T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1261.1 | old technology nice sound | LEDS::ORIN | Ensoniq, is EPS a Mirage? | Thu Mar 17 1988 17:14 | 17 |
| Peter -
I have also noticed all of those DX/DMX machines for sale. I checked out the
DX/DMX when they first hit the scene. They were originally very overpriced
(IMO) as was the Linn Drum. They use "brute force" mass quantities of hardware
to accomplish what a Korg DD5 or Alesis HR16 does in a minimal amount of
hardware. To tune the drums, you have to get inside the cabinet and move a
thumb wheel. Each instrument or group requires an individual PC card. They
have pretty good sounds, but no better than the Korg or Alesis (IMO). Notice
how cheap they are trying to sell these units. $500 now instead of $2k+ when
new. They are several generations back technology wise. If you can get a DMX
and some additional sound cards for under $400 it might be worth it.
Otherwise, I recommend the HR16 or DDD-5. See note 1168 for the HR16
continuing saga. I can't seem to give away my Linn Drum (no MIDI), and I paid
nearly $2k.
dave
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1261.2 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | Wilderness king of da' bluz | Fri Mar 18 1988 07:26 | 4 |
| Dave,
you can *give* the Linn to me if you can't find any other volunteers
dave :-)
|
1261.3 | And Don't Let The Boiler Run Dry | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Mar 18 1988 10:34 | 14 |
| I think the Oberheims represent the state of the art in analog drum
synthesis. This is sort of like representing the state of the art
in steam engines. Yeah, they work, they even sound good, but there
are better (cheaper, more compact, more flexible) ways of doing it
today. If that particular sound (analog sounds, good as they can
get, are recognizably different from the sampled/PCM drum sounds that
are typical of just about all drum machines lately) is worth what's
being asked for the machine, go for it.
I assume they are MIDI compatible and interpret velocity. If they
don't, forget it.
len.
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1261.4 | Not analog... | OILCAN::DIORIO | | Fri Mar 18 1988 12:00 | 7 |
| re -1 I used an Oberheim DMX drum machine a couple of years ago,
and I recall it used sampled sounds, not analog as you stated. It
was not MIDI, but had velocity sensitive pads. They can be MIDIfied,
and I have seen some MIDIfied ones in the Want Ads. They sound very
good, as good as the Linn units IMO.
Mike D.
|
1261.5 | more opinions... | FSBIC2::DDREHER | | Fri Mar 18 1988 13:48 | 23 |
| When I was looking for a high end drum machine 3 years ago, the
choice boiled down to the LinnDrum and the Oberhiem DMX. Both
were not MIDI. I choose the Linn because it had better hi-hat,
crash, and ride (longer samples, too). I have since had the Linn
MIDIfied with the JL Cooper mod. You can get alternate chips for both,
but they are expensive. The Linn is not inherently velocity sensitive,
but has 2 or 3 levels of velocity for snare, kick, and hi-hat by using
mutiple buttons for each. The DMX might be velocity sensitive but
the DX is definitly not. All three machines use 8 bit sampling.
I'm not ready to give up my Linn. It's a classic, like a mini-moog,
and has a few years left in it.
For $500, I think the used Orberhiems are over priced. The DMX
is a better machine then the DX costing roughly twice as much
when they first came out. The DMX has longer samples too.
Sounds like Oberhiem owners are panicking and trying to dump their
machines before they are worth $100 so they can use the money to buy
an HR-16 ;^}
Dave
|
1261.6 | Did you really sample the linn into S-50?? | JAWS::COTE | Hey! You seen my datums? | Fri Mar 18 1988 13:54 | 10 |
| > Sounds like Oberhiem owners are panicking and trying to dump their
> machines before they are worth $100 so they can use the money to buy
> an HR-16 ;^}
A wise move...
;^)
Edd (happy_as_all_hell_with_his_HR-16_despite_the_weirdisms)
|
1261.7 | I'm guilty... | FSBIC2::DDREHER | | Fri Mar 18 1988 14:00 | 4 |
| Yes, it is true...
I sampled my favorite Linn snares and toms into the S-50 to enjoy
the benefits of velocity. Easier to change sounds too...
|
1261.8 | Ok, I was Wrong, But ... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Mar 18 1988 16:48 | 9 |
| I'm surprised that Oberheim, bastion of analogy, would use digital
sampling technology, but I admit to only guessing, and the one Oberheim
machine I auditioned sure didn't sound digital. The remark that
you had to change cards (rather than chips) implied an analog
implementation (or a baroque (not to be confused with broke) digital
implementation).
len.
|
1261.9 | Moved by Moderator | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Thu Sep 21 1989 10:02 | 10 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note 2127.0 Oberheim DX MIDI modification info needed 1 reply
ZEKE::WOZNIAK 5 lines 20-SEP-1989 15:29
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Does anyone know how much it would cost to MIDIfy my Oberheim DX
drum machine or know someone that is selling a MIDI DX or DMX?
Thanks,
Ross
|
1261.10 | Moved by Moderator | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Thu Sep 21 1989 10:02 | 11 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note 2127.1 Oberheim DX MIDI modification info needed 1 of 1
HAMER::COCCOLI 6 lines 20-SEP-1989 19:46
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here's the number of Rogue Music.......212-629-3708 or
212-947-0027(shop)
These guys do mods on anything!
Rich
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1261.11 | Some info... | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Thu Sep 21 1989 14:16 | 12 |
| There was an article in a recent (maybe 3 months ago) Electronic
Musician magazine about a kit to retro-fit random gear for
MIDI control. You could only control 8 notes (and only on/off),
but, if I recall correctly, There was a PC card, 1 high rack
panel & parts that you could order, read to go for it. This
might be one direction to go. At least you could make the
drum machine into a slave device & at least 8 different drum
sounds. I don't recall the cost. I do recall some of the details
as I was considering the kit as a MIDI light controller that could
be driven by my sequencer (I'd add relays to drive the lights).
Jens
|