SEARCH
test widget

Entries in roland (4)

Tuesday
Jun302009

the analog silliness continues unabated... 

This is the latest addition to my ever-growing fleet of old analog synths: a 1983-vintage Roland JX-3P analog polysynth. I snagged this guy with the hard-to-find PG200 knob programmer dealie for just $350, and besides one wanky key, everything works peachy. As JX-3P's didn't originally come with the programmer, out of the box, sound editing was done by selecting a parameter number and moving a single slider, DX7-style. Y-to-the-uck. But Roland would sell you the PG200 controller, which offered knob control of all sound parameters. Being the proud owner of both, I was surprised to learn the programmer is affixed to the top of the synth via magetic strips. High-tech!

People tend to honk on about how DCO's sound inferior to VCO's (that's digitally-controlled oscillators vs. voltage-controlled oscillators), because digitally control makes the tuning too precise, and I guess they're sort of right- I own an even older Roland Jupiter-4, and it's tuning certainly stretches the boundaries of warm. But it's not bad- the JX is still plenty "warm" sounding

The JP-4 is a raunchier sounding synth, and the sound parameters tend to have a more extreme range. But the JX-3P has two more voices of polyphony, and more importantly is a dual-oscillator synth, so that adds a lot. And it retains the famous Roland chorus, which frequently turns decent sounds into killer sounds. The only really annoying WTF-were-they-thinking aspect for me is the omission of pulse width and pulse-width modulation- the oscillators just have a non-modulatable square or thin pulse wave. Grrr... the JX-3P would SO cool if it had 'em. OTOH, for the price, it's probably the best bargain going in old polysynth world.

Thursday
Mar262009

Take only what you need from us.

More adventures with my new Canon ZR930 camcorder. Lou and I covered the ridiculously catchy MGMT tune "Kids" a month ago at a little live show, so we made a video of it the other night at my studio. This time I decided to go for semi hi-fi audio, as opposed to icky camera mic audio. We played through a little PA with wedges; I simply ran a stereo mix from the board straight into Logic, did some mastering on the stereo audio and then lined it up with the video in Final Cut (relatively easy, because I had the audio from the camera mic). For the synth cognoscenti: I'm playing a vintage Roland Jupiter-4 (running into Electro-Harmonix Memory Man w/Hazarai), a Synthesizers.com modular controlled by a wee StudioLogic MIDI controller, drums are my vintage LinnDrum (started/stopped by a footswitch), and the lovely Louise is a playing a Yamaha P-70. During the solo, I used the clock out from the Linn to externally clock the arpeggiator in the Jupiter.
Wednesday
Jan282009

This is what I wannabe when I grow up...

more things I missed from NAMM: post by Mitchell "Miami Nice" Sigman I play synths. I love old synths. I like old nerdy new wave bands that you probably never heard of. But I can't do a keytar. I can't I can't I can't!!!
Thursday
Jan152009

NAMM '09- Everyone loves astrap-on... keyboard

Ok, it's SO tempting to make a wiseass caption here... but suffice to say, this Roland rep WAS kinda tearing it up. The Roland Ax-Synth repackaged version of Roland's classic strap-on controller, but now with an XV-series sound engine built-in so you can plug 'er in and wail. Should be out around July at around $1095 street price. Should give you sufficient time to really get those chops honed.