T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1796.1 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Sing with the clams, knave! | Tue Dec 06 1988 13:18 | 6 |
| My HR arrived with a cold solder joint and a dislodged piezo. I
fixed them both myself and the unit hasn't given me any static since.
The 707 is very dependable. The HR sounds better. What luck...
Edd
|
1796.2 | Nobody's Perfect | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Dec 06 1988 13:25 | 15 |
| I have a Roland 707, 727 and 909. They have functioned flawlessly
for in excess of three years. The 707 has seen some traveling,
the 727 and 909 have been limited to studio use.
I also have an HR-16. I haven't used it much but it seems to be
working ok (I don't use the sequencer part of it). I've had it
about 4 months.
The HR-16 and 707/727 sound about the same. The cymbals in the
909 sound better than anything else available. The rest of the
909 varies from awful to pretty good. The HR-16 has more flexibility
in terms of tuning drum sounds and configuring kits.
len.
|
1796.3 | My experiances | TYFYS::MOLLER | Holloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Tue Dec 06 1988 13:36 | 49 |
| Roland TR-606 : Bought in 1983 - constant use for live performances.
Has been dropped at least twice. No Failures, other
than jammed keys (these were a result of a drop -
easily reset without taking apart - just required
wiggling the keys. Solidly built. Documentation: Fair
Alesis MMT-8 : Sequencer, but the same packaging as the HR-16.
Nice software implementation, considering limitations
imposed by the type of device it is. Sequencer has
Key bounce problem - I would never try to play anything
Live that was not in a SONG format, as it's easy to
accidently select random areas. I've had it apart 3
times. 1st time was when the sequencer seemed to
randomly reset itself when I hit the record button -
it was missing about half of the screws that held the
keyboard in place. 2nd time was when it didn't sem to
work correctly when it was cold (as in take out of the
back of the van after driving 50 miles on a cold
night), but worked ok when warmed up - I resoldered
all connections on both the keyboard & CPU module.
3rd time was when it wouldn't Record anymore (all other
keyboard functions were working) - I took the key pads
off (they are conductive rubber) & cleaned the keyboard
with tape head cleaner. This was the second MMT-8, the
first one would not always play the parts that you
selected, even tho the leds on the front showed that it
was, and some of the other parts (tracks) were being
played correctly. Not Solidly built. Documentation:
Mediocre & hard to follow. (bought in Feb 1988)
Roland TR-505 : Bought used in June 1988. Similar to TR-606 in
function, but has MIDI interface. No failures incurred
from the previous owner who used it with his 3 piece
for approximatly 2 years of live performance work.
Covered with grime when I got it. I cleaned it & have
had no problems with it (at least 20 live performances
since I've had it. Solidly built. Documentation: Fair
Would I buy another Roland Product: Yes, they tend to be reliable.
Would I buy an HR-16: No, I simply don't trust my MMT-8 for real
time use as I use my TR-505 & TR-606 (yes,
I still use them both) & that is what I would
expect of my drum machine (I switch 1 & 2
measure patterns many times during a song).
Jens
|
1796.4 | Once an HR-16 is OK, it stays so forever. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | I don't want to rule the Universe, I just want to see it. | Tue Dec 06 1988 13:39 | 13 |
| My HR-16 came with a bad power supply plug. Other than that it
has behaved flawlessly.
The "fill" capability, followed by a short time offsetting for one
drum is particularly useful.
-----
Are you considering it as an SGU, as a full drum machine, or what?
...and would you be interested in buying an Octapad with it? :-)
-Bill
|
1796.5 | beat it | SUBSYS::ORIN | AMIGA te amo | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:22 | 44 |
| Chris,
I've had the following drum machines with the following results:
PAIA drum machine kit:
Came with some incorrect parts, and missing parts. The kick drum circuit
never did work correctly. This was late 70's. It was fairly reliable but
never sounded very good. Still, it was better than nothing when your live
drummer was unavailable.
EMU Drumulator:
Characteristic "tinny snare sound". Never had any trouble with it though.
Roland TR707:
Very nice user interface. Never had any maintenance problems. Sounds were
ok in context with other instruments.
Oberheim DMX:
Very overpriced, but had some great "punchy drum sounds". Never had any
maintenance problems. You can pick up a used one pretty cheap now.
Linn Drum:
Had some intermittent problems caused by wiring and chip sockets. Somewhat
noisy mixer section.
Korg DDD-5:
Very solid unit with extremely powerful and flexible (although complicated)
sequencer. Additional sounds available on ROM cards. Some quantization noise
in drum samples. Never any maintenance problems.
Alesis HR-16:
Great sounds, low price. Mechanical problems include "noisy" data entry slider
pot and switch bounce. It is very susceptible to static electricity problems.
The original power connector was very poor design. The connector problem was
supposedly corrected in later models. Excellent factory support.
dave
|
1796.6 | Bad luck Blickstein | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:24 | 24 |
| HR-16 costs about $400. 707 goes for about $250. Not sure what
your trade-offs are but:
------------------------------------------------------------------
Casio RZ-1 - never had any problems
----------------------------------------------------------------
Alesis HR-16 - never had any problems
------------------------------------------------------------------
Roland (since someone talked about non-drum machines I can too)
MT-32 - developed a nasty hum this weekend - no amount of isolation
seems to get rid of it. To the shop it goes
SRV-2000 - developed excessive scratch noise, to the shop it goes
RD-300 - has performed flawless other than a few "crashes" where you
can't change sounds without turning it on and off.
S-550 - first one failed (wouldn't boot) within a week. My new one
crashes about once every two weeks but that's probably a software
failure, not hardware.
JC-120 - no problems
db
|
1796.7 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | Love is a decision ... | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:40 | 10 |
| I've had good luck so far with no failures on anything (Roland: TR-505,
S-10; Yamaha: TX81Z, QX5; Casio: CZ-101; Alesis: MV2). I've had all
of it (except the S-10) for about a year and a half. I think it
helps to have surge protection and filtering on the power lines.
Also, my stuff stays put most of the time. If anything, I expect
the buttons on the QX5 and the disk drive on the S-10 to be the
first things to go. The rest of it will probably not need anything
until a few years away when I need to replace internal batteries.
Steve
|
1796.8 | | SALSA::MOELLER | loose slips link lips. | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:41 | 6 |
| < Note 1796.5 by SUBSYS::ORIN "AMIGA te amo" >
>Oberheim DMX:
>Very overpriced, but had some great "punchy drum sounds". Never had any
>maintenance problems. You can pick up a used one pretty cheap now.
Warning.. NO MIDI, pads not velocity-sensitive. Fat sounds, tho
|
1796.9 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:45 | 23 |
| I have had the following Roland gear:
JX3-P: gripes "fully midi compatable" if you believe that I hhave
some land in Florida....reliable but don't try to buy the midi dynamics
upgrade (out of stock for 6 months...)
TR-707: sounds were ok for it's time but today it's obsolete
worked great very reliable
SDE-1000: lasted one gig, no service manuals avaialble for the
forseable future....broke down and waiting for documents
ALesis gear:
HR-16: sounds good works great lasts (so far) a long time
Midiverb ii: ditto
comparing the two I'd also say that Alesis can write manuals and
Roland only generates written confusion
dbii
|
1796.10 | Here's my 2� | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Just say Yo | Tue Dec 06 1988 16:18 | 73 |
|
I have/have had:
Roland:
JX-3P: Sounds were excellent. Manual was trash. MIDI
implementation was minimal. Reliability was reasonable. Unit has
never required service in it's 5-year life, although it is susceptible
to line noise (which cause crashes).
TR-707: Had it three years, it never failed and was used at
least four days a week. Manual was pitiful. MIDI implementation
acceptable, although cryptic. It never crashed and was the first
machine I ever had that performed reliable tape backups and restores.
MKS-50: AGAIN, THE MANUAL SUCKS. But it sounds great and is
relatively simple-minded anyway. It has never failed.
PAD-8 (Octapad): Manual? We don't need no stinkin manuals. It
is very susceptible to static (makes random hits if you look at
it wrong) but it is quite indestructable. Although abused, works
like a champ.
M-160: Mixer. Lousy manual but who cares? Beautiful, high quality,
been reviewed extensively, gets consistent high marks. Mine sits
in a rack but has survived about 10 gigs as well, including one
where the stage was 95 degrees...
Korg:
Polysix: Had it six years, the battery hasn't even died yet.
The manual, although thick with multiple languages, is at least
readable, if somewhat humorous occasionally. Has survived such traumas
as falling off a truck (in it's case) and having a pitcher of beer
spilled into it (had to turn it over to pour the beer out)...
Mono-Poly: Haven't had it as long, but ditto. Neither has ever
been hurt.
DDD-1: Manual is bizarre. Sounds are neat. Indestructable by
my standards, although I'm sure some gorilla could punch holes in
it.
Alesis:
MIDIVERB II: Received with a soft key ripped out. Was replaced
at the dealer with Alesis parts. Had a cold solder joint in power
inlet. Repaired by me (replaced solid wire with stranded...duhhhh!).
Hasn't failed since (approx 10 months). Gets pretty constant use.
HR-16. Never had a problem, surprisingly. I don't think the
manual is all that great. I don't use the sequencer. Has many
documented quirks. I like it anyway.
Ensoniq:
ESQ-1: Have had two years. Best manual of them all. Battery
died this week (although it warned me to make a backup before it
died...thanks Ensoniq). Lost a key recently, but self-repaired and
it's holding up.
EPS: Have had since March. Built like bricks. Has survived
much shipping and handling. Disk still holding up, although I have
lost a couple of floppies recently ("disk data corrupted"...some
error message). Verdict is still out on the manual because we don't
have all of it yet, although previews indicate usual Ensoniq quality.
This is hardly all of the stuff, but that's what I consider the
high-use items that traveled and are pertinent to this discussion.
/pjh
|
1796.11 | Roland User... | MASTER::DDREHER | | Tue Dec 06 1988 16:38 | 27 |
|
Roland:
Jupiter-6: Bought new, I've had it 4-years, never a break down.
Manual is awful.
MC-500: Bought new 1 1/2 years ago, never a break down.
Manual is better then Rolands usual (fair).
SDE-3000: Bought new 3 years ago, no problems. Manual fair.
MKS-30: Bought used 1 year ago, no problems, manual poor.
S-50: Bought used 1 year ago w/V2.0 software, no problems.
Manual is fair.
MKB-200: Bought new 1 1/2 years ago, no problems, manual
fair.
Some of this stuff has been moved around from time to time.
I've found Roland gear to be very dependable and but manuals
are lacking. After several years, I'm actially proficient in
Roland English.
Never owned any Alesis gear.
|
1796.12 | huh? | HAMER::COCCOLI | are we not men? | Tue Dec 06 1988 20:48 | 5 |
| WHAT IS THIS? The poor guy just wants to know which drum box to
buy. Get the HR-16. It sounds great without having to be overly
processed. I have both the HR-16 and a Roland 626 and I like the
Alesis better. Never had a problem with either.
|
1796.13 | eeny meeny miny....... | SALEM::DACUNHA | | Wed Dec 07 1988 10:34 | 13 |
|
Thanks a lot!! Everyone...8^)
From what I've read, it seems Alesis had
some QC problems but have since ironed most of them
out. I'm going to pick one up this week!!
Thanks again
Chris
|
1796.14 | Oh, They're Not Supposed to Sound Like Real Drums | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Dec 07 1988 10:35 | 9 |
| I'm really surprised by the assertions that the HR-16 sounds "better"
than the TR-707, or that the -707's sounds are "obsolete".
I guess I just don't know what drums and cymbals are supposed to sound
like.
len (owner of a 7-piece Ludwig acoustic kit, a "spare" snare drum,
and at least a dozen A. Zildjian, K. Ziljian and Sabian cymbals).
|
1796.15 | *NO* MIDI synth is obsolete, just not popular now | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | Love is a decision ... | Wed Dec 07 1988 11:03 | 3 |
| Git 'im, len! Git 'im ...
Steve (a happy 505 owner who would LIKE a 16, but is still happy)
|
1796.16 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:00 | 10 |
| I feel that the 707 cymbol sounds were obsolete when it came out.
Compared to the HR-16 the sounds are not as clear, not as useful
to me...I sold my 707 but then I don't need more than one drum machine.
not to sell the 707 short, it did a good job for me, but it's an
obsolete machine, I think Roland acknoleges that since they no longer
manufacture the product.
dbii
|
1796.17 | A dissenting *opinion*. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:54 | 21 |
| Sigh. More ballyhoo about personal preference.
I don't have your hardware, Len, and I'm certainly not as accomplished
as you as a drummer, but I can play a real kit fairly well, and have
used many different (and nice) kits on various occasions. And I have
been told by most people I've played with for very long that my ear is
as good as they come.
I sold my TR707 in favor of an HR16. The 707 has per voice individual
outputs, is very rugged and (depending on your taste) a bit easier to
program. But for sound quality and bang for the buck, I'll take my HR
any day of the week. This is my opinion, of course, but I think the
base samples (tuneablility notwithstanding) on the HR blow the 707 out
of the water. And they should, as the technology differential between
the machines is quite high.
To be fair, the technology delta is greater than the sonic delta - but
I'm not the least bit disappointed with my HR16. I'm glad I switched
when I did.
-b
|
1796.18 | Somebody make up my mind! | WRO8A::CORTOPADA | | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:10 | 12 |
| I've got to upgrade from my old dynosaur (a Roland Drumatrix).
I usually use step-programming, and understand this relic well,
and am leaning towards the TR626 in hopes of not having to re-learn
programming a drum machine all over again. I also feel more confident
with Roland reliability.
Can anyone out there relate to this upgrade?... or is there no basis
for my desire to convert my current programming knowledge to a TR626?
I've been pleased with the Drumatrix, but want the midi feature
to used with my Mac and Performer software.
dc
|
1796.19 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Wed Dec 07 1988 14:17 | 14 |
| If you're going to learn a new sequenccer anyway (with your PC) then
your programming knowlege of Roalnd isn't likely to do much good.
I found very little difficulty in learning the HR-16 sequencer,
not that I've mastered it, but it's easy to begin using within I'd
say an hour.
The TR-626 is rumored to have very good sounds (I haven't heard one),
much better than the TR-707 or TR-505 but the HR-16 is still probably
the best sounding machine on the market except for perhaps Roland's new
machine the R-8. The R-8 sells for over twice the cost of an HR-16, or
rather will sell for, when it becomes available, (if history repeats
itself) in 3-6 months.
dbii
|
1796.20 | HR or death | SRFSUP::MORRIS | You're one in a million | Wed Dec 07 1988 14:30 | 13 |
|
re: .17
I concur completely. I dumped my 626 in favor of the HR16 because
of the sounds, and the fact that you can tune over such a wider
range. Yeah the 626 runs on batteries, has a headphone jack, you
can play it on planes, is easier to program.
The HR16 is difficult to program (comparatively speaking), but is
much more flexible. And it has velo-sensitive keys. And it will
record velo information via MIDI. And it simply sounds better.
Ashley
|
1796.21 | | LEDDEV::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Wed Dec 07 1988 14:40 | 9 |
|
HR-16: Worked for almost a year. Broke. Sent it in.
6 days later: fixed. No charge.
Given all the schtuff inside that little box,
Im reasonably impressed.
ron
|
1796.22 | Dont forget Y*.* | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Wed Dec 07 1988 15:39 | 6 |
| I know this is a Roland/Alesis topic, but as youre thinking of
upgrading dont forget the Y word, check out the RX7. I did and never
looked at an Alesis again!!
Ken
|
1796.23 | Upgrade | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Wed Dec 07 1988 17:03 | 15 |
| On the subject up upgrading from a Drumatrix (thats a TR-606), to a
TR-626. This is an easy progression since they are very similar in
archetecture. One thing that is different is that you can't have both
hi-hat closed & open at the same time on the TR-626 (or 505/707).
For patterns that are different than the standard quantized versions
on the TR series, since you are planning on using a sequencer, you can
play anything that you want. My TR-606 & TR-505 are doing just fine &
sound good thru my P.A. & home studio. You have to decide what you
are going to use it for & then what you want it sound like before
going any buying either. The way I use my TR-505 is pretty difficult
on the HR-16 (the sequencers are very different) & I simply don't
have faith in the Alesis drum machine's construction reliability.
Jens
|
1796.24 | ..this is in the U.K. | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Dec 08 1988 04:26 | 5 |
| Don't know about Roland, but I bought a used MMT8 privately, and
when the memory backup broke 6 months later Alesis fixed it free,
upgraded the o/s and paid the postage within a week.
Richard.
|
1796.25 | Long Live Obsolete Technology | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Dec 08 1988 13:34 | 30 |
| Well, a lot of people sure do believe that the HR-16 sounds "better"
than the TR-707, but to my ears they sound more like one another
than either of them sounds like real drums. I had a TR-606 (Drumatix)
and it was clearly inferior in sound to the 707 et seq. I really
don't hear that much of a difference in sound "quality" between
the HR-16 and the TR-707. Yes, the TR-707 ride sucks out loud,
but the HR-16's isn't a whole lot better. The rest of the sounds
on the -707 (except snare2, which is one of the worst sounding snares
I've ever heard, but seems to be the preference of many people)
are pretty good. The HR-16's main virtue is not so much the quality
of its sounds as it is the ability to tune them and the very large
selection (i.e., it offers most of the sounds that you have to have
both a -707 and -727 to get), and of course, its very attractive
low price. Its crash cymbal sounds trashy to me, even tuned low,
and requires more outboard assistance than the -707's. Only one
of the snares seems worthwhile to me. De gustibus non disputandam
est.
Again, maybe I'm just too used to the sound of real drums and cymbals,
as opposed to what a lot of people think they're supposed to sound
like.
My -707 and -727 are no more "obsolete" than my Super Jupiter and
JX-10. Just because Roland doesn't make them anymore doesn't mean
they no longer sound good. In many respects they sound *better*
than a lot of equipment available nowadays. I wish I could buy
another Super Jupiter.
len.
|
1796.26 | A Thought | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Dec 08 1988 13:35 | 5 |
| Perhaps the difference in Roland's and Alesis's service departments
is related to how heavily they're used?
len.
|
1796.27 | Maybe Alesis Service Has No Choice | AQUA::ROST | Hum-dum-dinger from Dingersville | Thu Dec 08 1988 14:08 | 7 |
|
Re: .26
Also consider what would happen to Alesis if they *didn't* provide
super-quick turnarounds on these repairs....
|
1796.28 | an idea | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Thu Dec 08 1988 16:36 | 11 |
|
Though my ears aren't trained to anything and aren't that sensitive, I think
the "realness" of a sound is dependent on its context.
I don't have a drum machine but I do load up drum samples in my TX16W. When
I audition them by themselves, they all sound very fake, but when played as
part of a real tune, they sound like real drums to me. I don't notice any
of the "inconsistencies" when played in ensemble as opposed to single
audition. The same goes for other non-drum sounds.
Chad
|
1796.29 | any drumbox vs real drums | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Fri Dec 09 1988 04:31 | 13 |
| re: .-1
I agree. I've had more experience pre-midi, trying to get a real
kit to sound decent on tape, than I have with drum machines. And
NOTHING used to sound less like a real drum kit than a real drum
kit prior to chorus/delay/gate/compression and younameit boxes.
If this is what Len means when he says no drumbox sounds like real
drums, then I agree -- but Len's experience in getting real drums
to sound right on tape (which, doubtless, also has a lot to do with
studio technique in playing them) is not part of my musical c.v.!
Richard.
|
1796.30 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Fri Dec 09 1988 07:49 | 35 |
| Hmm perhaps my 707 had begun to go south by the time I sold it. I can
remember thinking it sounded pretty good at first but as time went by
it didn't sound like either real drums or like what I hear recorded by
pro's either. A/B-ing it with the HR-16 I bought really showed the
difference several years of technology makes. The HR sparkled next to
the 707. Specifically there was no snap to the snares, the cymbols we
agreee on so there's no point in mentioning them...the bass drum seemed
muddy with no punch, actually nothing seemed to have much punch,
perhaps the lack of individually assignable dynamics was a part of the
problem...if I remember correctly the 707 is a 12 bit machine, the HR
uses 16...seems like every 12 bit machine or effect I've dealt with has
had a muddy or muddier sound than the 16 bit'rs I've had/played
with....I would say that the 707 seemed to be slightly more ruggedly
packaged, but only slightly (I have had both open), slightly in
that Roland used a harder plastic. If I was gonna gig with either
one I'd buy or make a decently padded road case for it and expect
it to die inconviently regardless of make (the cynical road-weary
guitarist comes out....)
Going back and listening to recordings made with the 707 shows me that
either the sound wasn't that great or I had lousy recording technique
or both....I suspect both played a part in the whole thing.
My drummer hated the sound of the 707, "mechanical and unrealistic" he
rates the HR-16 as "I can't believe this is a machine, it sounds like
real drums", nuff said.
I have found Alesis to be more realiable and responsive, FOR ME, that
Roland ever dreamed about being. But, keep in mind that I've got an
open gripe with Roland right now and a broken digital delay that I
can't diagnose for 1 1/2 to 2 months, if the replacement parts take as
long it'd be more effective to scrap it and buy a new one...or pay
their techs to do what I know I can do cheaper.
dbii
|
1796.31 | 1 2 3 and 4 | WARDER::KENT | | Thu Dec 15 1988 10:34 | 24 |
|
3 things
1 I have a DDD-1 It's never broke yet. I understood the manual.
2 I think the Hr16 sounds better than the TR707. But I can't remember
the last time I heard real drums in a recording context. But they
both do the Job.
3 I was a Roland R8 this week. It was the one of the first 2 delivered
to my local shop this week it was just going out again. Both had
been sold within 1 hour of delivery. Never even got a chance to
see the insides of the Box.
Paul.
P.S. If you wan to make a drum machine sound human why
don't you program it from a keyboard.
Has nyone heard the new Akai 16 bit drum expander. Sounded brilliant
to me !
|
1796.32 | Paul Kent, Human Drum Machine?? | AQUA::ROST | Marshall rules but Fender controls | Fri Dec 16 1988 15:45 | 6 |
|
Re: .31
So, Paul, how did you like being an R8 for a week?
8^) 8^) 8^) 8^)
|
1796.33 | I Am Enlightened!!! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Dec 16 1988 16:19 | 13 |
| OK, I give up, the HR-16 sounds "better" than the TR-707.
And the way to make drums sound more realistic is to play them from
a keyboard. Regardless of what the drum machine's sounds sound
like.
So, I guess the way to make synthesized violins sound more realistic
is, uhm, oh yes, I've got it now, *play them from the keyboard*!
And saxes too! And guitars!
len (whose MIDIcortex just fused into slag)
|
1796.34 | Humanoids rule KO | WARDER::KENT | | Mon Dec 19 1988 12:17 | 22 |
|
re .32
Hey this could be fun....
sorry I lied I never was a drum machine. I wanted to be one but
am so dyslexic when typing over a slow line that I can't get my
point across.
re. 33
Len you do me a diservice.. I didn't actually say real I said "more
human" the point being that the R8 has "humanising" techniques built
into it which are really just quantising rules with built in timing
errors. My point being that if you program a drum pattern with a
keyboard and sequencer these so called "humanising techniques" get
built in. As to realism. What's real? And who mentioned viledins?
Paul. >-) (smiling with my eyes closed)
|
1796.35 | You'll Never Take My -707 Away!!! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Dec 19 1988 13:50 | 26 |
| No, the R-8 does more than make "timing errors". And as we have
already noted before, it isn't "timing errors" that make things
sound right, but consistent timing subtleties not often captured
by coarse resolution step time programming. Using a keyboard (or
any other form of real time controller) doesn't guarantee that the
player has the requisite timing skills to produce the desired effect.
My step-timed (robotic) drum parts sound a lot more "realistic"
than some rhythmically inept live performances. The main thing
that distinguishes the R-8 is its ability to provide subtle timbral
variations.
This weekend I went back and listened to the HR-16 vs. the TR-707.
For the life of me, I simply cannot comprehend how anyone can assert
that the -707's sounds are "obsolete" or that the HR-16 sounds
"better". Not one of the HR-16's snares is usable to my ears; the
acoustic ones sound like the snares need to be tightened and the
head properly tuned, and the electronic ones sound, well, electronic.
The crash sounds like a cheap crash. I have 8 crashes in my inventory,
and they sound a lot more like the -707's crash than the HR-16's.
With the exception of the ride cymbal, where the HR-16 is clearly
superior, the rest of the sounds are comparable.
Well, what the f**k do I know about how drums are supposed to sound.
len.
|
1796.36 | | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Mon Dec 19 1988 14:04 | 14 |
| re .35
...a collective "Gasp!, Shriek! and Groannnn!"
^ ^
* *
>
____
\__/
(Sorry...)
Santa Clusters,
Bill Allen
|
1796.37 | I disagree, Len. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Turpentine, acetone, benzine... | Mon Dec 19 1988 14:20 | 18 |
| I usually have only a little trouble telling a '707 recording from a
recording of real acoustic drums.
I usually have great trouble telling an HR-16 recording from a
recording of real acoustic drums.
Therefore, I claim that the HR-16 is a better approximation of real
acoustic drums.
(note- the first time I heard a '16 I was in a somewhat loud music
store and thought some overloud brain-dead ******* was screwing around
with a drum kit...then I saw the lead keyboardist in EH grinning at
me... and saw the little grey wedge in his hands. I didn't recognize
it then; I continued looking for the jerk with the sticks beating on
the drums.
It took several minutes to convince me it was coming out of the
box.)
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1796.38 | Speechless - so here's my speech | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Mon Dec 19 1988 15:59 | 22 |
| I'm also aghast!
I mean, it used to be that a couple of us could get in a room,
put on a Commusic selection, nod collectively and let out a
simultaneous "707" when we heard one. It's a very identifiable
sound.
The HR-16 is the first unit I've heard that sounded like well-recorded
kit drums. I plucked down my money immediately upon hearing it
even though I knew I couldn't afford it.
I find the comments about the crash to be particularly confusing.
I think it's a terrific crash.
The only sounds I prefer on the 707 are some of the latin sounds.
They are really terrific.
Anyway, I'm sorta astonished mainly because I think the HR really
overwhelms everything else I've heard, and I have heard a LOT
of TR-707's!
db
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1796.39 | Alesis strikes back? | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Turpentine, acetone, benzine... | Mon Dec 19 1988 17:39 | 19 |
|
> I mean, it used to be that a couple of us could get in a room,
> put on a Commusic selection, nod collectively and let out a
> simultaneous "707" when we heard one. It's a very identifiable
> sound.
I mean, it used to be that a couple of us could get in a room,
put on a Commusic selection, nod collectively and let out a
simultaneous "Fehskens" when we heard one. It's a very identifiable
sound.
:-)
But seriously Len, are you sure that you heard a correctly functioning
HR-16? Not that they're THAT undependable...
-Bill
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1796.40 | Subtle Hint | WARDER::KENT | | Tue Dec 20 1988 04:23 | 14 |
|
Re ---5
"Timing errors", "Subtleties", what ever you want to call them. I still
reckon that a snare part entered in real time for the length of
a song has more potential for the feel of the song and therefore
potentially a real drummer than a drum pattern repeated 24 times
with a couple of fill patterns in the middle. I therefore question
the worth of some of the newer sequencer's and their "humanising"
techniques. Why not just get a human to play it in the first place.
With all those inherent "subtleties".
Paul.
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1796.41 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Tue Dec 20 1988 07:16 | 37 |
| re: obsolete
Perhaps a bad word, or at least poor choice. Given that technology
moves on and given that the 707 is old technology it's "obsolete".
Roland must think so they no longer manufacture the beast. It was
good in it's day, good but not great (for great we had only the
Linndrum and it still doesn't come close to a Linn, but many of
the newer machines don't either). Obsolete doesn't equal useless.
The HR-16 is the most realistic sounding machine for it's
features/price on the market today. Obviously it's pretty good or
they wouldn't sell like they do. The 707 is history, useful still
but history. The R8 sounds to be closer to a real drum than anything
else on the market but still falls short of reality in my book, the
few advanced features it has over the HR aren't worth and extra
$500 TO ME.
Sequencer wise the HR's sequencer has one defect and it's a doozey
(no back step) however, compared to the sequencer in the 707 it's
a great advance with that one exception. Add in the extra patch/song
memory etc and again the 707 comes off as yesterday's news.
Reliability is apparantly the luck of the draw, but after looking
inside both machines I find that my lasting impression was that
roland used harder plastic on their box and that's about it for
major construction differences (other than design specifics). the
circuit boards were attached in much the same fashion, the wiring
was un-secured in much the same fashion etc. The alesis did show
an advance in LSI technology that the roland didn't but given the
number of years in between this is to be expected.
Christ I started this didn't I? Let's let it go ok? Len I grovel
and ask that we agree to disagree in friendship.
Merry Christmas to all!
dbii
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1796.42 | Once More, WIth Feeling | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Dec 20 1988 12:10 | 77 |
| There are two things that give a -707 away immediately - SNARE2,
which I never use, and the ride cymbal, which I never use. The
ride cymbal in the -707, as I have admitted many times, is totally
outclassed by the HR-16's ride. If you stay away from those two
sounds, you'd be hard pressed to distinguish a -707 in the mix
from any other drum machine.
Nobody has ever heard any "Fehskens -707" on any COMMUSIC tapes;
my only COMMUSIC submission was "GetSeriousNoah", which did not
use any drums.
The fact that Roland no longer makes the -707 has nothing to do
with anything. Just because they've gone to a different package,
or added new features to the R-8, doesn't change in any way the
quality of the samples in the -707. I admit that some of the samples
are junk, but some of them are quite good. I'm not arguing that
the -707 was the best drum machine ever made, nor that the HR-16
is a piece of junk, only that there seems to be a lot of loose talk
about their relative quality that to me is totally off the wall.
I'd certainly not recommend that anyone go buy a -707 today, you
can do as well for less money, or get a lot more flexibility and
capability for the same or more. But writing off the -707's sounds
strikes me as about as sensible as writing off the sound of the
Stratocaster because the technology is "old".
I have a LinnDrum, and its sounds are inferior to the -707.
It is truly obsolete technology. I intend to get new chips for
it as soon as I can find some. There *are* good chipsets for the
Linn, but the Linn is not the "reference standard" many people assume
it to be.
It is still the case that the HR-16's crash sounds like a junk crash
cymbal. If you like the sound of that crash, fine, I don't. I
compare the sound to the sound of my A and K Zildjians, and my Sabians,
and it loses. The -707's crash, with the exception of its "boxy"
attack transient, sounds much more like my real cymbals. And the
crash in my old *analog* -909 sounds even better! And I'm
not talking about how long it sustains, I'm talking about the timbral
quality of the sound. The HR-16 crash sounds like a cheap stamped
brass cymbal.
Similarly, if either of my Ludwig acoustic snares (the 5x14 chrome
one or the 6.5x14 wooden one) sounded like the HR-16's "deep wood
snare" or "ambient snare", I would get to work on them immediately,
tightening the snare strainer and properly tuning the batter head.
I can make my snares sound like the HR-16's snares, just like I
can make them sound like the -707's SNARE2, I just refuse to, because
they sound terrible.
The HR-16 is unquestionably an achievement. Its capabilities, breadth
of sounds, MIDI implementation, etc., for that price, all set a
new standard of performance for drum machines. But I am just not
that impressed with how it sounds. There's nothing wrong with my
HR-16; many of the sounds are excellent. As are many of the sounds
in the TR-707. (Incidentally, I find the TR-707 far easier to program
than the HR-16, but that may just be my familiarity; the inability
to define 12/8 "swing feel" bars on the HR-16 is an annoyance.
A moot point anyway, as I program all my drum machines from my MC-500.)
So, yes, the TR-707's "obsolete". Yes, Roland doesn't make it
any more. Yes, the HR-16 is quite an impressive piece of equipment,
if you were lucky enough to get one that works and stays working.
Yes, the HR-16 provides more "bang for the buck" than the -707 did.
But the -707 still sounds quite good, and the HR-16 is not the ultimate
in drum samples. But the R-8 looks to be a lot more like what I
really want from a drum machine, and the additional money is well
worth tripling the number of sounds, having the ability to add
new sounds, and the ability to provide subtle timbral variations.
So, you may all think the HR-16 sounds "better" than the -707, but
I disagree. I think they sound about the same overall, some individual
sounds are better on one machine, some better on the other,
many are comparable. The HR-16 certainly has more functional
capability than the -707, but that doesn't affect how it sounds.
len.
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1796.43 | After All, I *DID* Buy One... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Dec 20 1988 12:14 | 4 |
| Just in case some of you aren't aware, I actually own an HR-16.
len.
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1796.44 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | Love is a decision ... | Wed Dec 21 1988 00:49 | 13 |
| As far as I'm concerned, I'm happy I got the -505 and figure that
the R8 is the next beast to watch. Soon as the price comes down
a bit the HR16 will start feeling the squeeze. In the end, I think
it goes back to the old rule of buying on the basis that you'll
be happy with it for a long time. Since I have a sampler, I can
supplement drum sounds with stuff from a sample tape. And, if
I want a different kind of snare or whatever, I can run the -505
through my MV2 into the sampler. The -505 has good, basic sounds
that I find useable. I'd like an HR16, but if I wait long enough
(like until the time when I can actually pay cash) I can probably
get an R8. With my current setup, I can wait for a long time.
Steve
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