T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2456.1 | Ask and Ye Shall Receive | AQUA::ROST | She moves me, man | Mon Sep 24 1990 17:41 | 7 |
|
Karl,
The price from Sam Ash is about $550, it's cheaper than an Octapad II.
It's been in stores here for a few months, haven't heard it yet.
Brian
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2456.2 | SPD-8 pricing anyone? | KAOSWS::PARISEAU | | Tue Oct 09 1990 10:37 | 11 |
| -< SPD-8 pricing in Canada >-
The Rolland SPD-8 is sold up here for around $650 (Canadian). How much
is it going for in the U.S.? If the difference is significant...I'd be
interested in getting one through, say...interoffice mail...say for
Christmas. (one can wish, can't he...?)
By the way, it's got me salivating as well.
Robert
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2456.3 | | KEYS::MOELLER | she had teeth like billowing fire | Fri Dec 14 1990 17:58 | 9 |
| I recently received a small windfall, so I contacted my favorite
AZ synth store re the SPD-8. They claim it lists for $695, their
final price including tax is
$597.52
Nope.
karl
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2456.4 | 1st new SGU since 1988 ! | KEYS::MOELLER | she had teeth like billowing fire | Fri Dec 21 1990 11:24 | 12 |
| Well, I take it back. Dusted off the old Mastercard and bought an
SPD-8, including 2 pedals and the optional cymbal stand mount bracket.
Also, as the unit has no MIDI thru, purchased an Anatek Pocket Merge
and a 1' MIDI cable.
It arrived last night. My wife laughed when I opened the box,
extracted only the manual, closed the box, and sat back to read the
MIDI Implementation Chart.
I believe her words were, "I married a NERD!"
karl
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2456.5 | You know you're a nerd when you get horny reading a manual | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The Rippers are on a tear | Fri Dec 21 1990 13:52 | 23 |
| re: .4 (Moeller)
I did the same thing with my VFX-SD. (Took the manual out, took the
unit out only long enough to listen to the demo, play through the
sounds, and then back into the box).
I *LOVE* reading the VFX-SD manual - it's like they added everything I
ever wanted in the SQ-80 or ESQ-1.
Every so often while I'm reading the manual I let an "Oh NEAT!" escape
and if anyone else is in the room they shake their heads like I was
crazy.
db
p.s. Have to say it: after having read mostly Roland manuals for the
last 4 years (age of my last Ensoniq purchase), I HAVE to say
that reading an Ensoniq manual is like a TREMENDOUS breath of
fresh air.
Incredibly well written, and at least they TELL you if they make
a forward reference. They also inject a little humor here and
there as well.
|
2456.6 | external pads? | RICKS::NORCROSS | | Fri Dec 21 1990 13:54 | 14 |
| Does it have external pad inputs? I'm curious.
fyi, I've got a Pad-8 at home and I'm in the process of constructing
homebrew external pads. I'm impressed with how well they work - for
about $5 each. I'm making them from the "piezo buzzers" that you can buy
at rat shack. They turn out to have just about the right sensitivity.
The pedals you mentioned sound great. I'd love to be able to switch an
open/closed hit-hat. As for the kick-pedal, I ended up buying a rather
expensive kick-pedal-electronic-trigger which works very well and "feels"
great.
Happy Holidays,
/Mitch
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2456.7 | | KEYS::MOELLER | she had teeth like billowing fire | Wed Dec 26 1990 15:24 | 11 |
| Mitch, no external pad inputs. The 'kick' pedal can actually be
assigned to any MIDI note/channel number. The A/B switch pedal is only
useful for the internal sounds, because there is no MIDI event
associated with it... that is, I set up a 'kit' (kit 'A') and one of
the pads is open hihat. I set up a second 'kit' B, with ONLY the
closed hihat sound. Switching the pedal switches kits, but if I were
recording into a sequencer, only the open sound would be played back
since the A/B pedal doesn't have a corresponding MIDI event assigned to
it.
karl
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2456.8 | come again | RICKS::NORCROSS | Neon! | Wed Jan 02 1991 10:48 | 9 |
| but karl, if the pedal switches between kit A and kit B, then as
you record into a sequencer, you would in fact record the two different
MIDI notes (open hat/closed hat). So it IS useful for external sound
too, no? (I understand that there's no midi event corresponding to the
pedal switch, but you do get the effect externally, no?)
that's too bad about the lack of external pads though.
/mitch
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2456.9 | | KEYS::MOELLER | Stressed ? Just say 'Damitol'-I do! | Wed Jan 02 1991 12:12 | 11 |
| <<< Note 2456.8 by RICKS::NORCROSS "Neon!" >>>
-< come again >-
>if the pedal switches between kit A and kit B, then as
>you record into a sequencer, you would in fact record the two different
>MIDI notes (open hat/closed hat). So it IS useful for external sound
>too, no?
hadn't thought of that - haven't tested it out much as a MIDI
controller - the first time I tried... but that's for another note.
thanks for the thought. karl
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2456.10 | snicksnickSHOOPsnicksnickSHOOP | KEYS::MOELLER | Stressed ? Just say 'Damitol'-I do! | Thu Jan 10 1991 16:41 | 15 |
| Okay, finally got this thing integrated into my setup as a controller
AND SGU. Played some more with the A/B footswitch. I can have an open
and closed hihat (yes, it generates different MIDI note numbers for
each) assigned to the same pad. The problem is that the open sound
doesn't truncate in the SPD when a closed sound is struck..
Started me thinking. I set up my EMAX to listen to the SPD-8. Two
notes on the EMAX, one closed, one open, assigned to the SAME DAC !
So now the SPD-8 A/B switch causes the open sound to be properly
truncated when the closed sound is struck.
Wouldn't a real hihat have been cheaper ? Certainly simpler...
and certainly louder..
karl
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2456.11 | Sampled hihats are a convenience feature even if it's a kludge... | XERO::ARNOLD | C++ treats me like an object . | Fri Jan 11 1991 09:52 | 14 |
| >>> Wouldn't a real hihat have been cheaper ? Certainly simpler...
>>> and certainly louder..
Karl, I'm sure you know this and were asking rhetorically, but I couldn't
resist....
But real hihats aren't easy to record. I've NEVER been able to mike hihats
such that they sound anything like they do on records. With a good sample, I
can record with minimal noise, no microphones, and save a tape track. And,
besides, with a big amplifier a sampled hihat can be SOOOOO much louder than
an acoustic hihat.
- John -
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2456.12 | HH's are hard | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | I'm hungry, I'd like 2 all-u-can-eat platters | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:47 | 9 |
| I know what you mean about making sampled HHs sound real. I think that
the Roland R-8's Human Feel nuance variations are a BIG win for doing
HHs.
In the absence of that (I don't own an R-8), I've found that your
velocity levels are critical to making it sound real. It's also
important to open and close the HH occasionally. Repeat hits on
a closed or even half open HH sound VERY metronomic if the velocity
isn't varied.
|
2456.13 | | MANTHN::EDD | We could be heroes... | Fri Oct 04 1991 12:08 | 18 |
| <<< DNEAST::SYS$TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;2 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2741.0 General help needed with Electronic Drums 1 reply
NEMAIL::MERCIER "Baaabbbyy Snaaaakes" 12 lines 4-OCT-1991 10:37
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I did a keyword search and couldnt find any info on the Roland SPD8
drum pads. Can anybody provide me with some general information;
how they are, internal sounds, midi comp. etc. I am not all that
familar with electronic drumming equipment. I am interested in getting
into more. Currently I play a standard kit, but I would like to begin
doing some triggering amongst other things. I dont have alot of money
to invest at this point, so I anyone knows of some cheaper but reliable
ways of accomplishing this let me know.
Thanks,
Bob
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2456.14 | some feedback | SALSA::MOELLER | This space intentionally Left Bank | Fri Oct 04 1991 15:54 | 30 |
| > I did a keyword search and couldnt find any info on the Roland SPD8
> drum pads.
DIR /TITLE= SPD...
>Can anybody provide me with some general information;
>how they are,
Rugged. sits on a cymbal stand.
>internal sounds,
good quality, built-in and controllable pan position, lots of variants,
acoustic drums, simmons sounds, some latin, marimbas, steel drums, many
of the tonal instruments are tuned to an A scale. 32 kits of 8 pads
each, switchable with a footswitch to 8 other sounds
>midi comp. etc.
The MIDI implementation is.. frustrating. The manual purports to show
the MIDI note assignment for each 'kit'.. turns out to be not true.
You have to assign the damn things manually. Can't switch kits via
patch change, you have to select the kit manually.
It has 3 pedals - can be assigned as a functioning kick pedal. Also as
ahihat switch pedal, plus a 'kit advance' pedal.
Because of the need to assign MIDI note numbers to each and every pad,
16 per kit, X 32, it doesn't get much use. To be fair, after the notes
are assigned, the unit will remember the settings, and if I were
ambitious I could save everything in a SYSEX dumpt to my sequencer.
karl
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2456.15 | | JANUS::CWALSH | The Man Who Knew Too Often | Mon Oct 07 1991 04:54 | 17 |
|
I have an SPD-8, and I'm very pleased with the range and quality of sounds that
it provides. One slightly annoying feature, though, is that I find the pads to
be a little insensitive. They are sufficiently unresponsive that you can't get
a sound from a pad by hitting it with your hand (at least, you'd need to hit it
pretty damn hard!)
Now, I'm not actually interested in playing the thing by hand, but I do find
that when using sticks I have to hit quite briskly, and the stick noise (impact
of the stick on the pad) is very noticeable. For some sounds (snare and kicks)
this is less of a problem, but I find that the stick noise interferes with the
cymbal sounds quite badly.
Has anyone else found this problem? Has anyone found a solution?
Chris
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2456.16 | | SALSA::MOELLER | think of it as sense,not surrender | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:29 | 11 |
| I have that syndrome, too - it seems to have only two volumes - very
soft and very loud.
Another issue I have is the number of tonal instruments - it seems they
forgot this is a PERCUSSION module and put in bunches of marimbas,
vibes, xylophones, etc... I'd rather have had a few more ride or crash
cymbals, or several types of hi-hat hits.
Not exactly recommended by me.
karl
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2456.17 | Not An Acoustic Instrument | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG1-2/W10 | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:26 | 13 |
| I assume the SPD-8 pads use the same technology as the PAD-8 and its
progeny. To be fair to Roland, these pads were designed to not
spuriously trigger in high ambient sound level (read "live rock band
onstage") environments. As a result they really can't be played with
fingers, and that's by design. In the environment they were designed
for, impact noise is inaudible.
My PAD-8 has sensitivity level and "curve" parameters that can be
adjusted to provide pretty wide dynamic range and stick response.
I don't know if the SPD-8 provides equivalent parameters.
len.
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2456.18 | tuned and tonal percussion | NUTELA::CHAD | Chad in Munich at RTO, DTN 865 3976 | Tue Oct 08 1991 05:22 | 4 |
| But karl, vibes, xylophones, and marimbas *ARE* percussion instruments.
Chad
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2456.19 | I want things that go BOOM and THUD and CRASH | SALSA::MOELLER | think of it as sense,not surrender | Tue Oct 08 1991 13:59 | 9 |
| <<< Note 2456.18 by NUTELA::CHAD "Chad in Munich at RTO, DTN 865 3976" >>>
> But karl, vibes, xylophones, and marimbas *ARE* percussion instruments.
Yeah, yeah.. not to me, apparently.
Kudos on the four people that sent me mail on this. Your cortical
vigilance is... vigilant. ;-)
karl
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