T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
853.1 | insert yen and wait | JON::ROSS | Network partner excited first try!{pant} | Mon Jul 13 1987 15:24 | 9 |
|
US list is $1895.
Check the June Aftertouch Magazine.
nice. but expensive. a 6 operator TX81Z.....as predicted.
ron
|
853.2 | Yamaha's been drinking too mush saki... | JAWS::COTE | Any major dude will tell you... | Mon Jul 13 1987 15:30 | 10 |
| $1895!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No wonder they didn't publish the price... For that kind of clams
I could get a half a dozen Fb01s and have 24 operators and 48 voices
and 6 LFOs and and mis-tune them all and sound like Wendy Carlos
and still have enough left to buy a Dove Bar.
Len's gonna be very mad. He promised....
Edd
|
853.3 | Is it basic rack-mount? | THUNDR::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Mon Jul 13 1987 17:56 | 9 |
| Opinion (ignore this): [
That's ridiculous. The single best feature of the DX7s is their
16 voices. Why cut it in half and charge through the nose for it???]
Seriously: Does anybody know what the package looks like? Is it
your basic rack mount? TX816 card?
Steph
|
853.4 | Yep... | JAWS::COTE | Any major dude will tell you... | Tue Jul 14 1987 09:11 | 4 |
|
1-high rack mount.
Edd
|
853.5 | ana ana ana | JON::ROSS | Network partner excited first try!{pant} | Tue Jul 14 1987 09:39 | 16 |
| er, ah, 2 high rack from the cover picture (Ed????)
Its got 16 note polyphony. The problem is that for some
reason they can only get 8 MULTITIMBRAL voices out of
it. Yes, your arithmetic is correct, that means that
each multitimbral voice can play 2 notes. I suppose with
all the voices set the same, you have your basic 16 note
DX-ish beast.
Now at $995......
Look, you have to get 2 tx81z's to make 16 voices. THats ~$1200
list. So for ~$700 more list you get 6 operators.
Hmmmmm, I cant even talk myself into it.
|
853.6 | I think Yamahahahaha goofed up big-time... | JAWS::COTE | Any major dude will tell you... | Tue Jul 14 1987 09:55 | 6 |
| 2 rack spaces???
Mine must have been run through a compressor...
Edd
|
853.7 | PhD in 6 op? | BARNUM::RHODES | | Tue Jul 14 1987 10:45 | 14 |
| The only thing that six operators gives you over four is more FM programming
confusion, unless you just wanna use preset sounds.
If you just wanna use presets, buy a nice sampler and sample a DX7II (plus
any other damn thing you please).
Unless you are an expert programmer, go for the TX81Z.
I havn't liked Yamaha ever since I found out that my DX100 sustain pedal
works assbackwards such that you have to buy theirs. Open = sustain,
Closed = no sustain.
Todd.
|
853.8 | Does the DX100 use the standard Yamaha pedal? | THUNDR::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Tue Jul 14 1987 17:55 | 14 |
| Does the DX100 use IT'S OWN sustain pedal??? (I know that Roland
pedals work on my DX7).
More opinion: [6 ops make programming many things MUCH easier, because
you can get the equivalent of a 3 oscillator synth, with each having
independant amp and filter characteristics. That is, you can make the
``Sustain'' with one, the ``percussion'' with another and the
``thing-that-goes-radically-out-of-tune-when-you-wail-the-real-
instrument'' with the third. I admit that the hydraen 4-high stacks
of ops are hard to understand, though, but two high stacks aren't that
hard, and having three two high stacks is MUCH more flexible than
having two.]
Steph
|
853.9 | Roland and Yamaha? Compatible? You sure? | JAWS::COTE | I love it when you dBASE me... | Tue Jul 14 1987 18:01 | 4 |
| The sustain pedal for my Mirage is 180 degrees outta phase with
my DX...
Edd
|
853.10 | Sur, mon ami. | THUNDR::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Tue Jul 14 1987 18:09 | 5 |
| Yep. Just yesterday I was using a Roland pedal for the DX and vice
versa (Yamaha's cheapie pedal is much better than roland's).
Steph
|
853.11 | Oberheim does "the RIGHT thing" | PIXEL::COHEN | Richard Cohen | Wed Jul 15 1987 09:37 | 4 |
| My Matrix-6 can reverse its "pedal sense" to accomodate either!
- Rick
|
853.12 | | BARNUM::RHODES | | Wed Jul 15 1987 10:01 | 13 |
| My DX100 is 180 degrees out of phase with everything else. Maybe yours
is wired backwards by mistake 8^)
I agree regarding your statement on 6 ops vs. 4 when configured in 3 stacks of
2 operators each. In this case it is as easy to program as the 4 op.
There are probably a few more 6 op algorithms that are easy to program,
but in general 6 op programming can be overwhelming.
Hell, 4 op programming can be overwhelming. I've only programmed a few
sounds completely from scratch on the DX, and only one of which did I
obtain the sound I was looking for when I started.
Todd.
|
853.13 | Im right todd, your wrong. | JON::ROSS | Network partner excited first try!{pant} | Wed Jul 15 1987 11:04 | 15 |
| But thats a function of FM synthesis in general, not how many
operators. The sound generated by a change in parameters is
NOT intuitive.
I A/B'd the Fb01 alongside a DX7 and there is just no comparison.
You can add much more nuance with 6 ops and create a more complex
(dont read: clangorous) sound.
NOW, that's with only sine waves. The TX81z may just be a great
compromise of 4 ops and other waves. I mean, sines only, you need
2 ops to get a saw, pulse, square, etc...but tx81z apparently only
needs 1 op for same.
Ron_who_has_some_$_but_is_overwhelmed_again
|
853.14 | Your mother wears combat boots | BARNUM::RHODES | | Thu Jul 16 1987 10:00 | 12 |
| I never said that the 4 op synth sounded as good as the 6 op synth. All
I implied is that it is less overwhelming to program. Sure the 6 op synth
is gonna sound better than the 4 op synth when both are programmed by a
professional DX programmer (he or she gets paid for it, do you?), but I
havn't got the time. If you are impressed with the DX7 factory patches,
sample them.
I guess what I'm saying is that the more complex a synth is to program,
the less chance I'll have of getting myself motivated to program it. This
is just my opinion. Is it right?
Todd.
|
853.15 | Todd's wrong! see? just kiddin | JON::ROSS | Network partner excited first try!{pant} | Thu Jul 16 1987 17:39 | 6 |
|
Nope.
;{) (with my moustache...)
|
853.16 | Admit I'm wrong, c'mon! | BARNUM::RHODES | | Fri Jul 17 1987 11:42 | 7 |
| Flattery will get you no where, Mr. Ross.
May the lord of the black and whites condemn you to a single Casio synth
with a built-in bossa-nova rhythm section and 12 mini keys for the rest of
your breathing career...
Todd.
|
853.17 | May you play through a BC-1.... | JAWS::COTE | I love it when you dBASE me... | Fri Jul 17 1987 11:50 | 3 |
| Aren't you being a bit tuff on him Todd?
Edd
|
853.18 | nyaaaaahhh! | JON::ROSS | Network partner excited first try!{pant} | Fri Jul 17 1987 13:40 | 7 |
|
Yeah! I cant help it if I knew this stuff since I was
13 years old.
Take it back. Or else I'll take my data and go home.
|
853.19 | | BARNUM::RHODES | | Fri Jul 17 1987 15:05 | 16 |
| Don't take yer data and go home. Leave it here when you go.
Actually, Umm, well, err, lessee. I, ah, apologize Ron.
eek, that was tough. [But it do feel mildly good...]
It was awful of me to wish mini-keys on you. Please don't wish mini-drums on
me. Not enough projection. Unless they're just small electronic drum pads.
A piezo element covered in rubber on a stick? How about a small cheese
piezo with onions and peppers to go? How 'bout a piezo mind? [Stop, Todd.]
Must be Friday.
May all your sustain pedal bearing synths be consistant with the industry
standard...
Todd.
|
853.20 | Just like the TX81Z ? | NYMPH::ZACHWIEJA | Freedom countdown in progress | Thu Jan 07 1988 10:58 | 13 |
|
One last question, before I sign my life away. Polytimbrality aside,
everyone seems to be comapring this beast to the DX7 in that it has
up to sixteen notes of polyphony or 16 voices.
And while that is all well and good, I am more interested in how
close it is to the TX81Z. Does it have multiple waveforms for the
operators? I think the TX81Z has 10, the DX7 has 1. Does it also
handle performance data a la TX81Z ? It is quite nice to be able to
save a particular configuration of patches, note allocations, and
channel assignments.
Zach
|
853.23 | A multi-timbral Dx7-II | GCLEF::COHEN | Richard Cohen | Thu Jan 07 1988 12:40 | 4 |
| I think that the TX802 does NOT have the alternate waveforms.
- Rick
|
853.26 | Let's give this a rest, shall we? | DYO780::SCHAFER | Resist. | Thu Jan 07 1988 14:07 | 13 |
| RE: current tack
Perhaps this is more important to Edd than to you? Kicking the urge
isn't all fun and giggles, y' know. You should see the pencil gnawings
cluttering his office ...
RE: TX802
Sorry - it's simply a multitimbral DX7-II. Sine wave as base (ie, no
alternate waveforms). You want alternate waveforms? Either get a
TX81z, or wait for the new multi-wave 6 op synth to come out. Should
only be around $5k, and be available in 2010 ...
|
853.28 | | NYMPH::ZACHWIEJA | Freedom countdown in progress | Thu Jan 07 1988 14:51 | 7 |
|
Oh yeah, I guess I'll get two TX81Z's.
More timbrality, Additional wavforms, same Polyphony for
less money.
Zach
|
853.29 | TX81Z + keyboard = DXII | FGVAXZ::MASHIA | Crescent City Kid | Thu Jan 07 1988 15:04 | 9 |
| I didn't want to start a new note for this, but I read somewhere
recently that Yamaha is coming/has come out with a "new" synth called
the DXII, which is simply a TX81Z with a keyboard, presumably velocity-
sensitive.
Anybody got any info?
Rodney M.
|
853.30 | Now About the Sequencer ? | ERIC::KENT | | Mon Jan 11 1988 02:49 | 11 |
|
Well I have to admit that I weakened and bought one of these things.
I have been promising myself that I would get a DX7 one day and
this is about the nearest I think I will get ( I used my sequencer
budget). I actually think that for home studio use it is the ideal
DX7. I own an FB01 and the TX machine has rendered that one
unlistenable. It's a bit like the difference between a Cheap rack
HIFI and the real thing.
Paul.
|
853.31 | Buy TX81Z's, Sell TX802's | NYMPH::ZACHWIEJA | Freedom countdown in progress | Mon Jan 11 1988 14:24 | 14 |
|
It seems to me that without the multiple waverforms, worth twice their
weight in operators, that the TX802 is somewhat beat even with 16 note
polyphony, 6 operators and performance parameters.
I called SAM ASH last week. $347 for the TX81Z and $1300 for the TX802.
And if I figure an equivalance at $1300 I put the TX81Z way ahead.
TX81Z TX802
polyphony in notes 29.97 16.00
timbrality 29.97 8.00
Zach
|
853.32 | Little known GEM of a product: Roland MT-32 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Jan 11 1988 14:54 | 19 |
| Have you considered the Roland MT-32?
It's a different sorta beast than the TX81Z (it's more like
a greatly souped up FB-01) but if you're not really into creating
your own FM patches, it has a lot of advantages:
o 128 builtin sounds
o 32 voices (enough voices to go nuts with patch layering)
o 9 sound polyphony
o excellent builtin drum sounds)
o with a PC/voice editor you can create your own LA synthesis
sounds (it essentially has a builtin Roland D50 (?) which
is one of the hottest new synth technologies)
It's a bit more expensive than the TX ($530 would be a good price).
But if you're just starting to build your own home studio I think
the extra money easily justifies itself in bang-for-the-buck.
db
|
853.33 | More, more lots more; memory's getting cheaper... | MENTOR::REG | It was 20 years ago next May | Mon Jan 11 1988 15:18 | 4 |
|
re (.32 re MT-32) 9 ain't enough. FB01 has 8 and its nowhere
near enough. I want at least 16, Kurzie's new thingie has 24, I
want 32, preferably 64 or 88.
|
853.34 | Six ops are for programming flexibility. | BOLT::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Mon Jan 11 1988 17:08 | 25 |
| Re: TX81Z vs TX802.
You pay (and in my opinion, quite justifiably) for the silence of
the TX802.
Further, with minor effort, you have literally thousands of public
domain patches at your beck and call.
Finally, it is arguable whether the extra ops are needed for timbral
richness (in which case, non-sinusoidal waves will make up the
difference) or for ``coarse-grained'' variance (i.e. attack,
sustain, velocity variance, etc.) in which case you can not cover
for having less ops.
Personally, I think the coarse-grained flexibility is worth much
more than the more complicated timbres. I am firmly convinced that
this is the reason Yamaha put six ops into DX7*, even though it
seems like it can be a real bear.
I'm not knocking the TX81Z. (It sounds quite good to me), I am
just of the belief that with the TX802 you get what you pay for.
Steph
|
853.35 | Maybe I meant timbrality instead of polyphony | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Jan 11 1988 17:20 | 24 |
| re: .33
Reg, is 32 enough? That's what the MT-32 has. I think you
misunderstood.
The MT-32 can play 32 notes at once. Each of those 32 notes can
play any of 8 different 'sounds'.
If your priorities are to be able to play as many notes simultaneously
as possible, you should certainly have a look at the MT-32.
TX81Z TX802 MT-32
polyphony in notes 29.97 16.00 32
timbrality 29.97 8.00 8 + drum sounds
Also, the division of voices to timbralities is dynamic with the
MT-32. No voice is dedicated to a particular timbre. In one bar
you can play 32 notes all with the same timbre, in the next bar
you can play 32 notes distributed to any combination of 8 timbres
without having to do anything. Is that also true of these Yamaha
units?
db
|
853.36 | LA, here I come ! | NYMPH::ZACHWIEJA | Only 278 days left | Mon Jan 11 1988 17:49 | 28 |
|
To put the MT-32 in the proper perspective, using db's price of $530,
the correct tables showing "bangs-per-buck" and "bangs-per-unit".
TABLE I. BANGS-PER-BUCK TX81Z TX802 MT-32
-------------------------------------------------------
polyphony in notes 29.97 16.00 78.46
timbrality 29.97 8.00 8.00 + drum sounds
TABLE II. BANGS-PER-UNIT TX81Z TX802 MT-32
-------------------------------------------------------
polyphony in notes 8.00 16.00 32.00
timbrality 8.00 8.00 8.00
price (approximate) $350 $1300 $530
To me it is more imnportant to have the notes where and when I
want them as opposed to having the instruments. God created multi-
track recording for a reason, 8 is enough.
The entry cost is a bit higher, but getting one TX81Z now at a lower
cost will still not allow me to reach the level of an MT-32 by
purchasing another 81Z several months down the road.
I guess it is time to learn a bit more about LA synthesis.
Zach.
|
853.37 | When is a ping really a "PING" ? | ERIC::KENT | | Tue Jan 12 1988 03:20 | 30 |
|
Re-1,2,3 etc
I am not sure what the issue is we are discussing here but I sense
there is some confusion as to why any one would fork out Lotsa money
for a TX802 when you could buy multiple cheaper units for the same
price, and make a gain in polyphony. Well let me tell you I am extremely
careful with the money I spend on my hobby and have never yet
regretted a purchase. In fact the money spent on this unit was reserved
for a sequencer but after much testing and speculation I couldn't
find one which met my requirements. Next on my list had always been
a quality synth a'la La50, DX7, Super-Jupiter etc. The reason:-- Quality.
That is the quality of the sound and the lack of associated noise.
Which is hard to measure in a Bang for Buck league table. But is
a real annoyance with my other two "4 op" sysnths. I guess
as Steph says you pays your money and takes your choice. The only
reason I bought the TX802 and not one of the others is The 8 seperate
outs. Plus I got a good deal.
The flexibiliy this gives me in my particular working(playing?)
evnironment was a significant plus. I would still like to buy a
whooshy Roland one day!
Just a note in terms of the compatibility of the system. Derek Kay
and myself traded patches(He has a DX7) ,via SYSEX, last night for
the whole evening. We had no problem DX7-TX802 and just a slight
niggle going the other way in that one of the PEG parameters got
a bit confused.
|
853.38 | 64,000 dollar sounds | HEART::MACHIN | | Tue Jan 12 1988 04:20 | 23 |
| I suppose debate over 'bang for the *' is the only way to talk about
thiese sorts of hit-tech musical devices. Unless you can take a
unit home and live with it for a while, it's difficult if not
impossible to assess whether it's sound is useful, or even musical,
to your ears and in your setup. One good patch is certainly worth
128 trains going down tunnels and the like, and the more I hear
pro patches at work in compositions, the more I realise that you
can't tell what a patch sounds like until you can try (or whatever
might be the aural equivalent ov visualize) it within a tune. I
mean, some of the prophet sounds that have been successfully deployed
would make the milk in your tea curdle if heard in a shop, on their
own, hacked out by a relatively inept salesperson.
And it's always been difficult to assess on a 'quality of sound
per buck' basis. That's why people pay thousands for crummy old
violins, and I supoose why they used to pay thousands for pro-5s.
Personally, right now I'd give my right arm for a minimoog. Well,
a few hundred quid, anyway.
Next month maybe.
Richard.
|
853.39 | Drip drip drip. | ERIC::KENT | | Tue Jan 12 1988 04:53 | 11 |
|
RE.-1
Just what I was tring to say myself but not as eloquently. In theory
I still have the Tx802 out on loan, bit I know I will buy it.
On a seperate, but related, subject, I noticed recently that in
net.music.synth there were a number of encoded patch dumps for the
DX7. Can anyone tell me how to decode these ?
|
853.40 | Highlighting some important considerations | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Jan 12 1988 10:25 | 43 |
| re: .36
God also created virtual tracks for a reason.
I found that the 8 notes my ESQ-1 gave me was not enough. It's
not just a question of what you can ultimately put on tape. It's
a question of the flexibility you have.
If you have to record 8 notes at a time, you have to do all your
experimentation on tape. If you are sequencing stuff, I hope you
have a sync-to-tape feature (as far as I know you don't) or you
will only be able to sequence one track. Get the MT-32 and you
don't even need a 4-track.
You either have to trust me or be confident that your needs
and methods are very different from mind when I tell you that while
this is workable it's just not very pragmatic. You CAN do things
this way, but in my experience it makes the going
much slower, and you end up making lots of compromises.
Other readers should feel free to chime in with their own experience
and say "You're wrong Dave" or "Dave knows what he's talking about".
Let's also not forget that the MT-32 has a builtin drum set whose
sounds rival and exceed many drum machines. Subtract the price
of a drum machine from the $530 and you may find that your own
"bang for the buck" metric swings wildly in favor of the MT-32.
As I aluded to before, if you get something with enough voices to
obviate the need for multi-tracking you may not even NEED to get
a 4-track (only need it if you are going to be adding more than
one non-sequenced track in real time). So subtract the price of
a 4 track (AND the price of the drum machine) from the $530 and
the bang-for-the-buck becomes even more biased.
If what you're trying to do is build a small home studio sequencer
based setup (my guess based on what I know of you) with limited funds,
I would think the MT-32 is your best bet.
By the way, you (or anyone) are welcome to come over to my place
and try out the MT-32.
db
|
853.41 | How about a review? | AKOV68::EATOND | | Tue Jan 12 1988 10:40 | 6 |
| Hey, Dave... Do ya think you can open a note for the MT-32 and give us
a formal review? I'm especially interested in hearing about the drums. I
demo'd one of the first ones P.U. Wurlitzer's had and because they didn't know
enough about the thing, I never got to hear the drums.
Dan
|
853.42 | Review maybe, a demo, always | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Jan 12 1988 11:09 | 9 |
| re: .41
I'll try but the HR-16 review constitutes my civic Commusic duties
for the week. Perhaps next week.
Of course, I'm willing to demo it to anyone willing to come to
my place in Hudson, NH (near Nashua).
db
|
853.43 | more peer pressure | DSSDEV::HALLGRIMSSON | Rapid Electrical Machine | Tue Jan 12 1988 11:54 | 6 |
| ...just seconding .41: Do please give us an MT-32 review. I've yet to
find out how many LFO's/voice the thing has.
Eirikur
|
853.44 | wonder how much I can get for a used Fb01? | SALSA::MOELLER | IBM Farts,Industry Genuflects.Film@11 | Tue Jan 12 1988 13:00 | 9 |
| So I'm not alone in beginning to hate the Fb01, eh ?
Also I haven't been too interested in the newer affordable Yamaha
rack units, as I'm tired of FM sounds..
You can bet I'll try to find out more on the MT-32.. 32 notes
simultaneously, dynamic voice assignment, builtin drumset.. wow.
karl
|
853.45 | | NYMPH::ZACHWIEJA | Only 277 days left | Tue Jan 12 1988 13:20 | 17 |
|
re .40
db, did i imply that i am still leaning toward anything other than
an mt-32 in .36 ?
each of the items in question comes with a polytimbrality of 8, but
the mt-32 comes with 32 dynamically allocated notes of polyphony.
discounting drum sounds, it still blows away the others especially
when you consider the error i made in my chart for the mt-32. for
the price of a tx802 you really get a polytimbrality of 19.62 mak-
ing it even that much better.
the only problem i do have is that i have to buy more software to
create new sounds.
Zach
|
853.46 | Reverbbbb toooooooo!!! | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Jan 12 1988 13:21 | 40 |
| Hey, I know I'm not the only guy in here with an MT-32. Any of
you other MT-32 owners should feel free to beat me to the punch
with a review. In fact, I'm almost sure there are already some
notes on it.
BTW, 32 voices and dynamic voice assignment, builtin drumset and
that ain't all!!! It also has BUILTIN reverb. Not great reverb,
but useable reverb. It has 8 reverb modes which pretty much sound
like varying degrees of wetness/dryness. The 'reverb mode' is
universal - the mode you select applies to all 8 timbres/channels
plus the drum channel, BUT you can vary the amount of reverb for
each channel and the drum sounds individually.
For those of you building home studios from scratch the reverb is
yet another highly endearing feature of the MT-32. Recording
drums dry is the pits, and almost anything is gonna sound better
with a little reverb on it.
So, let's modify the bang/buck ratio again and recompute the
cost/performance of the MT-32
Cost of MT-32 = $530 - cost of 4 track - cost of drum machine
- cost of reverb - cost of tape sync
That probably comes out to a negative cost of close to a grand.
(Feel free to present this justification to the wives.)
Now before anyone takes me to town on this; YES this method of
calculation does not apply to most of us, but I believe it does
apply to Zach unless he's bought some more stuff since I was last
at his place.
It's a pretty hot unit. I didn't know it was a 'secret' in this
conference. I had lusted for one for what seems like a long time.
Another Roland winner.
Again, I'm willing to give demos. I have yet to find ONE salesman
who knew jacks__t about it.
db
|
853.47 | we have all been here before | SQM::VINSEL | | Tue Jan 12 1988 13:24 | 3 |
| see note 989
pcv
|
853.48 | There are two notes on the MT-32 (at least) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Jan 12 1988 13:32 | 10 |
| see note 989 AND note 891.
These notes contain some reasons NOT to go for the MT-32 that are
worth considering. I don't get a commission even though I may sound
like I'm hyping it.
I like mine and am very happy with it. It sounds good to my ears
and it gives me a LOT a capability.
db
|
853.49 | more bits, please | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Tue Jan 12 1988 18:13 | 7 |
| RE: MT-32
Numerous complaints about noise in this unit over the Usenet. Listen
carefully before you buy...
Todd.
|
853.51 | Pretending to moderate? | GCLEF::COHEN | Richard Cohen | Wed Jan 13 1988 09:46 | 5 |
| Lets move this discussion into one of the other MT-32 notes? The
title for this note is TX-802. Or at least set a keyword to these
replies.
- Rick
|
853.52 | | MENTOR::REG | It was 20 years ago next May | Wed Jan 13 1988 10:19 | 29 |
|
re .34 Thanks Dave, yes, I had misunderstood, still not quite
sure what 9 sound polyphony in .32 means vs 32 note polyphony in
.34.
Anyway, being *SO* new to keyboards/pianos and having played only
acoustic guitar (kinda 6 note polyphonic limited), I had counted
my fingers and thumbs when I bought the FB01 and said, "Eight notes
at once, eh ?, sure should be plenty." At this stage of my development
it seems I double my knowledge/skills and therefore needs/want every
month, hence the somewhat cynical comments about wanting 64 or 88
note polyphony. EVEN "I" can already hold a four note cord with
one hand and arpeggiate a couple of octaves with the other (6 year
old exercise # 7, I know), this takes 17 notes to go up and come
back again for a single voice or the cord "goes away" if I don't
play it again, i.e. introduce a synth technique. Until I've
developed some basic piano skills I want to avoid adding synth specific
skills that are required due to lack of sufficient polyphony. I'm
also quite ignorant of what lies ahead, so it seems natural to want
to go for "just a little more than I can use in the next couple
of years", so I don't get trapped in the eternal upgrade game.
BTW, does the MT-32 have any overflow/outflow capability so
they can be chained when the 32 note limit is reached ? I seem
to remember a reference to one/some of Ensonique's synths doing
that.
Reg
|
853.53 | Do Your Fingertips Fall Off and Hold the Keys Down? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 14 1988 11:31 | 6 |
| Reg, could you possibly elaborate on where that 17 note requirement
comes from? I haven't been able to figure out how you derived
this.
len.
|
853.54 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Thu Jan 14 1988 12:46 | 4 |
| Well, there is the sustain pedal for one thing.
Watch out for layering. If you use layering you lose from the polyphony
count in LA-type synthesizers. (According to a review in the latest Keyboard)
|
853.55 | | MENTOR::REG | It was 20 years ago next May | Thu Jan 14 1988 16:01 | 17 |
|
re .53 Err, lessee.... I hold the cord with the left hand, thats
four; then I go 1,2,4,1,2,4,5,4,2,1,4,2,1 with my right hand, (keep it
simple, stay in an easy key while I count this) thats another thirteen,
and my right foot is down all the time, but thats not another note cos
its a sustain pedal, not a pedal board. The cord starts to go away at
the second 2, its all gone by the third 2. There are a couple of piano
sounds in the FB01 that I like together (layered), I think they're 4/6
and 4/8, but I get close to zip out of it in dual mode, 4 notes per
voice.
QED ?
Reg
|
853.56 | What's The Next Number in This Sequence... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jan 20 1988 15:08 | 21 |
| Having lost the context of this discussion several days ago, I wondered
just what "cord" was being held - the power cord (must have been
heavy metal), sometimes called the line cord (for serial work?),
or some lanyard attached to an across the room MIDI continuous
controller (for "remote" bends?)...
Aha, he means "chord", as in a line connecting the ends of an arc of
a circle!
Now all I have to do is figure out what the numbers mean.
But then that last sentence talks about zip, could he have meant
some zip cord, as in 18 gauge? Maybe it's a typo and he means
"rip chord", time to bail out...
Or maybe this is one of those mathematical games...
;^)
len (hopelessly confused at this point).
|