T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1979.1 | Look at Ensoniq and Korg | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Mon May 01 1989 14:18 | 15 |
| You might want to have a look at either the Ensoniq ESQ-1 or SQ-80.
The user interface is considered to be more powerful and much more
user friendly than the D-20, but lots of folks don't like the Ensoniq
sounds as much.
Roland is also legendary for poor manuals and Ensoniq is legendary
for terrific manuals. If you're new at this, that might be an
important consideration.
I'd also certainly take a look at the Korg M1 which has, IMO, the
best sounds of all of them but is more expensive and (according
to Keyboard magazine) has an inferior sequencer.
db
|
1979.2 | | HAMER::COCCOLI | L<>7 | Mon May 01 1989 17:47 | 8 |
|
D20 a cheesy sequencer compared to the Ensonics. If you like
the Roland D sound, better to go with a D10 and a separate sequencer.
These are my opinions, anyway.
Rich
|
1979.3 | Vote for D20 | WOTVAX::KENT | | Tue May 02 1989 05:22 | 11 |
|
Having seen and played with a D20 and having set a friend off on
a similar path I would wholeheartedly recommend the D20. The concept
of having all the bits you need Diskdrive/sequencer/"excellent"
drum machine/multi-timbral/reverb synth in one machine is, I think unique
except for the Yamha V50 which does not sound as good.
I wish these had been around 3 years ago when I started out.
Paul.
|
1979.4 | great sounds + all the drums you want | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Tue May 02 1989 05:29 | 4 |
| I vote for D1/20 too. Important point about the disk drive, which
you're unlikely to afford if you go D10+sequencer.
Richard.
|
1979.5 | Much to consider | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Tue May 02 1989 12:29 | 37 |
| I own an ESQ1 & you have to buy additional gear to make as many Timbres
as available on the D10/D20/D100/MT32 (these are all sort of the same
family). I Have an MT-32 and borrow a D110 on occasion. Ny Nephew has
a D10 (and a Yamaha DX7). We all seem to like the Roland sounds and
especially the drums that are built it. The ESQ1/SQ80's have a very
nice sequencer in them, but to effectively use the Ensoniq keybooards,
you really have to buy a drum machine or some sort of multi-timbral box
with drum sounds in it. You'll also need some sort of multi-timbral
box with the Ensoniq gear (you soon grow tired of running out of
notes). I know practically nothing about the D20's sequencer. It may be
good (I understand it only holds one song), or mediocre, that's hard to
say. Lately manufacturers seem to be putting more things into the boxes
(like sequencers). You might look into something like the D10 and an
seperate sequencer, such as a Roland MC500 (has a disk drive) or an
Alesis MMT-8 (no disk drive) or some of the more recent Yamaha
sequencers. You might even look into a Personal Computer with
sequencing software.
I'll only give you one warning about Disk units. The 2.8 inch drive
disks cost $4.00 to $6.00 each & hold very little (60K bytes). The
3.5 inch and 5 1/4 inch are available everywhere & can be had for $1.00
to $2.00 each and they hold quite a lot (800K is a common number).
I have a seperate sequencer & disk drive (not to mention the seperate
sequencer in the ESQ1) & I load everything in the MIDI network from a
single drive. If you want to keep it simple, go withe the D20. If you
want flexibility (such as the ability to outgrow either the keyboard
or the sequencer with out losing an old friend) go with a seperate
keyboard and seperate sequencer. Most of my stuff is now in a 6 high
rack mount & I don't want anymore keyboards, one is plenty for me.
I do enjoy, however, access to 2 sequencers at any time & use them
both during Live performance.
Jens
|
1979.6 | You can go a long way with the ESQ sequencer | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Tue May 02 1989 13:08 | 16 |
| Jens advice is good, but to give you an idea how far you can go
with the ESQ-1 synthesizer, the ESQ-1 was my first piece of MIDI
gear. I have since bought two more synths, a sampler, mixers,
recorders, several effects units, reverbs, racks, guitar processors,
etc. etc.
What do I use for a sequencer: the same sequencer that I had on
the ESQ-1 (only I upgraded to a SQ-80 which has essentially the
identical sequencer as the ESQ-1).
For my purposes, none of the dedicated sequencers offered nearly
enough over the ESQ-1 to warrant their price. The Roland MC-500 MK II
with the S-MRC software sounds nice, but at that price I'd rather get
a PC-based sequencer.
db
|
1979.7 | What's done is done, but in the future... | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Tue May 02 1989 13:32 | 11 |
| Please remember to either:
DIR/TITLE=topic
SHOW KEYWORD/FULL topic
EXTRACT NOTE filename 2.1 and $SEARCH filename topic
before creating a new (redundant) topic.
Also, PLEASE read notes 1.1 and 1.2 and follow the guidelines. Thanks.
-b
|
1979.8 | new kid on the block!!!! | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | | Mon Dec 03 1990 21:28 | 10 |
| I am going to pick up my new D20 next week. I chose it after looking
at the M1 K1 etc and on the advice of a friend. Is there anything in
particular I should be wary of or try ? This is my first
sequencer/midi piece of gear. Also has anyone tried those plug in Ram
cards they offer? Thanks in advance
Peter Knight
Melbourne Australia
|