T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1723.1 | Casiotone MT-240 with MIDI | AQUA::ROST | Canned ham, that's for me | Thu Oct 13 1988 21:13 | 51 |
|
The Casiotone MT-240 is the first box from Casio that I've seen
to have both MIDI and the Casiotone name. It's a relatively recent
addition to the line and is selling in discount houses for around
$150.
While it won't replace your Kurzweil or even your FB-01, it has
some neat features that I gleaned from a glance at the owner's manual
in a toy store today (hard to read with some salesperson staring
at you).
At first glance, the MT-240 is a stock Casiotone box, 49 mid-size
keys, 20 preset tones, rhythm accompaniment with Casio chords and
bass, stereo speakers, etc. However, it also has MIDI in and out as well
as "Tone Bank" which claims 210 tones.
The "Tone Bank" it turns out is just layering. Simple math will
show that with 20 presets, if you try all layer combinations and
note that A layered with B is the same as B layered with A, you
get 190 layer combinations, which added to the 20 "vanilla" presets
gives 210 tones, some of which are, of course, totally useless.
When unlayered, you get 10 note poly, 5 notes when layered.
To layer, press a preset (the "base" tone) then the tone bank button
then another preset. Hitting additional presets exchanges the tone
layered over the base, until you hit tone bank again to cancel.
This is the cheapest layering keyboard I've seen yet. The tones
themselves are all PCM which means that some are pretty decent (the
piano is a decent improvement over the CZ/FB/MT presets most of
us have barfed over but lack of velocity sensitivity is still a
drawback....whaddya want for $150???) although I guess Casio has
a reputation to maintain and some are, well, pretty lame. The layering
gives you a liitle more to work with if you can stand losing 5 notes.
The MIDI is primitive by today's pro standards, but not too bad when
compared with early pro MIDI gear. Transmit is channel 1 only, recieve
is channels 1 to 4, and from my brief read I gather that it's actually
all four at once giving you access to upper and lower splits, bass and
drum sounds. A note map is provided for the drums, so you *can* access
them from a sequencer. You can also drive external sequencers with the
onboard clock, but it was not immediately apparent if you can clock the
240 from an external device. No velocity, transmit level is fixed at
64. Accepts program change 0-29, i.e. the twenty presets plus ????
Also sends program change. Sustain information is accepted but not
sent. Didn't catch whether pitch or mod were accepted.
Anyway it sounds like a cheap peripheral for computer hackers who
want to check out MIDI at a minimum cost and for cheapskates like
me who could use a couple of chintzy PCM voices plus a funky drum
kit and don't want to blow the cash on an MT-32. Wait for 'em to
show up in the want ads for $80.
|
1723.2 | I second the motion | SKITZD::EVANS | | Thu Oct 13 1988 21:56 | 14 |
| I'm interested in consumer MIDI things too. For a long time, I thought
there was a reason why all these other notes were so "technical",
then I realized all these other noters were pro/semi-pro. Different
slant on things. That's why I crawled through the MAC notesfile,
thinking it would answer my questions (it hasn't so far).
Is there another notes file for this sort of thing?? This notesfile
seems pretty eclectic.
Don't forget: from "pro" things come future "consumer" things. That's
what keeps me reading this file. Besides, where else can one get
such great entertainment?!!?! :-)
Bruce Evans, Santa Clara
|
1723.3 | Hey, a toy is a toy | TALK::HARRIMAN | Peak Week to Peek | Fri Oct 14 1988 10:52 | 25 |
|
re: consumer items
I don't think that being a pro/semi pro should have much slant
on whether or not you get off (or on) consumer electronics. I have
an SK-1 and a DH-100. The best thing about 'em is that I can take
them up to my camp on weekends and sit out on the lawn and play
them - they run on batteries which the rest of my equipment isn't
really set up for. Given that I am not really a wind player anymore,
I couldn't justify the couple grand for an EWI or whatever, but
the DH-100 works fine, for me.
I just received the latest Casio product catalog. Definitely the
fall lineup has some new toys that look like they fall between semipro
and consumer.
For instance, they have a new keyboard controller (<$300) that
appears to have the same functionality as the LINC. (>$700). Likewise,
two new guitar controllers (X767,777? I'll check the model numbers)
which retail around $400-$500, and appear to have more features
than the previous generation. Also an entirely new line of MIDIfied
mid-range keyboards (no more CZ line). More on this later, when
I pry the catalog away from my partner.
/pjh
|
1723.4 | The MIDI Studio for the Kid Who Has Everything | AQUA::ROST | Canned ham, that's for me | Fri Oct 14 1988 11:01 | 8 |
|
I saw a blurb in STart magazine that Yamaha and Atari will be doing
a co-promotion this Christmas, with one of the new MIDIed Yammie
PortaSound boards bundled with a 520ST and some sequencing SW.
I think the blurb said Lechmere's would have it on the east coast.
|
1723.6 | MIDI instruments in latest Casio EMI catalog | ALEX::CONN | Alex Conn, ZKO | Fri Oct 14 1988 14:03 | 45 |
| Casio MIDI products:
MT-240 ($199.50) Mid size keyboard 49 key, 20 tones, all PCM,
2-level layering, 10-note poly, stereo, real
time memory (i.e., melody), 20 rhythm
MT-520 ($259.50) Same as MT-240 plus 8 preset sound effects.
MT-600 ($299.50) Mid size keyboard, 49 keys, 40 SD sounds, 20 PCM
rhythms, chord/pattern memory, 8 note poly, stereo,
pitch bender, pitch control.
HD-700 ($399.50) Same as MT-600 plus RAM card compatible, synthesizer
function, chorus effect, key transpose.
(Currently on sale through C.O.M.B for $199)
CT-460 ($329.00) Full size keyboard. 49 keys. 30 PCM tones, 20 PCM
rhythms, 8 sound effect patterns. 2-level layering.
Real time memory. Registration (4 position). Real time
memory. 10-note poly. Stereo. Auto harmonize. Stereo
CT-640 ($399.00) Same as CT-460 except 61 keys, and no sound effect
patterns.
CT-630 ($499.00) [discontinued but still available]. Has 3 split
points. 20 SD tones lower, 40 SD tones upper. 20 PCM
rhythms. 8-note poly. Auto harmonize, Pitch control
Stereo. Chord memory/operation memory.
CPS-101 ($449.00) Full size keyboard, 61 keys, Initial touch response.
10 (SD?) tones. 8-note poly. Chorus effect. Real
time memory. Pitch control. Stereo. Metronome.
DH-100 ($175.50) Sax. 6 tones. Portamento effect. Key transpose. Built
in speaker.
DG-20 ($449.00) Digital guitar. 20 present tones, 12 PCM rhythms.
Transpose. Mute. Sustain/Reverb effects. 20-fret
neck. Pitch control. Built in speaker. 4-built-in
drum solo pads. MIDI out.
Prices are list.
Alex
|
1723.7 | Yamaha PSR 36 | SCOMAN::LOGSDON | | Thu Oct 27 1988 10:36 | 5 |
| I am interested on information on the Yamaha PSR 36. Is this
a good machine to start my Daughter into midi from her present
CT 350. I have a price of 369.00 on this machine.
Thanks Dennis
|
1723.8 | Casio MT-540 | AQUA::ROST | You've got to stop your pleading | Fri Oct 28 1988 08:59 | 94 |
|
This is from USENET. The Casio MT-540 is (supposedly) identical to
the MT-240 except that it has additional "sound effects" tones in
addition to the 210-preset tone bank.
Newsgroups: rec.music.synth,rec.music.makers
Path: decwrl!labrea!rutgers!mailrus!cornell!uw-beaver!tektronix!orca!stank
Subject: Re: Yamaha PSS-140 (does it have MIDI?)
Posted: 26 Oct 88 21:55:42 GMT
Organization: Tektronix, Inc., Wilsonville, OR
Xref: decwrl rec.music.synth:5654 rec.music.makers:2914
In article <18.UUL1.2#[email protected]> [email protected] (Todd Ogasawara) writes:
>I've been wanting a little synth to stick in my office to
>noodle around on during lunch and maybe experiment a bit
>with my office Mac II. I just saw an advertisement for the
>$99.95 Yamaha PSS-140 in Time Magazine (of all places). It
>has a little "toy" keyboard (3 octaves, small sized keys)
>like the old Casio-101. The ad claims it has a lot of
>voices and a drum pad.
>
>My question is: Does it have a MIDI port?
I don't know much about the Yamaha PSS-140 but consider looking into
the the Casio line. I think they've got Yamaha beat, hands down, on
the low end consumer keyboards. If you don't mind the "toy" keys
they're great! Their low end boxes use the same phase-distortion
synthesis that their top models do, they get some great sounds. I've
messed around with several of the low end models in the local
department stores and overall I think Casio has the best sounds. I
own two cheapo Casio's, a CZ-230s and a CT-540. The CZ-230s was
pretty hot stuff two years ago but the newer models are a lot cheaper.
(I got the CT-540 for $189 a month ago, I paid $380 for the CZ-230s
two years ago.) One thing the CZ-230s has is a pitch-bend wheel, I
haven't seen one on any other low end box. The CT-540 has a lot
better MIDI implementation than the CZ-230s, you can have up to four
MIDI channels (three if you use external MIDI clock), but the channels
are hard-wired to MIDI channels 1-4. (On the CZ-230s you can change
the base channel.) On the CT-540 the number of notes of polyphony
varies with each channel the assignments are as follows:
channel 1 - 6 notes
channel 2 - 4 notes
channel 3 - 2 notes
channel 4 - 4 notes
Having only 2 notes available on channel 3 may seem limited, but it's
just fine for the kind of drum tracks that I do. (one of the
pre-defined patches is called percussion, it has various assorted
percussion instruments asssigned one per key.)
The CT-540 has 20 pre-set non-programable timbres (patches) available
from the push buttons and another 10 available from MIDI only.
Overall, the CZ-230s has a larger selection (99 total) but there are
some lame ones in there. (For comparison look at the new Yamaha low
end synth that Sears is starting to carry, the one with the drum pads
out in front of the keyboard, it has 99 pre-set patches, all of which
are lame. It does has programmable patches, so hopefully you could
program your own sounds that are better.) My favorite sound, of all
the low end synths, is the piano on the CT-540. You can actually hear
the hammer hitting the strings in the upper octave! The lower octave
sounds realistic too, but the envelope is a bit too short. I still
like the string synth sounds that I can get out of my old CZ-230s,
none of the new cheapo synths come close, yet. The main reason I
bought the CT-540 was for its piano sound and for the fact that you
can play the percussion timbre from MIDI. The CZ-230s has great drum
sounds (they used PCM technology) but you can't play them from MIDI.
The CT-540 drum sounds are a little on the lame side but they have
some interesting things like the ever popular gated (sp?) snare and
various blocks, cymbals and gongs. They lack proper closed and open
high hats, though. Also, they cymbols are just a bit too "splashy", I
think they over-did the stereo panning on them just a bit. (I guess I
forgot to mention that the CT-540 is a stereo box, the CZ-230s is
mono.) Also included on the CT-540 are two "sound effects" timbres,
the first has galloping horses, six gun shots, forest streams and
such, the second has city traffic, car horns, ocean surf and other
stuff. I don't use these much but I suppose one could use the car
horns to do a pretty good Jon Hammer/Jeff Beck "Freeway Jam", 'cept
you can't pitch bend.
Well that's all I have to say about cheapo synths from Casio. If
anyone out there has had any experience with the Casio CZ-230s I'd
like to hear from you. I'm currently trying to figure out what system
exclusive message is used to program timbres 96-99, the manual is real
vague on this.
Stank
--
US Mail: Stan Kalinowski, Tektronix, Inc.
Information Display Group, Graphics Workstations Division
PO Box 1000, MS 61-028, Wilsonville OR 97070 Phone:(503)-685-2458
uucp: {ucbvax,decvax,allegra,uw-beaver}!tektronix!orca!stank
|
1723.9 | Comparable Casio for Sale | ALEX::CONN | Alex Conn, ZKO | Fri Oct 28 1988 14:28 | 3 |
| RE: .7
See for sale note 12.58
|
1723.10 | Low end Yamaha units? | TEA::PETERS | Don Peters, CTS1-2/H6, 287-3742 | Fri Nov 11 1988 13:03 | 5 |
| I was glad to see the notes on the low end Casio MIDI devices, but yesterday
I saw an ad for a Yamaha low end MIDI keyboard. I think the model was
a PSS-480, and the cost was about $140. Does anyone have anymore info on
this unit, and how it compares to the Casios?
|
1723.11 | CASIO MT-640 | BRAT::OCONNELL | JACK O'CONNELL @MKO 264-5670 | Sat Nov 12 1988 18:53 | 12 |
| The latest DAK catalog has a Casio Model MT-640 listed for $299.00
It sounds similar to the MT-600 but has a built in memory. Does
anyone know if this would be a good instrument to experiment with?
Does it have outputs that could feed a stereo system?
Thanks for the info.
Jack
|
1723.12 | More on Casio MT-240 | AQUA::ROST | Hum-dum-dinger from Dingersville | Tue Nov 22 1988 08:50 | 49 |
|
Re: .8
After a half hour demo with an MT-240, I'd like to add the following:
1. The piano is indeed fantastic. It is *not* touch sensitive.
However, it does sound like a real piano. Quite impressive for
under $200.
2. Most of the other patches are, as usual, poor. Good pipe organ,
harpsichord, accordion, "synth-reed", and lousy vocal chorus (weird
attack), brass, strings and jazz organ. The "stereo" effect can
be bothersome as it uses audible panning.....ugh. For external
amplification, I'd stick with mono.
3. The drum sounds (independent of the rhythm box) appear on the
white keys and are called up as a patch. Provided are kick, snare,
*gated* snare, ride and crash cymbals, *choked* crashes, congas,
timbales, agogo bell, etc. Not velocity sensitive. As noted, the
crashes are a bit splashy but overall not bad sounding. Unlike
the rhythm section (which appears to use the same sounds) using
the drum sounds steals from the 12 notes total polyphony.
4. The bass patch is a split. Bottom 2 octaves are "wood bass",
like an upright, sort of. Top 2 octaves are a poor electric "slap"
bass patch, transposed down two octaves.
5. No tone mixing with MIDI operation (sigh).
6. The unit has a fixed multi-timbral setup. Channel one is six
note poly, channel two is four note poly, channel three is two note
poly. Notice that this gives two more notes than you can get from
the keyboard!!! Omni-off/poly mode only. Transmit appears to be
fixed on channel one.
7. Channel 4 accepts patch change messages *only*. It is *not* four
note poly as .8 stated. It is used to drive the rhythm box. Patch
change 0-19 selects the rhythm. When using the rhythm section with
an external sequencer, the MT-240 *must* be the master clock source.
8. Patch change 0-19 on channels 1,2 or 3 select a patch from the
20 presets. Patch change 20-29 will select 10 additional presets
not acessible from the front panel. These include a second set
of brass and string patches, fantasy organ, etc. I was unable to
audition these. The unit can *transmit* only patch changes 0-19.
9. The unit will respond to 61 notes (i.e. one octave above its
own keyboard), sustain, patch changes.
|
1723.13 | Some late comments | ALEX::CONN | Alex Conn, ZKO | Wed Mar 01 1989 10:19 | 65 |
| RE: .* Here are some delayed responses. (I must have hit next unseen and
missed these at some point.)
RE: .7
The Yamaha PSR36 is one of the nicer consumer keyboards out at this point.
It has 61 keys, not touch sensitive. Its major feature is a set of
sliders (each with something like 5 positions) that perform modest
synthesizer functions (you can alter some of the envelope characteristics,
brilliance, vibrato, etc). The FM sounds are not bad as a whole. They
have quite a nice selection of bass and obbligato and drum patterns. Some
percussion programming is possible (although I have not had a chance to
check it out).
Check the price out carefully. Service Merchandise regularly has it on
sale for $279. Treisman's (Nashua) has similar prices, I believe.
RE: .11
I see no Casio listing for MT-640. The CT-640 is normally sold by Service
Merchandise for $299 and goes on sale for $279. The CT-640 does have
outputs that could feed a stereo system.
RE: .12
It appears that Casio uses the same "all PCM" chip in its entire new line
of home keyboards. Thus the stereo keyboards: MT-240, MT-540, CT-360,
CT-607, CT-460, and CT-640 should sound the same and may respond the same
to MIDI. (The 460 and 540 also have special sound effects.) Thus,
although your unit may only have 49 keys, it will respond to 61 notes.
Also the chip has 30 patches, so your keyboard will indeed respond to all
30 even if the front panel only has 20 push buttons.
General comments:
I generally agree with the assessment in .12. In an attempt to have
exciting patches, Casio sometimes builds in a heavy chorus or preset
modulation or encodes PCM presets from sources with high attack or release
envelope values. The result is that an instrument may be quite good
(piano, pipe organ, harpsichord) or quite bothersome. You keep looking
for some control to adjust the modulation! On the other hand, Yamaha is
moving toward "consumer understandable" synth parameters, allowing the
user to add vibrato, select among a small set of waveforms and do some
envelope modification. Casio is banking on the fact that what sound good
in the store at quick audition will sell best.
If piano sound is critical to you, Casio might be a good choice. If you
need some "pure" tones that are not terribly exciting but also not very
annoying, look into something like the Yamaha PSR-36.
Velocity sensitivity:
--------------------
Velocity or initial touch sensitivity is becoming available at lower and
lower prices. In my opinion, anyone trying to learn piano should look
closely at these units. It's one thing to argue about whether expensive
weighted electronic keyboards can precisely mimic the feel of a good
piano. It's another thing to try to learn piano without having the
opportunity to understand and feel what it's like to play a piece
emphasizing the melody while playing the harmony. Without velocity
sensitivity you simply can't learn that aspect of piano (which I believe
is critically important). So if the keyboard is meant to be a replacement
of a piano, be careful. If it's meant as an organ (or a toy) don't worry.
Alex
|
1723.14 | Casio or Yamaha Model #'s | ANOVAX::CWOODLEY | confusion has its' cost | Tue Oct 23 1990 11:58 | 42 |
| OK all you "pros" out there, I'm a non-musical type in search of a
consumer keyboard and am dazzled by the amount of model numbers. I want to buy
one for my wife for X-mas. She can play several instruments and is primarily
interested in piano sound quality. She seems to think the Casio has better piano
sound than the Yamaha. Is this true or is there "electronic adjustments" that
you can make. Also this velocity sensitivity sounds interesting; how would a
novice determine this in a store? We want one with full size keys, but is 49
acceptable or do you need 61?
I'm providing a list of the model's I've found so far, maybe you folks
can pick out a good one. It seems as the numbers get higher the price also goes
up. Does this indicate quality or just more "bells and whistles"? Are there any
features that are "must have"? Can anyone tell me what the model # prefix
letters indicate ie: Casio's CA/CT/MT and Yamaha's PSR/PSS? Anyone have any
"800" numbers for Casio or Yamaha where I could call and get product brochures?
Here's the list:
CASIO CT-670 $349
CT-655 $319
CT-615 $159
CT-470 $279
CT-390 $149
CT-370 $119
CA-401 $169
CA-100 $100
MT-540 $129
MT-260 $99
MT-240 $99
YAMAHA PSR-27 $179
PSR-18 $168
PSR-6 $129
PSR-2 $96
KAWAI FS610 $159
Thanks,
Craig
|
1723.15 | velocity | VICE::JANZEN | 70% chance of East Coast quake by 2020 | Tue Oct 23 1990 12:57 | 4 |
| To determine if a synth is velocity-sensitive, hit the key faster and
slower. If the sound if louder or softer with different speeds, it is
velocity sensitive.
Tom
|
1723.16 | The Yamaha YPR-9 is a good box (61 keys) | DOOLIN::HNELSON | Evolution in action | Tue Oct 23 1990 13:29 | 19 |
| The people in this conference won't know much about the class of
keyboards you've described; COMMUSICians generally spend about one
order of magnitude more bucks on their toys.
I'm a happy owner of a Yamaha YPR-9, which is touch-sensitive (this is
vital) and has a decent piano sound. The YPR also has MIDI out, which
means that you could buy a piano (or other) module and drive it from
the YPR keyboard (a tricky key combination turns off the YPR's sounds).
This machine was top-rated by Consumers Reports a few years back, on
the basis of sound quality. It's still available in stores: I've seen
prices varying between $400 and $500 during the last six months. I got
mine through the want-ads for $350, two years ago.
In general:
- get touch sensitivity (vital)
- MIDI out gives lots of potential
- listen to it
FWIW - Hoyt
|
1723.17 | Some New Yamaha Models Out This Year | AQUA::ROST | Neil Young and Jaco in Zydeco Hell | Tue Oct 23 1990 14:36 | 30 |
| Re: .14, .16
The Yamaha YPR-9 is discontinued, although some dealers may still have
them. I plead ignorance to what the followup model is, but I've seen
and heard one and the piano sound is much better. The YPR is basically
a piano, it doesn't have the built-in rhythm section and 120-gazillion
sounds. It *does* have a few extra sounds, things like an organ,
harpsichord, stuff like that. There was also a (less expensive) YPR-7
made.
The prefixes on Casios doesn't seem to mean too much; originally "CT"
was for Casiotone. The "PS" in the Yamaha names stands for Portasound.
Exclusive of the YPR series, the Casios do have a better piano sound,
to my ear anyway.
49 keys will seem cramped to someone familiar with a piano. I've
noticed that 61 key models seem to be more common, with recent models
from Casio, Kawai and Yamaha.
Velocity keys will probably kick you up over $300, I have yet to see a
board under $300 with it. Most of the machines you noted simply
increase the "gee-whiz" features as price goes up, so if a surrogate
piano is the main thing, remember you have to *pay* for all the goodies
even if you don't use them.
There is a note with manufacturer's addresses and phone numbers in the
beginning of this cobnference, note 6, maybe?
Brian
|
1723.18 | The rhythm section stuff can be fun, though | DOOLIN::HNELSON | Evolution in action | Tue Oct 23 1990 17:27 | 6 |
| Daddy's has three YPR-9's, one in the Nasha store and two in the
warehouse, for $399 new. There *is* a new Yamaha, I forgot, and it *is*
a nicer piano sound. The YPR is decent, though, especially the
next-to-lowest G. And the YPR *vibes* is superb!
- Hoyt
|
1723.19 | Roland's New Line Of Sampled Pianos | AQUA::ROST | Neil Young and Jaco in Zydeco Hell | Wed Oct 31 1990 16:27 | 39 |
|
Three brand new Roland electric pianos out.
EP-3: 61 keys, no velocity
EP-5: 61 keys, velocity, "song recorder" (simple sequencer)
EP-7: 76 weighted keys, 4-song "recorder", digital chorus and reverb.
All three use sampled sounds with "time varying filters". All have
stereo headphone outs (2!!, for 4-hands or teaching applications) and
stereo line outs. EP-3 speaker setup is mono, though, others are
stereo. A music stand and damper pedal are included. Power is by a
wall bug.
There are five sounds, piano, electric piano, vibes, (pipe) organ and
string section. The e-piano and vibes were so-so, the strings *very*
good. Oh yeah, the piano is nice, too!! I demoed the -3 (others
weren't in yet) and missed the velocity response, otherwise, pretty
nice. 24 voice polyphony.
MIDI functions allow setting transmit and recieve channels independent,
omni on/off, local on/off and patch change enable/disable. MIDIphiles
will be interested that patch changes are on boundaries of 4, that is,
piano is on patches 1-4, e-piano on 5-8, etc. Also, going beyond patch
20 (for the strings) gets you into a range of layered patches, not
accessible from the front panel (piano + strings, organ + vibes, etc.).
No splits. Like most home pianos, this one uses weird button pushes for
the MIDI functions, you will need the manual. Good (maybe bad?) news
is that the main manual is only 3 pages long and the MIDI supplement
another 3.
Prices?
List is $400 for the -3, $600 for the -5, forget what the -7 was
supposed to be. Stands are optional extras.
Brian
|
1723.20 | PSS 790 | IGETIT::BROWNM | BASS-ICly WARPed!!! | Thu Nov 01 1990 13:23 | 31 |
| 299 pounds (UK) Yamaha PSS 790.
This has 100 voices (sounds), 100 accompaniaments (incl. rhythms), 8
track sequencer, vector sysnthesis and MIDI in, out & thru.
the voices sound great for a consumer k/b. Apparently they are
produced by Yamaha's AWM method. Using the Vector synthesis you can
assign any voice to any of 4 positions (UP, DOWN, LEFT, RIGHT). Using
a joystick you can switch through the sounds as you play. If you leave
it in the middle you get all 4 sounds playing at once, or you can blend
any 2 sounds together at any ratio. It's dead good fun assigning
Choir, Strings, etc, then playing while swiveling the joystick!
Though the sequncer is advertised as 8 track is is really only 5 track.
on the 6th track you can record automatic accompaniament changes, on
the other track you can program rhythm. You have about 60 drum sounds
(nice sounds too) that you can assign to the 8 drum pads at the front.
From there you can build you rhythm as you wish. Can't remember what
the 8th track is for - I have a feeling it is for MIDI data or
something like that.
With the rhythm track or any of the melody tracks you can actually
record part, then add later.
It's also something like 28 note polyphonic, but it does have mini
keys, and of course they are'nt touch sensitive.
It's amazing what they can do nowadays!
matty
|
1723.21 | Roland EP-7 update, please? | FILTON::ROBINSON_M | Nobody expects the SPANISH Inquisition! | Tue Jun 25 1991 07:04 | 6 |
| re .19 - Roland Sampled Pianos
This note refers to the EP-3, EP-5 and EP-7. Has anyone got anymore
information on the EP-7? Is the EP-7e the same thing, or an update?
Martin Robinson @BSO
|