salespeople):
GP8, FC100 foot controller, EV5 expression controller, and 3-high
rackmount case: $1100 at E.U. Wurlitzer in Boston. (after much
negotiation)
I'm hoping that my new gig will be successful enough to pay this off
quickly.
-Dan
|
860.20 | | PNO::HEISER | I want my SMP! | Wed Feb 01 1989 12:59 | 11 |
| A friend of mine (non-DEC) just purchased a GP8 and we burned it
in over the weekend.
Before I go out and buy one, I have a question that is more audio
related than anything else (bear with me, I'm new to this stuff).
In the audio world, the trend is to go with separates (components)
for a cleaner sound. Why would it be different in this case with
the guitar and GP8? Sure it is easier to work with but can you
get a cleaner, better sound with separate effects units?
Mike
|
860.21 | | MARKER::BUCKLEY | Mr. Big! | Wed Feb 01 1989 13:16 | 19 |
|
>Sure it is easier to work with but can you
>get a cleaner, better sound with separate effects units?
I sense this may be one of those "opinion" issues.
Personally, I think you can not only get a `cleaner' sound with
separate effects (meaning, you can get way better bandwidth/freq
response), but also you have more flexibility over changing parameters
and creating new sounds with separate units. It does have it cons
though, like the more separate units you have, the greater chance of
failure due to bad cords, and its hard to locate a bad cords once it
does go wrong. Also, sometimes you get ground loops with all those
units.
Ask yourself how much `control' you need over your sound, and then ask
yourself if you are willing to put up with the possible headaches of
equip failure (of course if a delay craps out, you can just take it out
of line).
|
860.22 | This is a very one-sided question | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Wed Feb 01 1989 15:40 | 56 |
| re: .20-.21
I also am a new owner of a GP-8.
To me, the comparison with audio equipment is like apples and
oranges. The design criteria are drastically different. There
are more things different than things in common.
I agree with Buck. The principle advantage of component systems
is really flexibility. There's no reason why the audio world
couldn't make a combined system that's just as good as seperate
components. The problem is that it would be:
1) Extremely expensive and you'd have to buy it all at once
2) It would be very large physically
3) If a new technology arrives you can't "replace" that component.
To me, the issues are totally different in the context of live signal
processing.
1) It has to be portable
2) It has to be easy to setup and breakdown
3) The components of the system have to be well integrated.
That last bullet item is the key one.
If you are playing live, you want to be able to go from a sound with
chorus, distortion, reverb and short delay to a sound with flanging,
overdrive, no reverb and long delay without having to tweak knobs
on your flanger, chorus, overdrive, distortion, reverb and delay.
In fact, you really don't even want to have to take your hands
off the guitar.
You can assemble a component system that will do that (via MIDI).
It will cost your far more than I imagine you would ever want to
spend; it will be a constant source of noise and problems because
of all the chords and connections, and you probably will need two
people to carry it, and 2 hours to set it up and break it down.
The Roland GP-8 has extremely fine audio qualities. And probably
costs about the same as TWO high quality dedicated boxes even
though it is the functional equivalent of EIGHT boxes.
To me, there's no question that if you want more than 2 or 3 effects
in your setup, you are ABSOLUTELY better off with something like
the GP-8.
Having racks of dedicated units is only practical for most successful,
affluent pros.
db
|
860.23 | | PNO::HEISER | I want my SMP! | Wed Feb 01 1989 16:08 | 10 |
| re: .21,.22
Oh! :-)
Thanks for the input! Both replies make great sense to me and I
guess I was comparing 2 different animals.
I agree that the GP8 is a great unit and is already on my wish list!
Mike
|
860.24 | Gots ta have 1. | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | How do I spell relief ? GP-8 !!! | Thu Feb 09 1989 06:54 | 9 |
| Thanx to the replies in this note I am anxiously awaiting my tax
refund check so I can run out and grab my GP-8, foot controller,
and expression pedal !!! I tried one out a week ago and LOVED it.
I can get the whole set-up for $1050, which sounds more than
reasonable to me.
Jerry
|
860.73 | A biased reply if you ever heard one !!! | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Roland ROOOOOLZ !!! | Mon Mar 27 1989 02:57 | 11 |
| I'm buying a GP-8 and the works Tuesday, and I can relate to a few
back where the unit didn't sound as well at home. In the store
they had it running through a Midi-Verb and a limiter. When I cut
these off, the sound changed drastically. The thing I like most
about the GP-8 is the programability. Some of the best tones I
heard from it were NOT presets. Any of you GP-8 owners care to
share some of your favorite non-presets with the *new* owner ?
Scary
|
860.25 | | PNO::HEISER | Don't Bb, B# and you'll look # | Wed Apr 19 1989 19:58 | 6 |
| Does the GP8 have a repeat & hold pattern in the digital delay?
If not what is the least expensive unit that does. What I have
in mind is the "Playmate" function on the Roland SDE3000 that holds
an 8 second pattern and will put it into a loop.
Mike
|
860.26 | Nope ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Roland ROOOOOLZ !!! | Thu Apr 20 1989 00:13 | 5 |
| Nope, no repeat/hold function. But if you play around with it some
you could probably coax about 4-5 seconds of repeats out of it.
Scary
|
860.27 | Digitech is pretty inexpensive | CSC32::G_HOUSE | six feet from the rest of your life | Thu Apr 20 1989 18:56 | 8 |
| ...cheapest unit that will?
I'd check out the Digitech delays. I have an RDS3600 which will
do 8 second infinite repeats which only cost about $400 4 years
ago. I think that their stomp box DDLs have a repeat/hold function
on them.
Greg
|
860.28 | egad, wheres my tone? | MARKER::BUCKLEY | I wish it was summertime all year! | Fri Apr 21 1989 10:48 | 7 |
|
8 second delay??? Aack, does it have a 2-4K bandwidth or what??
Thats what I hate about Digitech delays is the bandwidth
response...nil!
Buck
|
860.29 | My DOD Analog Delay Has 0K Bandwidth | AQUA::ROST | DWI,favorite pastime of the average guy | Fri Apr 21 1989 11:16 | 5 |
|
Their current model with the 7.6 second delay claims 15K bandwidth.
Watch out, the RDS3.6, with 3.6 second delay is only 8K bandwidth!!!
|
860.30 | Yes, limited bandwidth. | CSC32::G_HOUSE | six feet from the rest of your life | Fri Apr 21 1989 15:59 | 16 |
| Yeah, it's switchable bandwidth. Three settings that allow you
to split the memory in it allowing longer delays.
If I remember right it's 1.6 sec at 16k, 3.4 at 8k, and 7.6 at 4k.
According to the delay time display, it actually goes to over 8 secs
though, but that might be in error.
Figure that the thing is almost 5 years old now. When it came out,
those specs were reasonably good, especially considering that it only
cost ME about $250 (new). Since I don't often use the long delays like
that, it still fits my needs reasonably well. The bandwidth limitation
only seems to affect the wet signal anyway and I don't expect a lot of
response in an echo signal, since I'll almost always be playing
something in front of it which I'd rather have more emphasis on.
Greg
|
860.74 | Can I get there from here ? | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | IF VOLUME .LT. 9 GOTO 10 | Sat Apr 29 1989 07:40 | 11 |
| I have a question for you seasoned GP-8 owners. I have the GP-8,
FC-100, and EV-5. I also have an Alexis Midiverb II. I would like
to use the GP-8 to trigger patches in the Midiverb. Say if I was
in A-4-3 and I wanted to have patch 30 on the Midiverb, what do
I have to do to the GP-8 to program that ? And if I go to A-4-8
and want patch 18 on the Midiverb, can I program that as well ?
I read the "midi" section on the GP-8 manual, and the "midi" section
on the patch card for the Midiverb and I'm rather "midi"-confused ....
Scary ...
|
860.75 | You can do that... | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Mon May 01 1989 09:31 | 42 |
|
Well , I don't have a GP-8, but I do have a ton of MIDI gear,
so this will probably help. (The GP-8 may have some capabilities
I'm not aware of, but the whole process is generally the same
across all MIDI gear. This will at least get you started.)
I assume the FC-100 is a foot controlled MIDI patch change
generator. (Seems like a reasonable guess. I don't imagine the
letters FC stand for fruit cocktail...)
If you have a MIDI THRU port on the back of the GP-8, connect a
MIDI cable from the GP-8 THRU port to the MVII IN port.
Set them both to receive on the same MIDI channel.
The MVII allows you to save any of its' 100 programs to any of 32
patch memory slots. (See the details of how to do this in your MVII
programming card.)
When you select a patch (configuration) by stepping on the FC-100,
you are generating a "select patch (nn)" message where (nn) is a
number from 00-127. The MVII wil recognize the first 32 of these,
so you may need to move some of the patches around inside the
GP-8.
Say you want to use the configuration stored in patch 1 of the
GP-8 and want to have a light chorus with it. Store PROGRAM 60
on the MVII into PATCH 1. Now, when you step on the FC-100 you
send a message to the GP-8 saying "use patch 1". The GP-8
changes patches, and sends the same message out the THRU port and
on to the MVII which, since it is set to the same MIDI channel,
reacts by selecting ITS' OWN patch 1, which contains the light
chorus program.
The GP-8 may allow you more flexible routing and re-mapping of
patch change messages. I also may not have used the same terms
("patch", "program") that Roland uses; that might be a source of
confusion (There is no rhyme or reason to the way Roland abuses
the English languge.), but this is a basic MIDI set-up that should
get you going...
Edd
|
860.76 | Close but not quite | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Mon May 01 1989 10:03 | 36 |
| Edd,
> I assume the FC-100 is a foot controlled MIDI patch change
> generator. (Seems like a reasonable guess. I don't imagine the
> letters FC stand for fruit cocktail...)
Well, it is a reasonable guess, but it's not quite true.
The FC-100 sorta does act as a MIDI patch change generator and sorta
doesn't.
For one thing, its output cord is NOT a MIDI cable and you don't plug
it into MIDI IN. The reason it's not is because it does a lot more
than generate MIDI commands. It does a few other things so as not to
require you to run much more than one cable from your pedal board to
your rack.
The cord also:
o Carries power to the FC - nice not to have to worry about
running power to your pedal board.
o Carries the input signal to the FC for use on a "tuner output".
You can plug a tuner right into the FC-100. Actually, using
a tuner is just one application of a more general concept
called the control function. You can also use it to do signal
routing (I use it as an A/B switch between my Boogie and my
JC-120).
> If you have a MIDI THRU port on the back of the GP-8, connect a
> MIDI cable from the GP-8 THRU port to the MVII IN port.
You actually run it from the MIDI OUT of the GP-8 to the MIDI IN
of the MV II.
db
|
860.77 | Thanks... | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Mon May 01 1989 10:24 | 6 |
| Thanks Dave, I figured I'd get nailed on a couple details like that,
but I'm sure you'll agree my basic premise was correct....
Do I want a GP-8?
Edd
|
860.78 | | PNO::HEISER | Don't Bb, B# and you'll look # | Mon May 01 1989 13:46 | 6 |
| Anyone own the Digitech GSP-5? How does it compare to the GP8 in
functionality and $$$?
Sorry if this was covered already.
Mike
|
860.79 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Mon May 01 1989 14:42 | 23 |
| > Do I want a GP-8?
I dunno.
I've had it for enough time to use it now and sorta have some
conclusions about it.
If all you are looking for is to combine some of your effects
into one convenient box, I might actually be more inclined to
save some bucks and get an ME-5. It's far more convenient (one
package (pedalboard, instead of pedalboard and rack-mount), a
lot less expensive and does all the basic things the GP-8 does
including one very basic thing that the GP-8 does NOT do: reverb.
I didn't consider the lack of reverb to be significant because
every amp I own has builtin reverb that's more than enough for
gigs, and I have digital reverbs that I use for recording.
The GP-8 is probably better if you have a semi-complex rig
that includes other efx processors. The GP-8 does some wonderful
signal routine tricks.
db
|
860.80 | | AQUA::ROST | The closer I am to fine | Tue May 02 1989 09:22 | 19 |
|
Re: .23
The GSP-5 is in the $500 range, that's about half of a GP-8. It
includes a "foot controller" at that price, but beware, this just lets
you bypass the effects and kick your preset number up or down (i.e. for
live use, you would need to put your presets in consecutive order for
recall).
Internally, you get up to five effects simultaneously, these are
mostly delay type things (flange, chorus, echo, reverb) some EQ
functions and distortion. Unlike the GP-8, which seems to be
hot-rodded Boss stomp box circuits controlled by a microprocessor,
the GSP-5 is a true digital signal processor. It's really just a
DSP-128 modified to provide more simultaneous effects at the price
of some bandwidth (only 15K instead of 20K).
Price wise it is competing more with the ME-5.
|
860.31 | GTR->GP-8->KItty Hawk | USRCV1::REAUME | undergoing behavior analysis | Thu May 04 1989 15:40 | 24 |
| Another vote for the GP-8. I've had my set-up about a year and
have had nothing but good things to say. I use the ext-1 and ext-2
programmable outputs to control channel switching on my amp. Of
course this almost completely eliminates using the distortion and
I use overdrive on maybe two patches. The Kitty Hawk M1 amp has
a two-function overdrive, so along with the clean channel you
have an overdrive with a lower-mid boost (boogie-type), an overdrive
with an upper-mid boost (marshall) and combination mode with both
active simultaneously (mega-overdrive). I use both ext outs to do
this since even with the footswitch it's not easy to activate both
switches at the same time.
I had a problem with the fact that the sleeve of the ext outputs
were common to the sleeve of the line-out to the input of my amp.
I thought the ext outs would be totally isolated. On some amps
(like my Marshall) this doesn't cause a problem. But some amps
(like my Kitty Hawk M1) don't like having the sleeve of the input
jack tied to the sleeve of the footswitch jack. It must have been
doing something to the DC level of the preamp. No damage to the
amp but it killed the signal. I solved the dilemma by building a
relay-isolation circuit out of parts from Radio Shack. The "prototype"
box eliminates the need for the footswitch and lets the GP-8 take
control of the amps switching.
NOW this rig cooks!
|
860.32 | Midi ! Midi not ! | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | IF VOLUME .LT. 9 GOTO 10 | Fri May 05 1989 06:22 | 17 |
| I'm using the GP-8 along with a Midiverb II and a DOD stereo Aural Exciter,
going from there into a 100W Marshall to a 4x12 cab, and a 60W Bogen power
amp/eq into a 4x12 cab. I never really thought about how much the Marshall
changes the color of the sound until I recently started using the Bogen.
The Bogen really alows the subtle effects to come through. Even though the
Marshall is a MOSFET solid state, it still is "dirty" to a degree on the
clean channel. I was very pleased with the GP-8 before the Bogen, but now
I really love it.
But I'm still having trouble with the midi funtions ... do I need to have
the FC-100 plugged in to make the switches on the Midiverb or does it
matter ? I read up on all the midi-literature that came with both units
and the impression I get is that I should go from midi OUT on the GP-8 to
midi IN on the Midiverb, right ? Wrong ? Go back to stomp boxes ?
??? Scary ???
|
860.33 | Nay... | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Fri May 05 1989 09:28 | 7 |
| You won't need the FC-100 to change patches on the MVII. By connecting
to the MIDI OUT of the GP-8, and patch changes generated BY that
unit are transmitted to the MIDI IN port of the MVII.
Are you having trouble getting that to happen?
Edd
|
860.34 | | ASAHI::COOPER | Shattered Dreamz | Fri May 05 1989 11:52 | 4 |
| Sheesh Jerry, bring your rack over and we'll get it to happen.
I seem to have a knack for this networking stuff.
;^)
|
860.35 | OUT--->IN Makes sense to me ! | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | IF VOLUME .LT. 9 GOTO 10 | Sat May 06 1989 09:18 | 9 |
| The GP-8 manual *leads me to believe* that I need to be connecting
the midi-through to the midi-in on the Multiverb. It didn't make
sense to me, but I did it anyway. Needless to say, the midiverb
said "I can't hear you !!". I'll go midi-out --->midi-in on the
'verb when I get home. We'll see, and hopefully hear too !
Scary
|
860.36 | The ol' IN-OUT trick... | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Sat May 06 1989 10:23 | 14 |
| The thing you must determine is where the patch change command
originates from. You must connect to the MIDI OUT port on the
device that originates the command. According to Dave Blickstein,
who I have no reason to doubt (I'm sure he knows MIDI as well as
I do), the GP-8 is the source of the command.
I've had some problems with both of my MVIIs when trying to get
them to respond to patch changes, but I've yet to determine if
it was a hardware, software or cockpit error.
The GP-8 *may* have a software switch you have to turn on before
it will transmit. My DX does.
Edd
|
860.37 | By jove ..... izzzat it ? | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | IF VOLUME .LT. 9 GOTO 10 | Sat May 06 1989 11:28 | 8 |
| Well, I certainly have recieved a wealth of information on this,
so hopefully with any luck at all (other than bad ...), Mr. Midiverb
will be talking with Mr. GP-8 in about an hour ! Thanks to all
who gave advice ...
Scary
|
860.38 | | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Sat May 06 1989 21:34 | 3 |
| Well? Are they friends?
Edd
|
860.39 | Shake midi's and come out talking ! | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | IF VOLUME .LT. 9 GOTO 10 | Mon May 08 1989 00:32 | 14 |
| $ SET SCARY=DUMB_SH*T <return>
I got home and played around with it, no good. So finally, I just
set the GP-8 on a patch, set the Midiverb on a patch, pressed either
"Program" and "Store", or "Patch" and "Store" together, and, eureka,
that's it ! Now they're talking and I've got a blue zillion reverbs.
Just prior to that I did a "Bulk Dump ALL" deal with the GP-8, don't
know if that coaxed them into conversation or not. Whatever I did,
or didn't do worked - I won't ask any questions, until I get another
midi device that is ....... 8^) x 500000k ....
midi-Scary
|
860.40 | | CHBGUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Windsock management | Mon May 08 1989 09:37 | 8 |
| When I tried the Gp-8 in a store it seemed like another multi-effects
unit , quiet but not particularly astounding. Last night I saw John
Hall (of Orleans) using one and he got a fabulous sound...of course
he also had some fantastic sound re-enforcement, but since I was
right up front I got more of his amp and less of the PA...and it
still sounded good to me....
dbii
|
860.81 | | CHBGUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | The sea refuses no river... | Thu May 11 1989 09:45 | 10 |
| I got a chance to hear a GP-8 used by John Hall (formerly of Orleans)
Sunday night. I was impressed with the sound, much more than I was in
the music stores where I've heard them....of course John had some sound
re-enforcement but since I stood right in front of him, I couldn't hear
the mains that well and got to hear his amp (what appeared to be an old
white tolex covered boogie?) very clearly and directly. He 'drove'
it with an old (and I mean old/beatup) strat that looked to be quite
stock..
dbii
|
860.82 | Nuke the presets ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | IF VOLUME .LT. 9 GOTO 10 | Fri May 12 1989 00:28 | 11 |
| The secret to having success with a GP-8 is writing your own patches.
The factory presets, for the most part, merely demonstrate what
the various effects can do. Only a few of them would really be
practical for a live situation. Presently I use the "A" bank for
all the patches I write and leave the "B" bank alone, since they
contain the same presets anyway, just arranged differently. You
would really have to be playing some diverse styles of music to
burn up 128 patches !
Scary ...
|
860.41 | moderator can move if necessary | PNO::HEISER | B#, not Bb, you'll B(natural) | Thu May 18 1989 18:18 | 15 |
| I need to verify the competiveness of some prices offered by the
locals. How do these 'deals' sound?
Boss ME5 - $644 (reg. $825)
Fender Strat - $210
Kramer Nightswan, thin neck, Floyd Rose, Seymour Duncan JB & Full
Shred pickups, 24 frets, ebony fretboard, 24 3/4 scale - $188
Les Paul - $350
Ibanez EX350 - $349
Guild D-25 - $550
Martin D-28 - $649
Thanks,
Mike
|
860.42 | A few suggestions | CSC32::G_HOUSE | My dog ate it... | Fri May 19 1989 19:27 | 17 |
| re: .41
Boss ME5 - I can get one for $618 from the store I always deal with
(which gives me really good deals), so it sounds like you're
in a pretty close range.
Fender Strat - Sounds like a pretty good price, even for a Squire if
it's new or in real good shape
Kramer Nightswan - $188???? Surely you typed that price wrong? If not,
it's totally destroyed, right?
Les Paul - Sounds reasonable, if it's in halfway decent shape.
I don't know on the others...
Greg
|
860.43 | thanks for the info | PNO::HEISER | B#, not Bb, you'll B(natural) | Fri May 19 1989 19:37 | 5 |
| Greg, all the prices were taken from newspaper ads for new equipment.
When you have it in writing, you pretty much got them where you
want them.
Mike
|
860.44 | GO GET IT!!! | CSC32::G_HOUSE | My dog ate it... | Fri May 19 1989 22:27 | 4 |
| If you can get that Kramer for $188 you'd better not be reading notes
before you do it! That HAS to be wrong!
Greg
|
860.45 | | ASAHI::COOPER | Shattered Dreamz | Mon May 22 1989 10:18 | 8 |
| Yeah, and if you do get it for $188, then I'll give your $200 for
it and you'll make $12 cash profit !!
;^)
Don't those babies go for like $1K+ ?
jc
|
860.46 | Our Price | NEEPS::IRVINE | Ask & Ye Shall Learn! | Mon May 22 1989 10:29 | 4 |
| In the Uk we pay something like �780. So if you translate that it
would be around the $1320.
Bonzo
|
860.47 | missed it by that much! | PNO::HEISER | B#, not Bb, you'll B(natural) | Mon May 22 1989 15:31 | 9 |
| I went and checked the ad again since you guys got all excited.
It said $188 and up. You know what that means...
Major bummer: guitar shop near my house was giving away a $500 Fender
Strat as part of their anniversary sale. I showed up 5 minutes
before the drawing to enter my name. The guy that came in right
after me (last one in the drawing too) won the guitar!
Mike
|
860.48 | Any opinions on the Gs6 | PNO::HEISER | Walking in 2 Worlds... | Tue May 30 1989 18:21 | 3 |
| Anyone ever demo the Roland GS6 Digital Guitar Sound system?
Mike
|
860.49 | a little GS6 vs GP-8 | VNABRW::EXEL | | Fri Jul 21 1989 08:27 | 28 |
|
RE: .48
Hi Mike!
A friend of mine bought a GS6 and I had a quick look at it so I
can tell you just very little about it. As I am a GP-8 user I
saw some differences between these two devices. As a big advantage
the GS6 has a swichable noise gate. Changing params of effects seems
to be a hard work on the GS6 compared to the GP-8 - for me it's
not userfriendly.
One thing I was really interested in: the GS6 should be able to
create sounds like a Marshall. I had not enaugh time to check that
by patching; the preset sounds (overdrive, distortion) are simply
terrible. Preset sounds in the GP-8 are not all you can dream of
either, but compared to the GS6 it's a lot better.
So thats not much what I can tell you, but if you have some more
questions let me know and I will find it out for you.
One more question about new equipment:
Does anybody know something about the KORG A3 (compared to the
GP-8)?
thanks
Guenter
|
860.50 | No More Hum | AQUA::ROST | It's the beat, the beat, the beat | Fri Jul 21 1989 08:43 | 15 |
|
One cool feature about the GS-6 (whether it really works is a good
question) is that they have included a hum filter.
The GS-6 digitizes the guitar signal as soon as it enters the box,
and once in the digitial domain, things like ultra-narrow notch
filters centered at the major harmonics of 60 Hz (or 50 Hz, it's
tunable) are possible that would be ridiculously expensive to do
in the analog domain.
The hum filter in combination with the noise gate supposedly allow
almost totally noiseless operation even with single coil pickups that
are not properly shielded (like most Strats).
Brian
|
860.51 | But I wouldn't consider it, 'cause I think it's OVERPRICED! | CSC32::G_HOUSE | No silver bullets please! | Fri Jul 21 1989 14:49 | 10 |
| I don't know much about the GS-6, but I've played with a Boss Guitar
Driver and was able to get some really good distortion sounds out of
it. I've been told that the GS-6 has the same circuitry in it, just
that it's programmable where the BGD is not and has other effects.
(this could be bogus)
The GS-6 also has reverb doesn't it? I thought that was a big
deficiency in the GP-8.
Greg
|
860.52 | kickstart dead topic | FREEBE::REAUME | I know trouble cuz I am | Wed Nov 14 1990 15:25 | 19 |
|
I know I'm gonna catch it for this, but...
Yes, I use my KH/GSP-21/SP-1000 MIDIrack exclusivly on gigs. No
problem with sound quality/versatility at all. So why did I jump
on American Musical Supply's Boss ME-5 $399 special?
I practice in a rented rehearsal hall where my band can make
all sorts of noise and not be bothered. I'm not gonna leave my >$2000
baby there. And after carrying if a few times, I decided this is
not fun either. So I bagged the ME-5 as a practice effects unit
to drive a spare combo for rehearsal. I'm even looking into something
different to plug it into at rehearsal as well. The price on the
ME-5 was $150 lower than all the other trade mags I've received.
Granted it's not the most up-to-date processor on the market,
(my GSP-21 is! 8*>) but it is very good sounding, very portable,
and built like a Boss unit.
-BooM-
|
860.53 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Wed Nov 14 1990 23:13 | 7 |
| I do the same thing - kinda. For gigs, I use the GP-8 (not in a rack
...) but for practice I use a small Peavey amp and a Chandler Tube
Driver (no rack either ...). It's good enough for practice - also
makes me tend to ease off on effects overkill on the GP-8. I get used
to none, and in turn, tend to use less live. Sounds a LOT better !
Scary
|
860.54 | I've often thought about getting an ME | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Unix:Familiarity breeds contempt | Fri Nov 16 1990 16:32 | 19 |
| Hey, the ME-5 is really a great package.
It's certainly a lot more convenient than the GP-8. There are times
I wish I had gotten an ME instead of a GP-8 (no trade offers PLEASE
;-)).
With the GP you gotta run lines between the foot controller and the
rack, you gotta have a rack, it doesn't have reverb whereas the ME
does.
The ME, you plug your guitar in, the AC in, the amp out, and your
set.
I mainly use the GP-8 for sorta "processed" sounding guitar for
recording. I've never brought it to a gig. Too much extra to carry.
I also play keys so I don't want to spend forever setting up and
tearing down a complicated keyboard rig AND a complicated guitar rig.
db
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860.83 | Line or Instrument levels ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Tue Nov 27 1990 15:48 | 8 |
| Got a question for you guys ...
If I wanna stick something in the effects loop on the GP-8, should I be
using the line level ins/outs on the effect or instrument ins/outs ?
I'm toying with the idea of putting my Tube Driver there ....
Scary
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860.84 | no way... | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Tue Nov 27 1990 15:58 | 10 |
| Tube Driver in the FX loop ?
<insert bruins game at the garden>
Eeeeeeeeeeeeeettttt...
No score. Don't do it. Put the GP8 in the FX loop of your Chadler,
put not the other way, dude.
jc
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860.85 | | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Tue Nov 27 1990 15:59 | 1 |
| And run it at line level if possible
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860.86 | But then, I'm gonna use a Strat, why bother ? | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Tue Nov 27 1990 22:34 | 8 |
| Nope - the Chandler doesn't have an FX loop ... and the GP-8 is a
preamp *only*. The Chandler can be run as a preamp or as an effect
before a preamp.
The reason for doing things this way is so I can use the GP-8's
compression before the Chandler, not after ....
Scary (wonderin')
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860.87 | | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Tue Nov 27 1990 23:12 | 4 |
| Just a thought. Doesn't seem like a distortion box type thingie would
work to well in a loop is all...
jc
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860.88 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Tue Nov 27 1990 23:44 | 4 |
| I figure if the effects are already in a loop (internally), wtf, I'll
give it a spin, got nothing to lose ...
Scary (who probably try both ways in the morning ...)
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860.89 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Can't wait til my Strat gets old! | Wed Nov 28 1990 13:01 | 7 |
|
Exactly, Jerry. Give it a spin. The efx loop implies line
level unless both types are available, but if it sounds good and
the doc says it won't blow up, go for it. Also, if any of the
other effects in the loop have in/out level adjustments, you can
compensate for what is down stream. Also, there is a pretty good
discussion in the GP "Amps" issue this month about efx loops, etc.
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860.55 | | PUBS::DUBE | Dan Dube 264-0506 | Wed Dec 26 1990 13:49 | 14 |
| I've been using a GP-8 live on gigs for almost two years now, and I still love
it. Over the years, I've customized some of the stock sounds to suit my own
taste (I tend to like a "processed sound", though). A few months ago, I also
added a GR-50 guitar synth to my rack and added GK-2 synth pickups to two of
my guitars. It's really made a difference in the sound, although I still have a
ways to go learning about the complexities of using a guitar as a synth
controller.
Anyways, would anybody be willing to share some of their GP-8 patch
modifications in this note?
-Dan
(I'll add my own soon.)
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860.89 | | NEWOA::DALLISON | | Mon Feb 15 1993 01:35 | 5 |
860.90 | | NEWOA::DALLISON | | Mon Feb 15 1993 01:36 | 5 |
| Thought I'd try and revive a dead note :-
Anybody still own and use and like the Boss ME5 unit ?
-tony
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