T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1513.1 | Buy quality - be satisfied a long time. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - DTN 433-2408 | Wed Jul 06 1988 16:05 | 19 |
| I seems to me that obsolesence is a marketing gimmick.
Granted, it's hard to get the latest fad sound out of a synth that's
several years old, but unlike marketing would have you believe, that
doesn't make the old synth obsolete - nor is it impossible.
Sure, LA synths produce some very nice characteristic sounds ... but I
can produce reasonable facsimiles using a pair of TX7s, or a TX7 and an
old Oberheim. (Whaddya mean you've heard this before?) Actually,
there are a few DX patches floating around that sound VERY similar to
LA type breathy patches.
I think the bottom line is to buy a quality product, and then don't be
afraid to work at programming it to get the most out of the machine.
I wonder if len thinks his JX dinosaurs are obsolete ... (obvious bait
laid here) ...
-b
|
1513.2 | Almost forgot | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - DTN 433-2408 | Wed Jul 06 1988 16:09 | 6 |
| I think you're approaching things the right way Steve - just don't be
afraid of trying "strange" things. Most hot popular patches seem to be
based on sample combinations. For example, a piano attack on a gut
guitar sustain, or Mr. Moeller's dreaded "fart flute".
-b
|
1513.3 | Goodness is Timeless | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jul 06 1988 16:47 | 20 |
| Roland may think my JX-10 and MKS-80 are obsolete, but the sounds
are forever. So what if the Super Jupiter takes a half hour to warm up
and stop drifting, and has only 4 voices in dual (layered) mode. And,
yeah, I wish there was a chance of a replacement ROM that would make
my JX transmit and receive on different channels. The sound generation
technology may be "obsolete", but the sounds are classic, and there's
enough of the basic MIDI functionality there (both respond to velocity
and aftertouch, and do SysEx bulk transfers) to do a lot more than
"survive". Both have full blown "knobs and sliders" programmers.
I just got my D-550, and it can't replace either.
Talk about obsolete. I now have a LinnDrum and a TR-909. They
get used regularly. The Linn is going to be MIDIfied. The -909
still has one of the best sounding crashes of any drum machine.
Almost no such thing as "obsolete" in my studio. Just good and
useful, or bad and useless.
len.
|
1513.4 | | SALSA::MOELLER | You CAN 'push the river' ! | Wed Jul 06 1988 17:34 | 13 |
| I think a good sampler is the way to go. The first parameter is
a large library, the second is to use alternate sources like these
cassettes with 1000 sounds.
I got a real sweetheart deal with my EMax.. since I gave them $$
and didn't see the unit for months, Synthony in Scottsdale AZ lets
me come in with formatted flops and copy any Emax samples they've
gotten since the last time I visited. I now have ~100 floppies,
with sounds ranging from old ARP gear to Fairlight/Synclavier sounds.
My ONLY regret with the Emax is its 8-voice polyphony limit.
karl
|
1513.5 | Rack 'em up ! | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Fri Jul 08 1988 11:19 | 4 |
| If the S-10 has been dropped to $650, what has the rack mount version
(MKS-35672 orthelike) been dropped to?
Todd.
|
1513.6 | | RUGRAT::POWELL | Dan Powell/274-6608 | Fri Jul 08 1988 11:58 | 6 |
| I just got off the phone with LaSalle's. They have S-10s in stock
for 599. The MKS-100 (S10 rack) has been discontinued for a while
(last summer) and is not available. Its replacement, the S-220 sells
for 1K.
Dan
|
1513.7 | S-330? | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | incompetence knows no bounds | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:33 | 3 |
| You mean S-330, don't you?
Steve_who_figures_S-330's_will_go_for_$600_or_less_in_a_year
|
1513.8 | nope | FREKE::LEIGH | | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:41 | 14 |
| >< Note 1513.7 by MIZZOU::SHERMAN "incompetence knows no bounds" >
> -< S-330? >-
>
> You mean S-330, don't you?
>
> Steve_who_figures_S-330's_will_go_for_$600_or_less_in_a_year
Nope S-330 is a baby S-550.
MKS-100 is like an S-10 and S-220 is also in that family. Daddy's
'preferred customer' night had S-220 at $895 (for a reference).
Chad
|
1513.9 | Authorized buying agents | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:44 | 3 |
| If ANYONE sees an S-330 go for $600, please buy it for me.
db
|
1513.10 | me too! | FREKE::LEIGH | | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:47 | 16 |
| > -< Authorized buying agents >-
>
> If ANYONE sees an S-330 go for $600, please buy it for me.
>
> db
I herby duly authorize ANYONE to buy ME the *second* one found for
$600.
I'll even pay a commision if you find one. Authorization expires
at XMAS.
Chad
(note: offer only valid after db gets his!)
|
1513.11 | S-550 vs. S-330 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:48 | 14 |
| An S-330 is indeed a "baby S-550".
It has either 1/2 or 1/4 the memory, no SCSI port and is being offered
as a "bounded" unit (no memory upgrade potential, etc. although it
has been said here that Roland says that it COULD provide an upgrade
if it wanted to, the "bounded" stuff is a sorta marketing product
line thing to differentiate it from the S-550.)
BTW, S-550 disks have to be "converted" (easily done with Roland
supplied utilities) to be used on the S-330, so apparently there
ARE some differences in the software architecture, and perhaps
the hardware too.
db
|
1513.12 | anyone have *official* word? | FREKE::LEIGH | | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:53 | 16 |
| > BTW, S-550 disks have to be "converted" (easily done with Roland
> supplied utilities) to be used on the S-330, so apparently there
> ARE some differences in the software architecture, and perhaps
> the hardware too.
>
> db
Interesting, a Roland User's Group mag had a blurb saying S-50 disks
were fully compatible with the S-550 (should be) *and* the S-330. They
listed their library of S-50 disks and S-550 disks separately though...
Chad_who_hopes_S-330_and_S-550_have_same_sound_quality_and_have_-
compatible_disks_because_he_wants_one_by_XMAS
|
1513.13 | Not official, but quite certain | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Jul 08 1988 15:07 | 13 |
| I think the confusion is from how you are interpreting "fully
compatable".
The S-50 and S-550 disk ARE fully compatable with the S-330.
The S-330 can read and use anything on a disk created by an
S-550 or S-50. It just takes a special program (which unfortunately
you have to load from another floppy) to do it.
Anyway, I was doing this just last week, and I can tell you with
great certainty that you can't load an S-50 (or S-550) disk on
a S-330 the same way you'd load an S-330 disk.
db
|
1513.14 | official enough | FREKE::LEIGH | | Fri Jul 08 1988 16:15 | 11 |
| > The S-50 and S-550 disk ARE fully compatable with the S-330.
> The S-330 can read and use anything on a disk created by an
> S-550 or S-50. It just takes a special program (which unfortunately
> you have to load from another floppy) to do it.
More or less that they have a different data format. Hmm...
Thanks Its official enough for me...
Chad
|
1513.15 | a shoot-from-the-hip review | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | socialism doesn't work ... | Mon Aug 01 1988 15:21 | 47 |
|
My tapes came in about a week ago. I've listened to many of the
samples. At first I was disappointed in some of them because they
were pitched pretty high and I could tell I was hearing a sampler.
Then, I realized/read that this was intended for folks that were
going to use one sample over the full keyboard - seems most samplers
can play a sound at a lower but not higher pitch (dummy! dummy!
I said to myself ...). Anyway, most samples are over a range of
pitches, which is nice. My recording is in Dolby B, which has some
noise, but I can filter most of that out.
The sounds are not as complete as I would like (there were not enough
samples of real choir voices or of sax variations), but much of it is
useable. There are far too many conga samples on the drum tape. It's
hard to tell many of them apart. A lot of the drum samples are the
same sounds run through effects (*I* can do that myself!). But, there
are plenty of unique percussion sounds that I can diddle with (more
than on any drum machine I've seen). The sounds tend to be abrupt and
short, which makes sampling easier. But, they sampled some RX sounds
and wound up missing a noticeable amount of the attack on some of those.
Fortunately, I'm not that interested in the RX stuff.
At times the levels seemed too high, bordering on saturation for my
deck, but this was not a big problem. There is audible echo and
crosstalk on the tapes (I can tell it's not my tape drive because the
echos come before the sound and are not reversed.) This is no problem
for the S-10 which can start the sample when it hits a certain level.
But, it might be a problem for other samplers. The D-50, DX7II,
Matrix, Kurzweil and Kawai sounds seem pretty useful. As I listened,
I began to be able to tell the different synths apart. I think because
of the popularity of the D-50 there was particular attention paid
there.
To my surprise, I found myself quickly tiring of the breathy, screechy
D-50 sounds. I guess I've become accustomed to hearing D-50 sounds
after being run through FX. Also, how many times do you have to hear
the Honda or the Certs commercial before you get tired of breathy
flutes? It makes me have second thoughts about going for a D-110 down
the road because raw FM and LA sound more similar than I thought. One
advantage that FM seems to have over LA is that it is less 'attacky'.
I've already got that problem with the S-10, except that I can do
velocity cross-fading to mask the problem. (I might not be using the
right terms here, but what the hey ...)
All in all, the sample tapes are breathing new life into my S-10.
Steve
|
1513.16 | One Reason for Owning The Original | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 01 1988 19:24 | 7 |
| re .15 - it *is* possible to "tame" some of the more egregiously
breathy D-nn sounds by a little reprogramming, but that's a bit
trickier to do with unmodified samples...
len.
|
1513.17 | illiterate? moi? | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | socialism doesn't work ... | Tue Aug 02 1988 10:33 | 4 |
| Gee, I'll have to agree with you, len. Especially because I can't
even PRONOUNCE egeg ... egrej ... whatever that word was ... ;-)
Steve
|
1513.18 | FB-01 still being used | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Tue Aug 02 1988 17:22 | 13 |
| I guess this is the topic within which to mention that even little things
add a little life to an otherwise obsolete synth.
For me, the FB-01 was becoming obsolete when all of a sudden I obtained a
velocity sensitive keyboard to breath a little new life into it. All the
patches became much more useable.
Then it became even more useable when I just discovered the other day that
I already had a foot pedal which can be used with my controller to act
as a damper pedal. Boom, all of a sudden sustain perks up many piano-like
passages.
/Mitch
|
1513.19 | FB or not FB thats the expander | MINDER::KENT | I can't Dance to That | Wed Aug 03 1988 05:24 | 9 |
|
I'me still using mine. It makes great 4 layered bass patches and
with the steinberg patch editor can make some fairly educated noises.
If you had an atari we could swap patches. (god bless steph bailey)
Paul.
|