T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1911.1 | and sounds nicer, too | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Tue Feb 14 1989 11:08 | 6 |
|
Well, the FZ certainly gets close enough to ruffle the Emax's
expensive feathers.
Richard.
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1911.2 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | quality first cause quality lasts | Tue Feb 14 1989 11:36 | 26 |
| This issue made me feel really good about my S-10. Although the
S-10 only has up to about 13.5 kHz bandwidth, one output and four
samples, it is pretty quiet and doesn't distort much. It basically is
in line with the review of the S-50, but ranks among the cheapest of
the samplers. Did you notice how many of the cheaper samplers have
been discontinued? Seems like to get a quality sampler you're talking
bigger bucks nowadays. That seems to be that market trend - kill the
low-end stuff so that folks have to buy the more expensive items. Also,
I found here that my S-10 *does not* support MIDI sample dump standard.
Neither do a bunch of others. But, this will be no big deal
since software vendors are pushing 'universal' sample dump support.
The comments about the Mirage were funny. 'Dog meat, right? Well,
it's hard to deny that the Mirage's results look pretty horrendous
... The Mirage's distortion levels surpass those of any other sampler
by such a wide margin that it may as well be considered a synthesizer.'
Gee, seems to me we should put the Mirage into a class of its own!
;^)
Also surprising was that on a spec basis there sure is a wide range
of bang for the buck. It was surprising to see that the specs on
the high end machines were not so impressive as one might hope.
Again, made me pretty happy to have chosen the S-10 for my setup.
Steve
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1911.3 | 2 * 330 = 550 ?? | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Tue Feb 14 1989 12:17 | 6 |
| Interesting stuff, but can anybody tell me why there is such a
difference between the S-330 and the S-550? I thought a 330 was
a 550 with less memory.
Ken
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1911.4 | Glad to hear that my ears weren't lying | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | So What? BEEG Deal! | Tue Feb 14 1989 13:30 | 8 |
| I'm just always glad to have something tangible to point to backup
what I've always felt about the S-550, which is that I've always
thought it sounded great.
However, I now have plenty of things to curse it for as well. So
don't consider this a unabashed plug for the S-550.
db
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1911.5 | Ease of use and ability to understand | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | So What? BEEG Deal! | Wed Feb 15 1989 14:34 | 8 |
| One of the most interesting parts of the issue was the inset about
how easy each sampler was to use and understand.
They ranted about most of them, but they did have nice things to
say about two of them. It was great to see that it WAS possible
to make a sampler that's easy to use and understand.
db
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1911.6 | not very objective | SUBSYS::ORIN | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Wed Feb 15 1989 15:44 | 18 |
| < Note 1911.5 by DREGS::BLICKSTEIN "So What? BEEG Deal!" >
-< Ease of use and ability to understand >-
That rant section about User Interface gripes proved that they really did
not know how to take advantage of the features that each machine has, probably
due to lack of time. They didn't like either the EPS or the S550. The S550
suffers from a lousy manual, and the EPS suffers from a lack of manual
(until now). They particularly mentioned that the EPS lacked the capability to
store and recall global parameters. That was completely erroneous. There is a
SAVE GLOBAL PARAMS feature right in the SYSTEM menu. They also complained about
the number of button pushes, which shows that they had problems learning the
hierarchy of the menus and how to use the EDIT button to switch back and forth
to do global parameter edits. I find the EPS very intuitive to use. You can
take a sample, assign the root key, map it to the keyboard, tune it and envelope
it, set the LFO, in about 20 key strokes. Looping takes longer, of course.
Universal Sound Designer is a life saver for cross-fade looping.
dave
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1911.7 | do tell. | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Feb 16 1989 06:40 | 4 |
|
O.K., so which samplers' UI did they prefer?
Richard.
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1911.8 | IMHO, ITHO, what's the difference. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Smurf _Terminator_ | Thu Feb 16 1989 10:38 | 13 |
| The Mirage, of course! :-)
Note that their fidelity rankings corresponded highly with the number
of bits in each machine, and to a lesser extent to the max sample
rate of the machine.
I certainly don't agree with their rankings.
And, of course, cost was not a major object. Was it my imagination,
or was the price ratio 5:1 across the field?
-Bill
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1911.9 | pricey stuff | SUBSYS::ORIN | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Feb 16 1989 15:39 | 17 |
| > And, of course, cost was not a major object. Was it my imagination,
> or was the price ratio 5:1 across the field?
Yes, the winner was Akai S1000 which retail lists for $5995. I was quoted
a price of $4300 by Caruso's, but that is negotiable. This is a 16 bit
stereo sampler. Not much of a library available, and it is not compatible
with the S900 or S950 12 bit machines or libraries. The price I got for an
S950 was $1795 from Caruso's, plus they will send you the library to copy.
I think the Emulator III costs about twice as much as the S1000? It looks
like a Roland S50, S550 or Akai S950 are choice picks. I still think the
EPS will perform much better when treated properly, and from the list of
credits, I'm surprised the Ensoniq reps didn't do better with assistance.
The new O/S should make quite a difference in sampling quality.
dave
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1911.10 | errata? | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Thu Feb 16 1989 16:35 | 18 |
| re: .9
>
>Yes, the winner was Akai S1000 which retail lists for $5995. I was quoted
>a price of $4300 by Caruso's, but that is negotiable. This is a 16 bit
>stereo sampler. Not much of a library available, and it is not compatible
>with the S900 or S950 12 bit machines or libraries. The price I got for an
If I remember the 'keyboard' review correctly, the S1000 can use S900
disks, albeit in 12 bit mode. And it had a lot of REAL nice features.
>S950 was $1795 from Caruso's, plus they will send you the library to copy.
>I think the Emulator III costs about twice as much as the S1000? It looks
>like a Roland S50, S550 or Akai S950 are choice picks. I still think the
>EPS will perform much better when treated properly, and from the list of
CHad
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1911.11 | just ask Sun Microsystems | SALSA::MOELLER | Audio/Video/MIDIophile | Tue Feb 21 1989 15:36 | 13 |
| I just bought the issue with the sampler 'reviews' in it.
Very surprised to see the Emax' poor showing. It did get points
for a good user interface, and should have gotten lotsa points for
its huge sample library. There's a musician here in town with a
studio.. I've worked with him and his AKAI S900.. to me it sounds
thin and brittle.. kind of harsh. The Emax sounds rich in
comparison.. plus it has an internal sequencer and real software
panning, not just left and right like the S900/950..
Ah well, just goes to show ya how numbers can lie
karl
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1911.12 | only MO | CGVAX2::COREY_J | | Tue Feb 21 1989 17:06 | 8 |
| re: .11
Not to mention the Emax is multi-timbral and has one of the best
arppegiators Ive ever used.
dito
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1911.13 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Audio/Video/MIDIophile | Tue Feb 21 1989 18:32 | 26 |
| More thoughts on the EMAX and Keyboard's testing methodology..
The Emax showed poor on overall digital noise level.. which runs
completely counter to my experience with it.
The Keyboard tests used the Emax' own sample input, and then measured
its output on a scope... for THD, noise, freq. response, and square
wave reproduction. (did great on the square wave)..
My thought is this. I've done very little sampling with the Emax,
preferring instead to use my large (100+diskettes) sample library.
Many of the samples in my library were not created using the A-D
converter of the Emax.. or even the Emulator II.. most of these
samples come from the E-II library, ported with Digidesign software..
and many of the original samples come from specialized sampling
computers, with virtually no digital noise from the sampling process.
And THAT must be why I consider the Emax to be a superb SGU.
So what, you say.. the tests were testing SAMPLING, not 'sample
players'.. if true, why'd they include the Oberheim DPX sample
player ?
somewhat incoherently yours,
karl
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1911.14 | the most musical of the lot | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Wed Feb 22 1989 04:49 | 4 |
|
Tell you what -- bet you haven't listened to an FZn.
Richard.
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1911.15 | S1000 Info | YUPPY::GEAL | | Wed Feb 22 1989 06:42 | 19 |
| I recently got an S1000 and thought I would pass on my observations.
The UI is fine and even the more difficult operations can be picked
very quickly. It comes with four factory disks (HD) with Piano,
Strings, Brass and Drums. The sounds are excellent and there will
shortly be a fairly extensive library available which has been recorded
at AIR studios in London. The S1000 will read S900 disks, but the
sampling algorithms are very different and some sounds convert
a lot better than others. Also, what used to fit on one (DD) disk
on an S900 will NOT fit on one disk when its been converted by the
S1000. This means using HD disks - expensive. The S1000 comes with
2Mb of memory which, if you are using the true 16bit samples is
not enough. You can expand to 8mb but this is expensive in the UK
- about $1400 for each 2mb increase. If you have one sample using
the full 2mb, you can't write it to floppy - you have to have a
hard disk. Both the Atari/Supra and SCSI interfaces are supported,
but you have to buy the relevant card - about $175 here.
One last point - last night mine went gaga and has had to go back
for repair. Beware new products!
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