T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2329.1 | never heard of it | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Thu May 03 1990 17:37 | 3 |
| Whuzza SY22? FM version of 55 (ie, FM, but no PCM)?
+b
|
2329.2 | What, You Don't Read Every Paragraph of KEYBORED? | AQUA::ROST | Bad imitation of Jerry Jemmott | Thu May 03 1990 17:42 | 9 |
|
The SY22 is a vector/wavetable synth of some sort...in the vein of the
Prophet VS. So is the Korg WS, which was also shown at NAMM, but a lot
more $$$$....about 2.5K, to be exact.
Lotsa USENET folks wondering how much the Y-folks picked up from the
Sequential technology, especially at such a low price tag.
Brian
|
2329.3 | Sounds good to me. | BAHTAT::KENT | peekay | Tue May 08 1990 04:04 | 8 |
|
I heard one of these things last week and was very impressed by the
sounds. In these days of everything having sampled pianos as a starting
point and then 14 different versions of a slap-bass, it was quite nice
to hear a nice lush syntho for a change. If I had any money I would buy
one.
Paul.
|
2329.4 | Some Details On What It's Got | AQUA::ROST | I'll do anything for money | Sat May 12 1990 09:50 | 75 |
| I stopped into LaSalle's to see the SY22 but it hasn't come in yet. The
salesman said it hadn't been released, so I mentioned how folks on the west
coast have bought them already (based on USENET reports). Guess Yamaha is
shipping by covered wagon. They did have the brochure which answers the
question:
If this is a $1100 synth, why are other "vector" machines like the Prophet VS,
Korg WS and Waldorf sold at such high prices?
Answer: the synth the SY22 resembles most is the Kawai K1!!! Read on...
1. Voice Structure
There is a wavetable of 384 "preset waveforms", of which 128 are samples
(Yamaha AWM style) and 256 are FM. You can have either two or four "elements"
in a sound, an AB configuration or ABCD. A and C are always AWM, B and D
always FM. You can edit "complex" (number of stages not mentioned) envelopes
on each element, plus a global attack/release element on the entire sound.
The vector controller is a joystick. It can be used in real time, or
"recorded" which allows "dynamic" vector control (i.e. it is triggered by
keystrokes). Two element sounds only respond to the joystick vertical axis,
four element sounds to both axes. The controller can be mapped to level (i.e.
fade from one element to another) or pitch (i.e. detune A sharp while B goes
flat, etc.). Once recorded, joystick motion can be edited. You cannot have
pitch and level under vector contol simultaneously except where you have one
recorded and vary the other manually while playing.
When editing, in addition to full control, there are preset envelopes and
vectors you can use for quick patch construction. Also a patch randomizer
which picks elements and vectors randomly for you. Remember, with 128 AWM and
256 FM, there are 32K 2 element combinations alone. NO mention of filters of
any sort.
There is NO mention in the brochure of mapping velocity or aftertouch to
vectors. Interesting feature: when panning voices, *each* element in a sound
can be panned independently.
2. Drums
One of the 128 AWM waves is a multisampled drum kit, with 61 sounds. Three
basses, five snares, acoustic and electric toms, triangle (!!), two record
scratches. One of the factory presets is a "rap perc" patch.
3. FX
Sixteen effects available, NO mention of any programmability of them. A
selection of reverbs, three delays, doubling, ping-ponging, two delay plus
reverbs, distorion plus reverb.
4. Patch Memory
This is vague. They mention 64 factory presets, 64 user locations and 16 multi
locations. On the last page of the prochure they list the 64 presets and 16
multis, of which the last is used for the demo sequence. I don't know if this
means there are 16 *preset* multis and 16 user multis or not. The unit is
8-part multitimbral, but no mention is made of voices. I'd *guess* 16/8 based
on whether you use 2 or 4 element sounds. NO mention made of patch mapping.
5. General
It uses a wall bug!!!! Second surprise is no breath control jack. Stereo and
mono outs, phone out, MIDI I/O/T, sustain and volume pedals, card slot for 32K
and 64K memories. Sys-ex bulk dumps via MIDI, etc. Pitch/mod wheels. Two
7-segment LEDs for program numbers, 2 X 16 LCD for alphanumerics. Velocity and
(channel) aftertouch keyboard, 61 keys. It offers "overlapping voice
selection" like Ensoniq synths, that is, when changing patches any sustained
notes hold the old sound until released.
6. Price
La Salle said that if the $1095 list holds, they will sell them for about $900.
Brian
|
2329.5 | Hurry Up And Wait | AQUA::ROST | I'll do anything for money | Wed May 30 1990 16:24 | 4 |
| For the benefit of the drooling hordes awaiting this new board from
the Y-people: Despite these being sold on the left coast since the
beginning of May, shipments to MA dealers won't go out until the first
of June.
|
2329.6 | Nice toy | HLFS00::WETERINGH_B | | Tue Sep 11 1990 11:26 | 45 |
|
I bought a SY22 last week. It's a really nice machine. to answer some
of the questions in *.4 :
Price : In Holland it goes for 2800 guilders, which is around $1200.
Mine was 1800 guilders ($800) for a demo version (Allright
with me!)
Filters : I haven't found any filters off yet, but as of me, I don't
mind. Basically everything can be set. If you've got a
configuration with 4 elements, of all 4 you can choose
between about 7 different envelopes, 8 different decay
styles etc. etc. etc. Then there also is a general one.
Also Pan can be set for each instrument to get some nice
stereo effects (this is mentioned before).
Aftertouch : Is programmable but I think not mappable to vectors.
Drum kit : You mentioned a triangel ... There two! An open one and a
colsed one!
FX : 16 available, programmable is the depth of each, among others,
reverb room, reverb hall, reverb chamber; you can really
make anything sound like played in the largest theatre.
Patch memory : 64 preset, 64 internal (programmable), 16 multi preset
and 16 multi internal. You define a voice per channel,(max
8). You can change any sound, as long as you take pre-set
sounds. I haven't been able to have pro-24 change from
let's say preset 18 to internal 35. Maybe it can be done,
but I don't know how yet. The number of elements per sound
seems to me indepentent of the max number of voices.
Also there is an option to insert ROM memory cards for
additional samples, however, as long as it's used (maybe
deep down in one of the internal voices, the card should
stay in.
Overlapping : sustained notes when changing voices hold the original
voice untill released. The FX do change though.
I quite like it, nice toy
Bernd.
|
2329.7 | Worcester Gets Vectorized, Finally | AQUA::ROST | Rockette Morton takes off into the wind | Wed Sep 19 1990 15:13 | 48 |
| Well, it finally arrived in Worcester. Went down to the K-word-place
and spent a half hour on it.
First impression--WOW!!! The vector feature really delivers in some
very nice patches which shift in timbre quite nicely. Of course they
also have some overdone patches ala "Digital Native Dance" which are
probably useless (why do they put these things in ROM?). Rumors that
it can't do sample-playback type sounds are false, it has a nice (not
incredible, but nice) piano, strings, etc.
The thing is plastic and feels chintzy. The wheels didn't impress me,
and as KEYBOARD noticed, aftertouch response is kind of, eh, sudden.
Hard to modulate. I used the joystick mostly to "disassemble" the
patches to see what they were built out of. Of course, most used 4
"elements" which gives 8 notes max. Some used only two, for 16 notes
max. A few used two samples, so four elements had to be used, since
they are always set in sample/FM pairs. The unused FM elements have
their volumes set to zero, but I assume still take up voices. Ugh.
Programming seems easy enough but time consuming due to the small
display. However, the 16 patch select buttons double as control keys
so at least you don't have to wander through menus. Editing is on
three levels: the elements, then the vector, then the total patch.
Effects are added at the total patch level, but when multis are used,
the FX setting is ignored in favor of the multi's FX setting. You can
only pick the algorithm and depth for the FX, BTW, there is no access
to parameters. The FM programming is quasi-preset. You get 256 preset
programs on which you can modify a whopping two params. Heavy duty FM
gurus will be underimpressed.
MIDI dumps of all memory (patches and multis) or individual patches are
possible. Dumping of individual multis appears to be not possible.
Typical decent MIDI implementation, like most Y-word synths.
As far as a rack version, it's looking less likely...Yamaha has just
dropped the list on the TG55 rack unit to $800 (thus the $560 Sam Ash
prices), so that a "TG22" would have to list at about $600 to make
sense. Plus, as the sales guy pointed out, what do you do with a
joystick on a rack unit (notice that the D50 and K1 both lost the
sticks when racked).
I'm not too interested in having another board lying about, but this
thing has interesting potential for some very expressive timbres. Even
if it doesn't have filters. Here's hoping that this box and the Korg
WS are successful enough so that some more vector boxes hit the streets
soon.
Brian
|
2329.8 | SY22 and ST (CREATOR) | COLSWS::GOETZ | Ach DA ist Norden ! | Wed Oct 24 1990 06:58 | 9 |
| Hello, Germany is calling...
Has anyone experience with the MIDI-Program CREATOR (C-LAB) on an
ST and the SY22.
I want to buy a SY22 for Chrismas and need some Info's about
this connection.
Markus_patient_waiting_for_Chrismas
|
2329.9 | TG33 Seems To Be The SY22 In A Module | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Thu Nov 15 1990 21:33 | 21 |
| I honestly don't know what manufacturers are thinking sometimes.
Around the first of June, an Ensoniq rep assured me and other clinic
attendess that no rackmount Ensoniq synths were in the offing, then the
first week of August, the SQ-R was in the stores. Now we have Yamaha,
who swore to me on the phone last month that no SY22 rack unit would be
made. Welcome to the TG33, the rack-mount of the SY22.
The TG33 may not truly be a rackmount, it looks like a table-top module
to me, but Yamaha says it's rack-mountable, so sue me. It looks like
an SY22 sans keyboard, much the way the Kawai K1m resembled the K1.
The Yamaha blurb talks about 32 note polyphony using 64 elements, so it
seems to have double the note capability of the 22, but then they
mention "196 voices of which 16 can be used at one time"...I have no
idea what they mean here.
No price given, but claimed to "extremely inexpensive", so with TG55s
listing at $800 and selling in NYC just under $600, this may be in the
$450 street price range.
Brian
|
2329.10 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Fri Nov 16 1990 10:30 | 3 |
| Sales folks don't talk to engineering. And, nobody talks to Marketing.
Steve
|
2329.11 | TG33 Pricing | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Mon Nov 19 1990 16:02 | 5 |
|
Sam Ash price for the TG33 is $479 as of today. Apparently list is
about $600.
Brian
|
2329.12 | Keyboard wasn't too hot on the SY-22 | RANGER::EIRIKUR | Eir�kur Hallgr�msson | Mon Nov 19 1990 18:45 | 6 |
| I just re-read the Keyboard review of the SY22, it was not very positive about
the sound. Apparently most of the samples are not multi-sampled, and the FM
implementation is simplistic. Too bad, the TG-33 is neat-looking.
Eirikur
|
2329.13 | More on TG33... | TLE::ASHFORTH | | Mon Nov 26 1990 11:55 | 5 |
| I spoke to a local Yamaha shop about the TG33; he seemed to think they wouldn't
hit NH for a while. His explanation of the guts was that it was in essence two
SY22s, thus the "TG33" moniker. Any more info on the 22's sounds? I for one
haven't been impressed enough with Keyboard reviews to not seek a second opinion
before nixing what sounds like such a sweet box.
|
2329.14 | It's Hard To Have Golden Ears When You're On A Budget | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Mon Nov 26 1990 15:45 | 33 |
|
Re: .13
Have you heard the 22 yet? I read the reviews and saw all the nits
about cheap sound. I would tend to disagree. It's not masquerading as
a sample player. In fact, a lot of the boards people talk about as
having "sampled" sound like the D-50, K-1, ESQ-1, etc. don't sound much
like sample players to me, the sampled sounds are just too rough.
Noone complained about the D-50 lacking multisamples at $2000 but then
Keyboard takes the SY22 to task for the same at $1000....gimme a break.
Also, EM and Keyboard seemed to disagree on the joystick. Keyboard said
it did *not* send via MIDI, EM says it uses controllers 16 and 17 (and
the synth receives the same, letting you use remapping to drive the
vector function from other controllers...nice). So who's right? Was
EM's reviewer one toke over the line or what?
The vector synthesis feature lets you get some very nice *synthetic*
sounds. The samples seemed adequate to me for non-critical use in
imitative sound, i.e. it's not the best piano I ever heard, but it's
still pretty good and usable in many contexts. I'm real interested in
picking one up, but mainly for the synthetic possibilities. I already
own a sample player, thank you.
I would think that if you find boxes like the D-110 and K1 to have
suitable fidelity, the SY22/TG33 would be acceptable. Go listen to
one!!
BTW, I've seen a mail-order price for $415 already, which is very close
to current D-110 and K-1r pricing.
Brian
|
2329.15 | EM appears to have been correct... | WEFXEM::COTE | Can't touch this... | Mon Nov 26 1990 16:56 | 4 |
| Keyboard was taken to task in the latest issue for their mistake
regarding the joystick...
Edd
|
2329.16 | A Real 32 Voice Module! | AQUA::ROST | Dickie Peterson Wannabe | Wed Jan 02 1991 14:34 | 29 |
| I got a second try at a TG33 over the vacation and verified this
thing not only can really generate 32 voices, but this may be the new
"bank-for-the-buck" champ, taking the crown from the MT32.
Yes, you can rack it, and the rack ears are included (yeah!) but the
options are either flat or tilted, mostly submerged in the rack or
sticking way out (forget closing the cover, bad news on the road
although OK in a studio). It'll eat two or three spaces.
It really is like two SY22s in a module. Polyphony is 32 voices using
two elements or 16 voices using four (and, in multitimbral mode, you
get somewhere in between, depending on the mix of patches). Speaking
of multis, they are 16-way now (yep, this can hog an entire MIDI network
all by itself). Parts are assigned to one of two groups. Each group
has its own send to the FX unit, so you can have some parts wet and
others dry, etc. (this is pretty cool in a unit at this price point).
There are two pairs of stereo outs. You can assign groups to outs
however you like (both groups to #1, both to #2, group 1 to #1 and 2 to
#2, group 1 to #2 and 2 to #1) except that out #2 can't use FX. Both
stereo pairs are hooked up so that using only the left jack gives you a
mono mix.
I doubt pros will drool over this, after all it's plastic, only
marginally rack-mountable and uses a wall bug. For amateurs and
cheapskates this will be the new power toy. At $595 list, it's already
$100 cheaper than the MT32 was in 1988. And you can program it without
a computer.
Brian
|
2329.17 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | Rent this space | Thu Jan 24 1991 13:14 | 14 |
| A Few questions on the SY22/TG33;
Has anyone been able to get a better piano sound? (This is only sound in
there I dislike, the others sounds better than the D-series to my ears)
Are there any editor/librarians available?
Sound cards?
Cheapest price I've seen in the UK is 499 pounds. Anyone seen any
better?
matty
|
2329.18 | | AQUA::ROST | Who *was* Martin Lickert? | Thu Jan 24 1991 14:06 | 22 |
| > Has anyone been able to get a better piano sound? (This is only sound in
> there I dislike, the others sounds better than the D-series to my ears)
There's not a lot you can do since the only options you have are
playing with envelopes and using vectors, there is no filtering
available. As far as using vectors, you may be able to find a better FM
sound to mix with the piano sample.
> Are there any editor/librarians available?
I haven't seen any yet, but I'm sure they are on the way. You could
use one of the generic programs like X-Or or Gen Edit if you were
willing to write your own template based on the MIDI data in the Yamaha
manuals. Of course you can then use the same programs with any other
synths you might acquire.
> Sound cards?
Only RAMs in the US so far, no ROMs with new patches yet.
Brian
|
2329.19 | | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Fri Jan 25 1991 08:02 | 6 |
| Hi there !
I've seen ad's for SY22 editors, but none of the larger SW houses is offering
them yet.
Richard
|
2329.20 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | SpacebassmanBrown | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:47 | 7 |
| How does the SY22 compare to the D10, or D20? I've seen the specs in
the Keyboard Buyer's Guide. The SY22 has half the polyphony, but I
prefer the sounds. Would 300+ waveforms be enough to keep me, a novice
synthesist, happy for a year or so? Or would I find myself limited
after a couple of months?
matty
|
2329.21 | | DCSVAX::COTE | I've got an alibi... | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:01 | 6 |
| > SY22 has half the polyphony...
...carefull when making comparisons to Roland gear. They seem to use
an "optimistic" approach to polyphony figures.
Edd
|
2329.22 | Ditto, plus... | TLE::TLET8::ASHFORTH | The Lord is my light | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:49 | 20 |
| On polyphony, .21 has an *excellent* point, which applies to all gear, really.
Check out the specs real well to see how many "voices" are used to actually
generate each "sound." We users often assume, all too naively, that what they
say is what we get; if a synth layers the output of four LFOs to get each sound,
for instance, cut their polyphony by four.
The larger difference which I believe you'll want to look at is the fundamental
difference in voice architecture between the D-xx and SY-xx synths. The Roland
line is their "L/A" synthesis, while the Yamaha doodads are vector synthesis, a
whole different breed of cat. If you like the voices better, you'll probably
like the ones *you* can program better as well, IMHO. The only truly correct
decision is to get one of each! No, seriously, think long and hard, and you'll
be able to endure the inevitable second-guessing at least a *little* better. If
you don't think you understand the voice production methods, study them until
you feel comfortable making a choice.
Good luck.
Cheers,
Bob
|
2329.23 | Polyphony Is Really About The Same | AQUA::ROST | Who *was* Martin Lickert? | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:20 | 33 |
| The SY22 has essentially the same polyphony as a D-10/20.
The Rolands have 32 "partials" which you can use one, two, three or
four per patch. Yamaha has 32 "elements" which use two or four per
patch. So Roland only comes out ahead if you use lots of one partial
sounds (I don't like most of them).
The Yamaha drums are drawn from the 32 elements, the Roland drum sounds are
totally separate and a drum pattern sequencer is included.
The Yamaha effects unit is more flexible, it can do more than just
reverb.
Roland has filters for square and pulse waveforms, Yamaha does not;
this makes Roland better for analog-style sounds. Roland cannot use
filters with sampled partials, however, which makes it equal to the
Yamaha. Yamaha's vector synthesis allows a whole new class of sounds
that Roland cannot create, but Yamaha can imitate most of the Roland
sounds.
The Yamaha samples are superior to the Roland (to my ears). Yamaha has
aftertouch. Yamaha uses an external AC adapter (wall bug), Roland has
an internal power supply.
Of course, the SY22 has no sequencer while the D20 does, but the D20
sequencer is not very flexible.
The biggest plus going for Roland is the price will probably always be
less, as it's an older instrument, so the current street price of a
D-10 in the US is $50-100 less and used pieces are found easily at
further savings.
Brian
|
2329.24 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | SpacebassmanBrown | Mon Jan 28 1991 07:46 | 7 |
| I think I'm going to go for the Yammy. I can get one of them for 500
pounds, while the D10 is around 600 pounds. I prefer the sounds, the
looks and I love the Vector joystick idea on the Yammy. I also think
the Yammy will be easier to program.
matty
|
2329.25 | I'll be waiting.... | TLE::TLET8::ASHFORTH | The Lord is my light | Mon Jan 28 1991 08:44 | 9 |
| Re .24:
When you get your new baby, plop in a reply after you've had it a while. I still
harbor a barely-repressed lust for the TG33, and I'd love to see a considered
opinion based on enough use to expose the more subtle loves and hates which are
missed by "first impressions" and "spec snob" reviews.
Cheers,
Bob
|
2329.26 | Can you program more drums sounds? | IGETIT::BROWNM | A Ciccone Youth | Tue Mar 26 1991 14:17 | 8 |
| Question; The SY22 has 1 instrument where you a seperate percussion
sounds assigned to each key, ie. 69 drum sounds.
Can you copy this in a user definable `patch' and edit and store the
sounds?
matty
|
2329.27 | Yup, Sort Of | IXION::ROST | I dreamed I was Roy Estrada | Tue Mar 26 1991 14:43 | 6 |
| Yes and no.
You can modify the entire set of drum sounds, but not each sound
individually.
Brian
|
2329.28 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | A Ciccone Youth | Thu Apr 04 1991 03:55 | 5 |
| That sounds very off-putting. What's the soloution? It's important
that I have hundreds of rhythm sounds.
matty
|
2329.29 | Control Ch. for bank selector | ISIDRO::ISIDRO | | Thu Apr 04 1991 07:30 | 11 |
| I'VE JUST BOUGHT ONE TG33, AND LIKE SOME HELP.
It is suppossed that with Control Change 32 and the value of 37, you
can change yout preset bank into P2, as it comes in the page ADD3 of
the manual. I do not know what is going on, but it does not work, even
with other values neither with Control Change 0.
By the way. Anyone knows what LSB and MSB bank selector means?
Thanks.
|
2329.30 | | IXION::ROST | I dreamed I was Roy Estrada | Thu Apr 04 1991 08:49 | 11 |
| Re: .29
What you wrote isn't too clear, but LSB and MSB are usually least
significant byte and most significant byte, i.e. the data is
transferred in two pieces.
Perhaps if you could explain what you are trying to accomplish. When
you say "control change" are you talking MIDI continuous contollers or
are you talking a *program* change?
Brian
|
2329.31 | Contl Changes. YES | ISIDRO::ISIDRO | | Fri Apr 05 1991 03:50 | 26 |
| Yes, Control Change, no Program change.
In the MIDI implementation chart of TG33 manual you can see different
control changes that can de sent from the computer, in order of
changing some parameters, or instance, control change #7 modify the
volume of the selected instrument in the selected midi channel, between
0 - 127 values. Other control changes modify other parameters, such as
panpot (10), expresion (11), breath (6), vector control (16-17),
soustain (64), etc..., and
with control change 32 you can change the bank (P1 or P2 or Internal),
but it does not work in my system.
Control changes are very usefull. I use MUSIC-X software in my AMIGA
computer to drive my MIDI system (Kawai, Rland and Yamaha), and
inserting these control changes between notes you can add a nice
expresion to your compositions, modifying the pan or volume or whatever
in real time during play.
If anyone else is interested, I can eplain in details all kinds of
control changes, their range and so on.
Isidro.
|
2329.32 | Filters, sweeps, all sorts of cleaning utensils;-) | IGETIT::BROWNM | Lightbulb! Lightbulb! | Tue Jun 25 1991 08:27 | 7 |
| Carried on from the SH-101 note;
The TG33 has no filters, therefore does this mean it is not possible to
create `sweeping' sounds? Or are there other ways of doing this?
matty
|
2329.33 | | MANTHN::EDD | Edd Cote | Tue Jun 25 1991 09:24 | 8 |
| It's possible to emulate a sort of "sweeping" sound by diddling the
envelope of an FM *modulator*. It's no substitute for a filter but
it works in a pinch. I was able to get a patch that didn't sound unlike
the manic synth sweep in Edgar Winter's "Frankenstein" on my DX. I've
found it best to just leave the unit in EDIT mode and move the
slider(s) in real time....
Edd
|
2329.34 | Why Filters Are Making A Comeback | RGB::ROST | I believe she's a dope fiend | Tue Jun 25 1991 11:31 | 12 |
| Re: .33
The FM in the TG33 is not sophisicated enough to allow modulation as
Edd described.
What I would look for is a pair of FM presets and a pair of samples
that are similar to each other but have different degrees of
brightness, and then make a vector which rapidly moves between them.
Probably won't sound too "analog" but I suspect it's about as close as
you'll be able to get.
Brian
|