T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1920.1 | I forget the MKS number... | WEFXEM::COTE | I bought a guitar? Where's MIDI IN? | Tue Feb 21 1989 08:28 | 3 |
| The JX-10 is the biggie...
Edd
|
1920.2 | Intro the Roland 101 | NRPUR::DEATON | | Tue Feb 21 1989 09:52 | 53 |
| RE < Note 1920.0 by KALLON::EIRIKUR "Hallgr�msson, CDA Product Manager" >
Congratulations on joining the proud (though small) group of MKS-7
owners! I use mine as the heart of my MIDI system. Like you, I revell in
the great analog sounds the MKS/Juno drips out.
The sounds of the MKS-7 are, indeed, a kind of a modified Juno 106.
I say modified because the Juno was not touch sensitive, but the MKS-7 is.
Later Junos came out with touch sensitivity, but they also were altered quite
a bit in other aspects of their architecture. Anyway, here's the history of
the Roland single oscillator� line...
1. Juno 6 - Roland's first cost reduced analog synth.
Marketed to compete with Korg's record-breaking POLY-SIX. 61 non-touch-
sensitive keys, front panel had all controls (sliders and switches).
No memory for patches. what it was set at was what you got. Non-MIDI.
2. Juno 60 - Same as the Juno 6, but had memory. Oh, and
both of these had an appegiator. Still non-MIDI
3. Juno 106 - First good MIDI synth from Roland (the JX3P
actually was the first Roland MIDI synth, but its implementation was
poor). 61 keys again, non-touch-sensitive, and you lose the arpegiator.
4. Alpha Juno 1 - After what appeared to be the death of the Juno
line, the alpha Junos appeared. The Juno 1 has 49 non-touch-sensitive
keys, but when recieving MIDI from a touch sensitive keyboard, the SGU
responds to velocity. All panel sliders have disappeared, replaced by
digital parameter access and the Roland 'alpha-wheel' (although a
separate programmer [PG300] is available). The oscillator has enhanced
VLSI circuitry that offers more variety of waveforms. There is also a
more flexible envelope generator.
5. Alpha Juno 2 - Basically the same as the AlphaJuno 1, but has
61 touch-sensitive keys and aftertouch. It also has a cartridge port
for storing patches.
6. In the rack-mount line, along with the MKS-7, you'll find the
MKS-50, which is built with all the added options that are founf in the
AlphaJuno line.
That is the entire Juno lineup as I remember them. Edd mentioned the
JX-10 which is part of another line, the JX series (obviously). They sport
two programmable oscillators per voice and have various other options. There
were also the Jupiter series (Jupiter 4, Jupiter 6, Jupiter 8 and Super
Jupiter). there were the higher-end synths that came about slightly before the
advent of MIDI.
Dan
� Although there is only a single programmable oscillator, there is available a
square-wave sub oscillator. This one is fixed at an octave below the main
oscillator and serves to fatten up the sound.
|
1920.3 | Jupiter not available. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Tue Feb 21 1989 12:31 | 8 |
| It seems to me that the Jupiters are no longer available (except used
market). You can pick up the JX10 or the rackmount (MKS70?) for around
$1500 and $1100, respectively. I've heard tell of prices as low as
$800 on the rackmount, but have never seen them myself.
BTW - the JX10 has a 76 (?) key controller built in.
-b
|
1920.4 | b's prices are steep I think. | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Tue Feb 21 1989 13:57 | 5 |
|
In Daddy's recent sale, the MKS-70 (new) at Daddy's Boston was in the
flyer at $479. They probably only had one.
Chad
|
1920.5 | to mks or not to mks! | HAMER::COCCOLI | omfug | Tue Feb 21 1989 21:12 | 11 |
|
I played a (used)MKS50 tonight at Rogue Music and am thinking
about picking it up. Is $350 a good deal?. Does it have a built
in drum channel like the MKS-7?. And, most importantly, how does
it's sound stack up next to a Juno 106 (which I have never heard
but might be able to get my hands on)?.
rich
|
1920.6 | BTW | HAMER::COCCOLI | omfug | Tue Feb 21 1989 21:32 | 6 |
|
BTW, how much damage did the MKS-7 do to your wallet?
rich
|
1920.7 | Now, where to get an MKS-80? | DDIF::EIRIKUR | Hallgr�msson, CDA Product Manager | Wed Feb 22 1989 05:56 | 16 |
| The MKS-7 cost me $215. LaSalle (Boston) had one for $200, demo--no
box no manual. When I went down the street still looking for an SGU,
I found another MKS-7 at Daddy's for $299, and they were willing to
come down on it and throw in a 3-month warranty. This one was used,
but had the manual and the sound chart card.
The MKS-7 is the only MKS-?? with the drum sounds. The one annoying
glitch with it is that it doesn't have portamento (or it is
undocumented and not wired up to the standard MIDI signal). If you
have other SGU's, the other MKS units would probably be a better buy;
although they are mono-timbral they have user patch locations, etc.
You can apparently edit the MKS-7 patches, but it doesn't have any
memory across power-cycles.
Eirikur
|
1920.8 | mks50 vs. alpha juno vs. Juno 106 | CSC32::M_MOSHER | WE ARE HERE TO GO | Wed Feb 22 1989 16:07 | 60 |
|
re .5
>I played a (used)MKS50 tonight at Rogue Music and am thinking
>about picking it up. Is $350 a good deal?.
I think $350 is a good deal for an MKS50.
>Does it have a built in drum channel like the MKS-7?
No, it does not have any built in drum samples.
Sounds like you need a ROLAND D110.
>And, most importantly, how does it's sound stack up next to a
>Juno 106 (which I have never heard but might be able to get my hands on)?.
I thinks it has a good analog sound, great for sweeps, synth bass,
synth leads. From what I remember, I think the Juno 106 sounds a bit
warmer.
The MKS50 has some advantes over the alpha Juno. Although the tone
architecture is the same, the performance memory is tied to the patch. It
looks something like this.
PATCH (BANKS A/B, 64 PROGRAMMABLE PATCHES/BANK)
=====================================
| TONE |
| PERFORMANCE MEMORY |
| Chord memory # |
| Transposition |
| Range of patch |
| Patch volume |
| Mono Bend range |
=====================================
|
|
|
|
\|/
TONE (BANKS A/B, 64 PROGRAMMABLE TONES/BANK)
============================================
| TONE PARAMETERS |
| dco |
| . |
| . |
============================================
Also, there are 16 chord memorys (the alpha juno only has 1).
LONG LIVE PULSE WIDTH MODULATION!!!!!
Mark M.
|
1920.9 | | NRPUR::DEATON | | Thu Feb 23 1989 08:18 | 5 |
| Don't spend $350 for a used MKS-50 until you've checked to see if
LaSalle's still has them new for $357!
Dan
|
1920.10 | | HAMER::COCCOLI | redrum | Thu Feb 23 1989 23:18 | 9 |
|
I played a friend's Juno 106 last night and I feel the MKS50
pales in comparison. Are these still in production or should I just
start searching the used shops?.
p.s. To the person who said I need a D-110...I have a Tx81Z already
and don't need another noise box!
rich
|
1920.11 | You might pay less for an MKS-7 than a Juno 106! | DDIF::EIRIKUR | Hallgr�msson, CDA Product Manager | Fri Feb 24 1989 01:05 | 13 |
| Juno's are long out of production. If you see an MKS-7, give it a
listen. You can set it into a 6-voice mode which gives you the Juno
106 functionality plus velocity sensing. (And you get the TR707 drum
sounds for free!) The MKS-7 is probably usually cheap used--the front
panel makes it look like some kind of brain-damaged "band in a box"
device. It is actually a joy to work with. I particularly like the
activity lights for each of the 4 MIDI channels, and how pressing the
channel button plays the current patch on that channel at middle C or
something like that.
Eirikur
|
1920.12 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Audio/Video/MIDIophile | Fri Feb 24 1989 12:14 | 4 |
| Juno 106.. 6 voice monotimbral, no velocity response either with
its keys or played as an SGU.
Nice analog sounds tho
|
1920.13 | MKS-7 specifics? | RAD1::DAVIS | | Mon Feb 27 1989 12:01 | 24 |
|
I was by LaSalles on Saturday and the demo MKS-7 for $200 was
still there. I'm really tempted. Can someone answer a couple of
specific questions?
o Is there really a full blown 707 drum machine in this box?
Does it include the sequencer section or just the drum sounds?
o Looks like the box is multi-timbral. Sliders on the front (for
volume?) are marked - Rhythm, Bass, Chord, and Lead, so I assume
you can assign sounds to 4 different MIDI channels. Yes? How about
relative volumes on the drum sounds.
o What kind of outputs? Stereo? Separate outs for the drum machine?
o One of the previous notes mentioned that the MKS-7 doesn't
retain patch changes on power down (ugh!). I assume this also
applies to any MIDI setups, drum volumes, etc. Any provisions for
sysex dumps, so you could at least save/load with a computer? Can
you edit the patches from the front panel?
Thanks,
Rob
|
1920.14 | Some MKS-7 Answers.... | KALLON::EIRIKUR | Hallgr�msson, CDA Product Manager | Mon Feb 27 1989 12:38 | 46 |
| Some MKS-7 answers:
1) Drum sounds only, not tunable, amount of velocity response can be
altered. There are only 11 (I think, maybe +/- 1 or 2) drum sounds,
a basic drum kit only, no Latin stuff, no exotic stuff. I find this
to be one of the major limitations, personally.
2) It is truly multi-timbral, the 4 sections map to 4 MIDI channels,
and you can set the channel numbers. The Melody channel is 2-voice,
the Chord channel is 4-voice, and Bass is monophonic. From the front
panel (control-shift-meta-cokebottle) or from MIDI, you can go into
"Whole Mode" which puts the 2-voice and 4-voice sections together on
one channel making a 6-voice synth. You still get bass and drums on
their own channels in that mode. The user interface is actually easy
if not obvious. You press the MIDI button, then press Melody while
holding down the Chord button.
3) There are 4 seperate outputs, and a hardwired stereo mix output.
The sliders control only the mix output (you are using a mixer if you
use the separate outs). Volume on the drums sounds responds to
velocity--that's the only relative volume control.
4) No patch memory. The machine does respond to sysex, you can edit
patch parameters or replace presets with your own patches. Interesting
bit of info: a patch can be represented in 36 bytes. I've played with
the sysex stuff, I built a "patch-tweaker" using MIDI-Control
on the Macintosh. I haven't tried loading patches. I wonder if there
is enough RAM to hold very many?
If you buy this thing, I will photocopy the manual and patch chart. I
like mine so much that I have tried to think of what I would do
with two of them, but I can't see that as being very useful--the second
one would wind up being used as just an analog synth. If I want
another analog synth, I will probably pick up a K3m.
While it sounds very good, you should be aware that the synthesizer
voices are very simple (obsolete, actually). There is only one VCO,
one LFO, one envelope generator, and one VCF per voice.
Eirikur
|
1920.15 | Try it, you'll like it. | NRPUR::DEATON | | Mon Feb 27 1989 13:59 | 14 |
| RE < Note 1920.14 by KALLON::EIRIKUR "Hallgr�msson, CDA Product Manager" >
I have though the same thing - about getting a second MKS-7. It has
been such a useful part of my setup. But you're right, it is not the sort of
thing that makes itself useful in plurality. I have adapted my setup to suit
the MKS-7's defaults - i.e. I program drums on ch. 10, bass on ch. 2 - so that
I don't have to manually change them every time I power up. If I had two, I'd
have to add re-setting defaults to one of them every time I set up shop.
It's really a nice instrument if you can live with its limitations. It
has become the heart of my setup. And at $200, you can't go wrong.
Dan
|
1920.16 | Time to Say Bye-Buy to My Juno? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Feb 28 1989 16:25 | 12 |
| I have had a Juno-106 for many many years now, and it's been obsoleted
by the Oberheim Matrix-1000. Anything the Juno can do, the Matrix
can do better, and there are many things the Matrix can do that
the Juno can't. The main differences are the Matrix's support of
velocity and aftertouch, but the Matrix also has more LFOs. Now
that I've got a Matrix-1000, I find myself seriously considering
selling the Juno, except for my strong emotional attachment to it
(it wasn't my *first* synth, but we've been through a lot together,
and we've been together longer than me and any other synth...).
len (whose studio is predominantly analog).
|
1920.17 | | NRPUR::DEATON | | Tue Feb 28 1989 16:57 | 4 |
| RE < Note 1920.16 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS >
Well, Len, I never thought I'd hear you say it...
|
1920.18 | Ever Heard A Digital Fart? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Mar 01 1989 13:17 | 6 |
| Well, technology marches on, even for us old analog farts...
But my SuperJupiter? Never.
len.
|
1920.19 | ...and I quote... | NRPUR::DEATON | | Wed Mar 01 1989 13:43 | 6 |
| RE < Note 1920.18 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS >
That's what you once said about your JUNO 106, if memory serves.
Dan
|
1920.20 | Juno-106 << Super Jupiter | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Mar 02 1989 09:06 | 7 |
| Well, if you can find it, more power to us both, but the Juno 106
and the Super Jupiter are in entirely different classes. I know
I've said several times I will never part with with my Super Jupiter,
but I don't think I've ever said that of the Juno.
len.
|
1920.21 | &^) | NRPUR::DEATON | | Thu Mar 02 1989 09:53 | 13 |
| RE < Note 1920.20 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS >
Always up to a challenge, I began the search. Unfortunately, I believe
the place I recall your remark was in a note I started for the purpose of
selling my Juno 106 (back in mid-87). You had given an unsolicited
recommendation on the Juno and remarked that you'd keep yours forever. That
note was deleted by Brad when he began his moderatorship of the conference. So,
verification will not be possible (or, if possible, not worth the effort).
So, what was this note about?
Dan
|
1920.22 | D'you know What We're Talkin' About? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Mar 02 1989 12:11 | 9 |
| Ah well, such is the passage of time. Maybe someday the Jupiter
won't seem so wonderful (after all, it's only 4/8 voices in this modern
world of 16 voice polyphony - no 13th chords in fat Jupiter voices
for me, I guess).
I think this note was about the *other* Junos.
len.
|
1920.23 | Sure, blame the moderator.... | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Thu Mar 02 1989 12:20 | 8 |
| I have the old conference sitting on a disk over here (sucking up
50,000 blocks). I just searched every topic that ever was, and there
is NO posting by Len that says anything about wanting to keep his Juno
forever.
So nyahhh....
&*}
|
1920.24 | | NRPUR::DEATON | | Thu Mar 02 1989 14:00 | 8 |
| RE < Note 1920.23 by DYO780::SCHAFER "Brad - back in Ohio." >
O.K., now try putting the disk into a drive... &^)
Dan
P.S. Did you find the for sale note I was referring to?
|
1920.25 | back to analog ... | NIMBUS::DAVIS | | Mon Mar 06 1989 15:36 | 13 |
|
Well, I couldn't resist for $200, went down to LaSalles and picked up
the demo MKS-7 this weekend. Now, I'll have to try and write a little
sysex-programmer for my Commodore. Which brings me to a question ...
I thought I noticed a stack of PG-300s for $99 next to where the MKS-7
was (not sure about the price, I wasn't really paying much attention at
the time). Can these things be used to program the MKS-7, or were they
strictly for the Alpha-Juno series? How do they connect, thru MIDI?
Rob
|
1920.26 | | NRPUR::DEATON | | Mon Mar 06 1989 16:22 | 11 |
| RE < Note 1920.25 by NIMBUS::DAVIS >
Congrats. I have a little sysex thing I wrote for the MKS7 - its
nothing special, but you can take a copy of it if you want.
The PG300 will NOT work for the older Juno stuff. The alpha junos
had a number of extra waveforms and a different envelope generator. And the
programmer had a special input jack.
Dan
|