T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1396.1 | MIDI lust is a terrible thing... | CLULES::SPEED | If it doesn't rack, it doesn't roll | Wed May 18 1988 17:26 | 3 |
| Did they give you a price quote on the D-110 rack mount?
Derek
|
1396.2 | not bad | SUBSYS::ORIN | AMIGA te amo | Wed May 18 1988 18:06 | 6 |
| > Did they give you a price quote on the D-110 rack mount?
The standard price will be $999. When they become more available, there may
be a special DECMS price at Wurly's.
dave
|
1396.3 | Smarvelous! Swonderful! | HEART::MACHIN | | Thu May 19 1988 08:02 | 5 |
| Well blow me down. U.K. price 785 for the D10 and 575 for the D110!
Is this a record?
Richard.
|
1396.5 | Are you sure about the carts? | PANGLS::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Thu May 19 1988 20:43 | 6 |
| My salesman told me that the D1[1]0 carts were physically the same
as the D5[5]0, but that the format was different. I didn't try
it, but...
Steph
|
1396.6 | | RUGRAT::POWELL | Dan Powell/274-6608 | Tue May 24 1988 13:59 | 7 |
| The D-50 cards are physically the same but are NOT compatible with
the D-10.
With only a three hundred dollar difference between the D-50 and D-10
what architectural differences /features would make you choose a D-10
over the D-50?
|
1396.7 | D-50 vs D-10 | NRADM::KARL | | Wed May 25 1988 01:34 | 7 |
| I own a D-50. In reading about the D-10, all I see are improvements,
and it cost less. I'm curious as to what the differences are,
i. e. what doesn't the D-10 have that the D-50 has? From reading
the notes so far, it looks like I should trade my D-50 in for a
D-10.
Bill
|
1396.8 | An uneducated guess from a non-owner | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - DTN 433-2408 | Wed May 25 1988 09:11 | 5 |
| D-50 has more partials available *per patch* than D-10.
D-10 is poly-timbral, D-50 is not (or bi, can't remember which).
-b
|
1396.9 | cleaner sound | FREKE::LEIGH | | Wed May 25 1988 12:24 | 8 |
| > D-50 has more partials available *per patch* than D-10.
> D-10 is poly-timbral, D-50 is not (or bi, can't remember which).
My experience is also that the D50 has a cleaner sound.
Chad
|
1396.10 | Just what I heard, not necessarily fact... | 20981::EATOND | Where is he when the music stops? | Wed May 25 1988 12:45 | 7 |
| I've heard it said that the D-10 is more likened to the MT-32 than the
D-50. It seemes to have a lot of similarities (multi-timbral, drum sounds...).
If the *sound-generating* circuitry is the same as the MT-32, the purists among
us will say keep the D-50.
Dan
|
1396.11 | D-50 is the Dad of the family...for now... | FDCV06::ARVIDSON | Live now. Procrastinate later. | Thu May 26 1988 15:31 | 9 |
| The D-50 has more patch modification capabilities than the D-10(20).
Also there is some difference in the reverb.
The D-50 is bi-tambral (...or you could spell it timberal, or you
could spell it tamberil, or you could spell it tambril, or you...)
Dan
BTW: How do you spell it?
|
1396.12 | D110 first impressions | SUBSYS::ORIN | AMIGA te amo | Thu May 26 1988 15:42 | 66 |
| I spent some time with the D110 last night while the Celtics were busy
blowing it. Here are some first impressions...
1. I connected the D110 to my D50 to use the D50 as the mother board controller.
The MC500 was also involved. The MIDI path is ...
--------------- -------------- ---------------
| |MIDI MIDI | | | |
| |<-------------| | | |
| |In Out | | | |
| | | | | |
| |MIDI MIDI | |MIDI MIDI | |
| D50 |------------->| MC500 |------------>| D110 |
| |Out In | |Out In | |
--------------- -------------- ---------------
Set the MC500 MIDI parameter "Soft Thru" to ON so that you can play the
D110 from the D50, the MC500 sequenced tracks, or both simultaneously.
This lets you layer the D50 and D110 live and play over a sequence playback
on the MC500. ( Sorry if this seems trivial to MIDI gurus, but it was a
new experience for me so I thought it might be useful ).
2. There is a fairly decent Acoustic Piano patch. I would call it a Rag Time
Honky-Tonk upright grand Scott Joplin here we come kind of sound. Very
convincing when played in this style. I sequenced the first page of
Maple Leaf Rag and it sounds great. An interesting aside to this is that
Scott Joplin music as written is very stiff and mechanical. The microscope
edit feature on the MC500 is invaluable for editing the attack velocity
of the MIDI note events to get more expression. The articulation percentage
of step programmed notes needs to be varied frequently, and a syncopation
factor needs to be added to get a realistic feel. Otherwise it is very
mechanical sounding; too perfect. There is a Tuba patch and of course the
drum kit, so I am planning on adding a Tuba bass track and drum rhythm
track to get that "Sting" band concert in the gazebo effect.
3. Some of the patches have some grundgy "digital" noise, especially the
organ. Others are clean and quiet. When everything is put in the proper
musical context, such as the 8 song chain built-in ROM demo, the sound
is wonderful. There is a nice horn lead patch, bass patches, excellent
flutes, strings not too nice, drums ok, good (but noisy) organ, breathy
wind instruments, some f/x, etc.
4. There are assignable partials for each patch, from 1 to 4. The D50 always
reserves space for 4 each patch, even if you don't use them all. On the
D110 there are 13 possible structures (7 on D50), and 8 reverbs (32 on D50).
5. I was comparing my sound system with the one at Wurly's. I was wondering why
there was so much noise in my system (hiss and hum) compared to the store.
I discovered that even when the Tascam M216 mixer outputs were off that I
still had the noise. It turned out to be the DOD graphic EQ. I patched it
out of the system and presto! silence and nothing but clean sound, no
background noise. With these synths, graphic EQ is not necessary, and in my
case added lots of disgusting hiss. I haven't found a use for the graphic
EQ yet. The parametrics on the board do just fine.
6. Different groups of patches seem to be assigned to different MIDI channels.
The drum kit shows up on channel 1 in the higher band/patch range. Others
are assigned to channels 2 thru 10. I haven't found anything on 11 thru 16
yet. Time to start reading the manual I guess. It came with a nice thick
manual similar to the MC500 advanced user manual.
more later,
dave
|
1396.13 | D-10 "Local Off"? | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Sat Jun 11 1988 17:11 | 26 |
| Question for D-10/D-110 buffs:
Can the D-10 keyboard be "separated" from the D-10 multi-timbral synth?
In other words, can you drive the multi-timbral synth from an external
sequencer over MIDI (via MIDI IN), and at the same time use the keyboard
in a "local off" mode just to send notes to other modules (via MIDI OUT)?
.........
Why I would like this:
I need a sound source in the D-110 range of capability. That is, I need all
those percussion sounds and all that multi-timbral capability.
I also need a velocity sensitive keyboard controller.
I prefer to keep these two functions separate, so that I can compose
and sequence basic tracks with the sound source, then use the controller to
sequence other parts with other modules on top of that.
So I thought maybe a D-10 could do this for me, in place of a D-110/Keyboard
Controller combination.
Any input appreciated,
Thanks,
/Mitch
|
1396.14 | prices? | FREKE::LEIGH | | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:09 | 8 |
|
So, what is the cheapest price you've seen yet on a D110?
thanks
CHad
|
1396.15 | Tool for D110 access | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Tue Jul 26 1988 14:52 | 63 |
| Here is some information about the D110 architecture that I found useful to
summarize in one place. While the documentation is very good at defining all
these terms and showing how they logically relate to one another with
pictures, it doesn't show which heirarchical pieces can be used in others
and which are online via MIDI (and how) all in one place very well. I may
have some mistakes here. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
I have not shown any references to how one creates tones from partials.
I don't have any interest in that (right now). The information given here
really just helps one to *access* all of his instruments more quickly and
easily.
Good Luck, it's a jungle out there,
/Mitch
Roland D-110 Architecture
Tones Timbres
.---. .---. .---. .---. .---. .---. .---. .---. .---.
|1 | |1 | |1 | |1 | |1 | |1 | |1 | |1 | |1 |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|64 | |64 | |64 | |64 | |64 | |64 | |64 | |64 | |64 |
`---' `---' `---' `---' `---' `---' `---' `---' `---'
a b r i c IA IB CA CB
| | `----------' `----------'
`-------' Pgrmble, |
Card Xferable Can be programmed |
`------------------' `---' into Patches. |
Preset Pgrmble | |
`-----------' `--------------'
Can be used in Rythm Setup Card Xferble
`-------------------------' `------------------------'
Can be programmed into Timbres On-line via MIDI part channel
program change messages but
only all internal (I, 1-128)
or all card (C, 1-128).
Patches Rythm Setup
.---. .---. .---. .---.
|1 | |1 | |1 | |1 |
| | | | `---' `---'
| | | | I C
| | | | `---' |
| | | | Pgrmble |
| | | | | |
| | | | `------'
|64 | |64 | Card Xferable
`---' `---'
I C `---'
`---' | Online via MIDI
Pgrmble |
| |
`------'
Card Xferable
`------------'
Online via MIDI system channel program change messages (1-128)
|
1396.16 | D-110 Comments/FB-01 Comparison | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Thu Aug 04 1988 20:03 | 71 |
| D-110 Comments/ FB-01 Comparison
---------------------------------
One of the good things about the Roland D-110 is that it's 8
"instruments" are available over 8 separate MIDI channels and that
each of the 8 instruments can play ANY of the 128 timbres
available by sending a program change message on that instrument's
channel. And the dynamic "voice" allocation scheme means that you
don't have to pre-allocate any specific number of voices to any
particular instrument.
In a sense, the D-110 "user interface" (via MIDI) is like 8
"virtual" instruments.
Now, with the FB-01 on the other hand, each instrument only has
access to the 48 voices that resides in the current voice bank
(without using sysex). And since it doesn't have dynamic
allocation, you must pre-assign a number of voices to each
instrument.
The FB-01 "user interface" (via MIDI),then, is a pre-set
"configuration" within which (typically) 2 or 3 instruments each
with 2 or 3 voices available are accessed. Setting up and storing
these configurations for each song requires front panel and
possibly sysex librarian operations.
(Can anyone describe how what the TX81Z "user interface" looks like
in this regard? I would really like to know. It could possibly
replace my FB.)
I have decided that I no longer want to deal with multi-timbral
devices which do not present the user with "virtual" instruments.
So, these days, my FB01 is only being used as a mono-timbral
instrument with access to 48 of my favorite FB01 sounds. (It's a
good thing that I just discovered the battery backup switch on the
back of the FB01 so that I can keep my favorite voices in one bank
and so it powers up with that bank selected.) Now I no longer
touch the FB's front panel at all.
There is a catch to the above D-110 description above. That is,
with a memory card in place, you *can* actually have access to 128
*additional* timbres, but each virtual instrument only has access
to the internal 128 exclusive-or the memory card 128. (This is
where it gets a little complicated, refer to D-110 graphics in an
earlier reply). The D-110 does in fact have the equivalent of FB
"configurations", but they're called "patches" and they *are*
accessible with simple program change messages over the
system channel (instead of sysex messages like the FB). So you
can either have SIMPLE access to 128 timbres, or if you're willing
to also maintain a set of "patches" and corresponding "patch
change command sequences", then you can have access to an
additional 128 timbres. So far I've been happy with just SIMPLE
access to 128 timbres on each of the 8 instruments. I'm getting a
memory card, though, to see if it becomes more rewarding to use
the additional timbres.
D-110 Sounds
------------
I am quite happy with the following type sounds:
basses, synths, horns, drums, percussion, electric pianos, special
effects, brasses, flutes, harps.
The following type sounds leave something to be desired:
acoustic pianos, strings, human voices ("Ahh").
These observations are based on non-layered sounds. I suppose the
strings and human voices can be made to sound better by layering them
in "patches".
/Mitch
|
1396.17 | Here's a shot | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | socialism doesn't work ... | Fri Aug 05 1988 14:58 | 27 |
|
>The FB-01 "user interface" (via MIDI),then, is a pre-set
> "configuration" within which (typically) 2 or 3 instruments each
> with 2 or 3 voices available are accessed. Setting up and storing
> these configurations for each song requires front panel and
> possibly sysex librarian operations.
>
>(Can anyone describe how what the TX81Z "user interface" looks like
> in this regard? I would really like to know. It could possibly
> replace my FB.)
The TX81Z "user interface" (via front-panel controls or MIDI) is a
user-definable "configuration" within which (typically) 2 or 3
instruments each typically with 2 or 3 voices are accessed. Up to
8 voices may be so configured and the configuration is not 'virtual'.
That is, each timbre gets as many voices as are assigned to it and
there is basically no dynamic allocation of voices. (An exception to this
is a mode which assigns notes to voices in sequential fashion.) Setting
up and storing these configurations for each song requires front
panel, patch change and possibly sysex librarian operations.
FWIW - Sounds to me like the TX is a *lot* more flexible than the FB.
Steve
|
1396.18 | Using Memory Card Timbres? | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Mon Aug 08 1988 16:53 | 34 |
| >There is a catch to the above D-110 description above. That is,
> with a memory card in place, you *can* actually have access to 128
> *additional* timbres, but each virtual instrument only has access
> to the internal 128 exclusive-or the memory card 128.
...and what a pain it is to get the thing to even work this way. I'm not
quite sure how I am able to do it. I just keep hitting the buttons till
it happens.
I must be doing something wrong. Anyone know a good Roland telephone number
to ask questions over?
-----------
What I mean is, after you select a "patch" (fb configuration equivalent)
which says that instruments 6,7,8 should select a voice from the memory card
instead of from the internal memory, you get the memory card voices. But then,
as soon as you send a program change message on that channel, it reverts to
using internal memory voices on that channel.
Now the manual says that 'if the instrument on that channel is using a memory
card voice, then a program change message will select a memory card voice
on that channel (while if it is using an internal voice, the message would
invoke an internal voice)'. But this is not what's happening, at least not
after you call up a 'patch'.
I have been able to get this to happen after pushing lot's of buttons and
going into and getting out of lot's of modes. Specifically, I think I can
get it to happen after I 'edit' an instrument, but I can't even be sure.
And even this will go away as soon as you select a 'patch'.
The whole thing really is quite frustrating. The front panel user interface
is real bad.
/Mitch
|
1396.19 | D-110/MT-32 Comparison | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Aug 16 1988 17:35 | 160 |
| Off the USENET, the following D-110/MT-32 comparison.
len.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: rec.music.synth
Path: decwrl!ucbvax!pasteur!ames!mailrus!cornell!batcomputer!itsgw!steinmetz!ge-dab!ge-rtp!edison!mfs
Subject: The Roland D110; a review and comparison to the MT-32
Posted: 12 Aug 88 16:45:41 GMT
Organization:
Since there seems to be alot of interest in the Roland MT-32 and D110
synths on the net lately, and since I have both, I thought I would share
some of my impressions of how the D110 improves on the MT design.
First of all, as I'm sure all of you know, the MT and D110 are multi-
timbral boxes with no keyboards. They both seem to have the nearly the
same architecture, although Roland decided to rename some of the blocks
of parameters inside the D110, just to keep everyone confused :). For
the most part though, the D110 is a 'turbo' MT.
Externally, the D110 is a nice thin rackmount job with an internal power
supply. The front panel sports a volume knob, 16 push buttons, a two line
backlit LCD display and a headphone jack. It also has a slot for one of
those slim little memory cards. On the back are MIDI in, out and thru
jacks, 6 assignable outputs and a set of stereo outputs. This is an obvious
improvement over the MTs 'clock radio' design for mounting the unit and
allows a more flexible audio output arrangement.
The buttons on the front provide a way to program everything in case you
don't have access to a computer and patch editing software. While this
is great, it is kind of tedious to enter sounds this way as Roland did
away with the nice 'alpha dial' kind of thing that some of their other
synths have. Of course, since the MT was not programmable at all from the
front panel, this is a vast improvement. Also, unlike the MT, the D110
has a lithium battery, so you don't lose everything when you power down
the thing. (don't ya hate it when that happens ? :)
Circuit-wise, the D110 has a smaller chip count than the MT and
seems to run the internal processor (an Intel 8097) in 8 bit bus mode vs
the MT's 16 bit mode. (It's selectable in the 8097, weird huh ? ) I
say this cause I only saw one socketed 27C256 inside, unlike the MT
which has two. I haven't dissassembled the code inside yet, but it
should be neat to see what's going on in there and how close it is to
the MT's firmware.
The analog circuitry has been *greatly* improved. I always thought
I had a 'quiet' MT, but the D110 is an order of magnitude better.
To go along with the new analog section, the D110 lets you assign any of
the internal 'parts' (at least Roland kept that term the same)
to any of the 6 mono outputs or the stereo mix. Parts sent thru these
outputs are removed from the stereo mix and are not effected by the reverb.
Incidentaly, the reverb on the D110 has eight selections instead of the 4
offered on the MT and has also been cleaned up (noise-wise) considerably.
The basic parameter blocks inside the D110 are almost identical to the ones
in the MT, except that they are named differently. In case you are unfamiliar
with these, the following gives a brief rundown of the functional sections:
The smallest unit of sound generation is called a partial. Four partials
are grouped together to form a tone. A timbre is made up of a tone plus
several performance parameters. A patch is a group of eight timbres, reverb
settings and a rhythm setup.
First of all, lets look at a partial. Each one of these is made up of
a Waveform Generator (WG), Time Variant Filter (TVF) and a Time Variant
Amplifier (TVA). Each of these blocks has several parameters and a five
stage envelope generator associated with it. The WG has controls which
affect the coarse and fine pitch, select the waveform (sawtooth, square
and PCM #) and control the amount of envelope effect. The TVF parameters
include cutoff frequency, resonance, velocity sensitivity, several keyfollow
parameters and a five stage envelope generator (the last stage of the
envelope is fixed as the sustain level and release time). The TVA has an
overall level adjustment, velocity sensitivity controls and a five stage
envelope.
Partials can be one of two types: Synth or PCM partials. In the Synth
partials, all of the above mentioned blocks are active. You can set up
a sawtooth on the WG, filter it with the TVF and adjust the volume with
the TVA. In a PCM partial, instead of using the standard square or
sawtooth kind of waveform, a sampled waveform is selected. Some of these
samples are looped so they sustain, while others only sound during the
initial attack of a note. Also, in a PCM partial, the TVF has no effect.
Perhaps the best improvement over the MT-32 is in the PCM section. The
D110 has a *much* better selection of PCM waveforms. Instead of the
128 found in the MT, the D110 has two banks (256 total) of PCM waveforms.
Also, the MT really only has about 30-40 really useful ones, while the
D110 has well over a hundred that are really great. Included are 30
rhythm PCMs, 41 Attack PCMs, 36 looped PCMs (including male and female
voice loops) and 16 'release' PCMs. In the other bank are the now
famous 'repeat' and 'jam' PCMs which are not real useable, but fun.
Partials are combined into blocks called tones. Each tone is made up of
two pairs of partials. These pairs are combined by setting a parameter
called a structure. The structure tells the partials what kind they are
(Synth or PCM) and how their output is combined. Depending on the structure
setting, the partials can be set up as 2 synth partials, a PCM partial
and a synth partial, 2 PCM partials, stereo PCM/synth partials (one partial
out the left and one out the right) and ring modulated synth and/or PCM
partials. Very flexible.
Like the MT-32, the D110 has 128 tones (called timbres in the MT) stored
in ROM. It also has room to store 64 more tones in internal RAM. An
additional 32 or 64 tones can be stored on RAM card.
The next block in the D110 is called a timbre (was called a patch in the MT)
There are 128 storage locations in the D110. Each timbre cooresponds to a
MIDI program change number and contains several parameters. The first tells
which tone is assigned to it: Bank A 1-64, Bank B 1-64, Rhythm tones 1-64
internal tones 1-64 or memory card tones 1-64. The second is the keyshift
parameter which allows the tone to be adjusted up or down by 24 half steps.
The fine tune, bend range and output assign (stereo mix or individual outs)
can also be adjusted for each timbre. So, when you send a MIDI program
change to a particular channel, the D110 goes and looks in this timbre
map, pulls out the sound you have selected, sets the keyshift etc and places
all this in the part associated with that MIDI channel. Simple huh ?
Now we come to the last block of parameters, patches. This is something
which didn't exist in the MT. Patches are sort of like global setups.
You specify a reverb setting, the desired timbres for each part and a rhythm
setup. You then give this a name and save it in one of 64 locations. Now,
by selecting that particular patch, you will load all the parts with the
timbres you specified, set the reverb and pull in the rhythm setup. All
with one command. Neat huh ?
Amazingly (considering all the incompatibility problems Yamaha has), my
MT-32 patch editor works great on the D110. There are a few things that
you can't get to, but most everything works just fine. I am told the
D-10 and the D-20 are compatible as well. Them Roland guys got their
shit together.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
All in all, the D110 is a great machine. Combine it with an MT or another
multi-timbral unit and you can have a desktop orchestra for minimum bucks.
With just my MT and D110, I can have layered drum sounds, and fill all the
MIDI channels !
Several of the patch producers in the back of keyboard (including me) are
selling sounds and setups, so there is no shortage of good tones for this
box. Also, once you get the hang of it, the D110 is pretty easy to program.
Oh yeah, the price. I ordered mine from Sam Ash (1 800 4SAM ASH) and
it cost $697 and was at my door in less than a week (I live in VA). The
first one had a screwed up display, so I called and got a return authorization
number and shipped it back. I had a new one in a week. Great mail order
place.
Hope you enjoyed this rather long winded description. If ya have any
questions, corrections, or wanna trade some patches (er, tones..) e-mail me.
Martin
mfs@edison.GE.COM
Rt 8, Box N55,
Charlottesville, VA 22901
|
1396.20 | Moreover and Strictly Speaking | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Wed Aug 17 1988 16:51 | 19 |
| >To go along with the new analog section, the D110 lets you assign any of
>the internal 'parts' (at least Roland kept that term the same)
>to any of the 6 mono outputs or the stereo mix.
Moreover, each "key" of the drum setup (each single drum sound) can also be
individually assigned to any of the 6 mono outputs. This is great, of course,
for sending snares separately for separate reverb processing.
>A patch is a group of eight timbres, reverb
>settings and a rhythm setup.
Strictly speaking, each patch does not contain a rhythm setup. There is only
one rhythm setup for the entire box, period.
What each patch does contain is a couple of settings for the rhythm part
as a whole, like output volume. THE one and only rhythm setup defines which
keys trigger which tones, which outputs the keys are routed to, and
pan for each key.
/Mitch
|
1396.21 | D-10 info from usenet | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Thu Oct 20 1988 11:35 | 93 |
| Newsgroups: rec.music.synth
Path: decwrl!labrea!rutgers!apple!voder!wlbr!pete
Subject: Roland D10/D20 Information
Posted: 18 Oct 88 19:56:54 GMT
Organization: Eaton IMSD, Westlake Village, CA
Pete
============================================================
Some intesting Roland D-10 info from a few CIS messages:
============================================================
#: 20805 S9/Synthesizers
14-Oct-88 07:54:20
Sb: #D10 ROM versions
Fm: Phil Camp 76004,2054
To: all
Having had no reply from Roland, I'm still trying to sort out my faulty Roland
D10. Thanks to a chap on MIDI-NET I now know how to find the ROM version
number. You hold down the EDIT and DATA TRANSFER buttons while powering the D10
on. My machine shows "1.10 27E8". Could all you D10 owners out there check your
ROMs and let me know if yours is different.
Thanks, Phil Camp.
* Replies: 20908, 21301
Read action !
#: 21014 S9/Synthesizers
16-Oct-88 14:05:23
Sb: #20908-#D10 ROM versions
Fm: Phil Camp 76004,2054
To: Jean P. St.Louis 76537,1407
My D10 (1.10) has a bug into the data transfer functions, so far Roland refuse
to belive its there. So far I have found 3 different ROM versions (1.01, 1.02
and 1.10) the more I can get the more ammo I will have to force Roland to 'come
clean' about the ROM changes.
BTW the bug in the transmit routines causes the F7s from the sys-ex packets to
be lost.
* Reply: 21101
Read action !
#: 21296 S9/Synthesizers
18-Oct-88 07:42:52
Sb: #D10 power on functions
Fm: Phil Camp 76004,2054
To: all
During my search for ROM versions, people on MIDI-NET and BIX have given me the
following undocumented power on commands for the Roland D10;
TUNE/FUNCTION + WRITE = Initialise the D10. ** WARNING ** This sets the machine
back to its 'out of the box' state. You lose any modified settings you have
created.
EXIT + EDIT = Diagnostic mode. This mode require two other buttons to be
pressed simultaneously ;
Diag; EXIT + EDIT = memory test. ** WARNING ** may overwrite memory.
Diag; EXIT + TUNE/FUNC = Control test. Shows bender value etc.
Diag; EXIT + MIDI = Keyboard test. Show key and velocity.
Diag; EXIT + COMPARE = D/A Adjust and PCM test. Bank buttons play PCM sounds
for D/A setup.
Diag; EXIT + ENTER = Lamp test. All the lights blink!.
There are some other button combos that it is uncertain what they do (Diag;
EXIT+WRITE and EXIT+DATAXFER).
* Reply: 21310
====================================================================
--
Pete Lyall (OS9 Users Group VP)| DELPHI: OS9UGVP | Eaton Corp.(818)-706-5693
Compuserve: 76703,4230 (OS9 Sysop) OS9 (home): (805)-985-0632 (24hr./1200 baud)
Internet: pete@wlbr.eaton.com UUCP: {hacgate,jplgodo,voder}!wlbr!pete
========================================================================
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|
1396.22 | Another one bites the dust... | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Wed Nov 02 1988 21:17 | 104 |
| Well, who says Christmas only comes in December ?!!?? After much
deliberation and talking to D110 owners, I decided to spring for a new
D110 from a local dealer. A key factor in moving now instead of waiting
until year-end was that the dealer was willing to match SAM ASH's $697.00
price (which seems to be the current low-ball). Another was that I like
the salesman and the store (a small family owned shop) and want to maintain
a good relationship with them for future purchases (Ohh, nooo!!!).
The purpose of this note is to thank all those who helped with
suggestions and recommendations (esp. Dave Orin 8-)), and to add a couple
of my initial impressions to the D110 reviews which have been done before.
I will not rehash any of the technical specs for the unit, but limit this
discussion to subjective observations which might be useful to other new
COMMUSICers and prospective buyers.
The ROLAND D110 is my first additional SGU, added to a system
mastered by a KAWAI K5. (See Intro 3.27) I also have their R50 Drummer.
I was looking for a well-rounded SGU whose sounds would both complement
and augment the K5, and if possible, the R50's drums. The D110 does this
beautifully! (Keep in mind that the following comments are based mostly
on comparison of D110 sounds to the K5, and to a lesser degree to other
SGUs I've heard). WARNING:For those of you who have Roland MT32s and/or
D110s, this may be redundant.
On its own, the D110 has many great sounds in several important groups:
The keyboards as a whole sound good with a nice variety of Acoustic and
Electric Piano. The Organs are nicer, particularly the Electrics (try Full-
out Organ). I only like the first of the Pipe Organs; the others seem a bit
overdone. Accordion, Harpsichords, and Clavs are to my ears terrible. They
simply sound to "electronic". Generally, the K5 does a much better job on
keyboards with very credible piano, decent organ, and a superb harpsichord.
Strings also seem a mixed bag; individual instruments seem a little harsh and
on the loud side. Violin, Cello and Contrabass are just too "horny" to be
credible. However, Pizzicato is very realistic. The Harps and Celesta are
good, but again the K5 sounds more real. Like the keyboards, the strings
as a group sound better when mixed with other sounds. I found that the D110's
sounds layer real well with the K5; just about any combination I tried sounded
interesting. Those of you who are old pros at MIDI may find this elementary,
but to me this kind of experimentation is new and loads of fun. For the first
time, I started to realize why people buy more than one SGU !!!
Horns were very dependent on register; the higher, the better. Thus, Brass,
Horns and Trumpet sounded credible while Trombone was less so. Tuba just did
not have enough Oomph! (Interestingly, the K5 has a superb Tuba). Woodwinds
were generally very good, particularly the Flutes and Pipes. The Whistle in
the programable bank is better than the preset, and great for playing stirring
renditions of the theme from LASSIE. Saxes were not convincing but Clarinet 2
and Bassoon are fun.
There are some great specialty sounds in the second bank (group B). Things
like Soundtrack, Chorale, Warm Bell, and Ice Rains all have nice rings to
them. Echo Bell is spacey. The Syn Leads and Syn Basses are also good with
lots of digital bite. The other Basses seemed OK but will take a bit more
listening. Percussive sounds like Xylophone and Vibes are OK, but not much
of a match for the K5's. However the D110 has a superb Timpani, and quite a
few nice ethnic instruments (mostly Japanese). And I'm sorry, but I like
stuff like One Note Jam and Telephone; give me some of that Seashore, too.
I guess some people are easily amused, right? (%-}).
Where the D110 really shines is on Drums and Latin Percussion. The R50 is a
very good unit with excellent samples, but what the D110 lacks in realism it
makes up for in variety. Cymbals are a good case in point. The D110's long
Crash is clearly "looped" and on its own would be noticeable. However, as
part of a sequence I doubt it would be as noticeable. The R50's Crash is much
better than the D110's, but there are more KINDS of Crashs available on the
D110 (Long, Short, Mute). I love Latin music, and have felt a bit hamstrung
by the lack of flexibility in the R50. Yes, there is a Hi and Lo Conga, but
what if you want to slap the Conga instead of hitting it? (Conga Abuse). The
D110 has this plus other stuff I didn't even know the names for! Tons of
Whistles, Wood Blocks, Maracas, and Timbales; just the thing for some smokin'
"claves"!! And many of the D110's drums are available in patchs which stretch
them across the keyboard (for easy drum rolls) and often chromatically.
Operation of the D110 is another story. Maybe I have been spoiled by the K5
and R50, but the D110 is the most cryptic MIDI device I have run into. It is
DEFINITELY neither user-friendly nor intuitive. Worse still, even after you
read the documentation (several times), you may have to call Roland directly
to find out how to do something. I don't know what other people's experiences
with this have been, but I mention it here because it might prejudice folks
against a good machine. Once you get into the D110 a bit, and find out how
to do things, it really sings. The trick is cracking the code. The physical
user interface is not exactly the best either, but they were limited on space
to keep it small. Although I haven't done any programming yet, the logic
behind how the D110 works appears very well thought out and capable of giving
musicians an enormous amount of flexibility. The fact that it has rudimentary
effects on-board makes the unit even more valuable, even with a MIDIverbII.
Even with the above criticism, I would highly recommend the D110. Unlike some
of my MIDI toys, this one will require a bit more homework to realize its
potential. And I will certainly keep the K5 and R50; they do several things
well that are different from the D110. But in the short time I've spent with
the D110, I believe it packs a helluva lot of variety into a small package.
For $700 you get a bunch of clean L/A sounds, some nice PCM partials to work
with, great drums, and some neat sound effects to boot!!!
Definitely, a sequencer's best friend.
Clusters,
Bill Allen @MPO
|
1396.23 | Disfiguring Zits | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Nov 03 1988 20:52 | 8 |
| re the D110 MIDI interface: I concur, Roland seems to have totally
jellied its brains with respect to MIDI support in its latest round
of products. The D-550's MIDI support is very difficult to use,
and the user interface to the extensive MIDI capabilities on the
JX-10 is just about incomprehensible.
len.
|
1396.24 | D110 question and answer... | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Thu Nov 10 1988 14:58 | 21 |
| 1) This baby sounds much better after it has been "retuned" to
the pitch of the K5, or whatever other SGU(s) you're using. I was
trying to figure out why the combination of the D110+K5 sounded
so cheesy at times. Then I ran across a note that pointed out that
ROLAND Master Tunes the D110 to 442, not 440 as the KAWAI K5.
Instant Chorus...
2) Also, I've been playing around a bit with the REVERB settings.
They sound nice but are DEFINITELY not a match for my MIDIverbII.
BTW, is PLATE the same thing as GATE???
3) I understand Dr. T has a D-110 Patch Editor/Librarian out for
the ibm PC. I have one for the K5 and it makes things easier.
Given the D110's user interface (or lack thereof) might this be
a good investement?
Clusters,
Bill Allen @MPO
|
1396.25 | | TALK::HARRIMAN | Huge Harry? Whispering Wendy? | Thu Nov 10 1988 15:06 | 14 |
|
re: plate and gate
No. Plate refers to 'plate reverbs' which, once upon a time,
consisted of a transducer on one end of a heavy metal plate and
a pickup on the other end. The plate was suspended. Made a thin
and long-hanging reverberation. Gate reverb, on the other hand,
is when you put a noise gate on a reverb so that it clamps shut
when the reverb decays below the threshold.
Definitely sounds different.
/pjh
|
1396.26 | O. K. , but... | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Thu Nov 10 1988 15:16 | 6 |
| re .25
I know that GATE sounds great on Drums especially snares. But what
would I use a PLATE reverb on and why?
Bill
|
1396.27 | | TALK::HARRIMAN | Huge Harry? Whispering Wendy? | Thu Nov 10 1988 15:29 | 11 |
|
re: .-1
anything you want a thin-sounding reverb on. By thin-sounding, I
mean 'with more treble than bass' in it. Vocals sound good with
plate reverbs, solo instruments too. Keep the reverb level low and
it sounds ghost-like. Too high, it mushes right up.
/pjh
|
1396.28 | Drum questions for the D110 | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Mon Nov 28 1988 14:31 | 7 |
| Does anyone know how to change the default assignments for tones
in the RHYTHYM Part? I would like to change the low C (C2?) from
BASSDRUM2 to BASSDRUM1 if there is a way to do it.
Enjoying my new toy,
Bill Allen
|
1396.29 | D110+Mac - anyone out there? | LEDS::BROWNDEN | | Sat Dec 03 1988 22:55 | 10 |
| I have a D110 and I concur that the manual and the user interface are the pits.
I spent many long hours and days decifering them. I finally decided that I
will not really be able to fully use the thing without the help of some
software for my MAC. I have started to write a Hypercard D110 editor,
tutorial and patch librarian. Does anyone else have this combination of MAC
and D110 with a similar need? I want to be able to create new sounds in an
easy and sensible way. By the way, the D110 is a very flexible and sensible
machine in its architecture, but you could not tell it from the manual!
Dennis Brown
|
1396.30 | D110 Tweaking | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Thrive on Change | Sun Dec 04 1988 14:36 | 23 |
| Re: Mac and D-110
Yes, the D-110 is my main sound source and the Mac is my sequencer. But
that's about it. I do not plan on taking the time to program the
D-110. Maybe, if it were real easy, I'd tweak some sounds here and
there. There are editor/librarians already available for under
$100.
I don't like spending much time on programming at all. The only things
I would care to do with respect to programming is increase and
decrease attack and release rates, and maybe increase and decrease
filter cutoff frequencies.
Does anybody know how to do these simple, basic tweaks on a D-110?
I just can't figure it out.
----------
Re: -.2 Bill asks about Changing Drum Tones
That's an easy one - but I don't have it memorized, and the machine is
not in front of me. I'll type it in later.
/Mitch
|
1396.31 | There is something that does that. | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Mon Dec 05 1988 18:49 | 8 |
| There is a public domain utility for the mac that lets you create
windows of controllers and assign MIDI messages to each controller.
It comes with a complete editor for the DX7 (no feedback though
from the synth, just a lot of pots). I'll find out more about it
and report back.
Ken
|
1396.32 | MIDIcontrol | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Mon Dec 05 1988 18:57 | 7 |
| The program that does this is called MIDIcontrol. I have a copy. It does
indeed do what it claims - it is a "synth programmer construction set". It
does have one annoying limitation though: it can not store the value of more
than one parameter in a MIDI data byte. (The FB01's over-condensed SYSEX
format requires this.)
It crashes sometimes if you add/delete too many controls during a session.
|
1396.33 | You might find it here. | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:32 | 9 |
| re-.32 I dont know the limitations you mentioned 'cos I havent really
used it, but if your interested I believe it can be found in the
Mac archives at MET730::MAC$ROOT:[SOUNDS] (Im not sure if this is
correct syntax not using VMS...).
It is a shareware product and even though it may have limitations
its certainly worth checking out.
Ken
|
1396.34 | Attack Rates via MIDI controllers? | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Turn it around. | Tue Dec 06 1988 14:48 | 14 |
| Re: last few on MIDIcontrol
Can you explain exactly what this does? It doesn't sound to me like
what I was asking for 3 or 4 replies back. I was asking about how
to program D-110 "tones/timbres" (adjust attack/release rates,
etc.). I didn't think this had anything to do with MIDI contiuous
controller messages.
If MIDIcontrol sends MIDI contiuous controller messages, then I don't
need it - my sequencer does the same thing.
(Or am I misuderstanding something fundemental?)
/Mitch
|
1396.35 | more than that | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Tue Dec 06 1988 15:06 | 14 |
| MIDIcontrol will send *any* MIDI message.
As you build your control panel, you put various data sliders and switches
around the screen. With each control you associate one or two MIDI messages
that the program will send when ever you change that control.
For example a toggle switch would have two messages, one for when you move
the switch from OFF to ON, and one when you move it from ON to OFF. For
sliders you tell it the minimum and maximum values and give it a template
message into which it will put the current value when ever you move the
slider.
Setting up the appearance is somewhat like using an object-oriented drawing
program.
|
1396.36 | still up in the air | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Turn it around. | Tue Dec 06 1988 16:15 | 8 |
| Well, MIDIcontrol certainly sounds interesting. Especially under
MultiFinder where you could keep it in the background.
But I still don't think it can do what I asked about several replies ago
when I was asking if anyone knew how to tweak D110 sounds. Or am I
missing somehting?
/Mitch
|
1396.37 | Do you speak sysex? | TROA01::HITCHMOUGH | | Tue Dec 06 1988 20:06 | 14 |
| If 'tweaking' is what youre after then this might do the job. It
is not a full blown editor in that you cant download a sound to
the MAC, visually edit it and send it back (at least I believe not)
but I have used it to tweak some of my TX802 sounds. One problem
you may have though is that it requires some knowledge of the synth's
system exclusive format if you are setting up a brand new control
panel. In some ways you could probably liken it to those remote
programmer boxes you can get for the JX8P etc...lots of knobs and
sliders. The constraint being that you have to know and program
what each slider sends to the synth. Even if its not what youre
after its probably worth having to show off to your friends. :-)
Ken
|
1396.38 | Voice editing is a must. | UTROP1::VDBOS | | Wed Dec 07 1988 08:40 | 7 |
| Speaking about editors.....
Is there a voice editor program available for the D10 running on
the Atari 1040 ST???
Pete
|
1396.39 | How to change Rhythm Tones | RUGRAT::POWELL | Dan Powell/274-6608 | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:50 | 17 |
| Re -.28
Bill,
To change the tone assignment in the rhythm group.
1. Press PART button
2. Use part select arrows to select rhythm part.
3. Press EDIT button
4. Select Key number to be edited using the part select arrows. I think it
defaults to C2.
5. Use the Parameter Bank and Value Number arrows to select the tone you want.
6. Press EXIT twice and you're done.
Dan
I love the sounds in this beast, but I loath the interface.
|
1396.40 | MIDIcontrol HELP | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:35 | 397 |
1396.41 | Need A Checksum for D110 Sysex | LEDS::BROWNDEN | | Fri Dec 09 1988 21:33 | 6 |
| The MidiControl program will not help with tweeks to the D110, because the
D110 Sysex messages require a checksum byte. From reading the manual, I
can not see any way that a slider control will send this out.
Dennis Brown
|
1396.42 | | MARVIN::SCOTT | BArry A. Scott | Sun Dec 11 1988 20:56 | 13 |
| Its more complex then simple putting the checksum on the
end of the message. If you are running in one-way mode
for SYSEX you have to pause between messages to the D110.
I have a D110 editor that I wrote for the IBM-PC/MPC-401
pair. When I get my Mac I'll port the code over. I'll
let you know when its done.
Oh and the title implies that the D110 is equivilant to
the D10. This is not so. The D110 has more complex ENV
shapes then the D10.
Barry
|
1396.43 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Plan data flows first | Mon Dec 12 1988 13:45 | 12 |
| The guy who wrote MIDIcontrol did not look at very many kinds of MIDI
equipment (or read the spec closely), as there are lots of things it can't
do.
For example, the lowly FB01 uses all 8 bits in some of its voice parameters.
You can't send data bytes with the high bit on, so for setting voice
parameters the SYSEX format uses two bytes with the high-order 4 bits
in the second byte. MIDIcontrol can't do this (but ConcertWare+MIDI can).
The FB01 also packs two and sometimes three voice parameters into one
byte, and MIDIcontrol can't do that either. Luckily for me, there is
a specialized FB01 voice editor that does know how to do these things, but
that doesn't help the general problem.
|
1396.44 | Hey! I need that wrench!! | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Tue Dec 13 1988 14:41 | 16 |
| re. 24
Barry,
I have a ROLAND D110 for which I am looking for a Patch
Librarian/Editor. The computer I use is an AT clone (PC Designs).
I've been trying to find out about Dr. T's product which looks
interesting, but nobody stocks it.
1)Did you look at any commercially available products before
you wrote yours?
2)What does your program actually do?
3)Might it work on an AT clone hooked up to VOYETRA's OPS4001?
4)What is your shoe size?
Thanks,
Bill (who wants to know it all now) Allen
|
1396.45 | | MARVIN::SCOTT | BArry A. Scott | Wed Dec 14 1988 16:29 | 35 |
| Bill,
> 1)Did you look at any commercially available products before
> you wrote yours?
I looked in the music comics at reviews of comercial
editors. But I did not feel that any where worth the
money. And I wanted to play around with midi programming.
I also new that I would not get editing software for my
Elka keyboard.
By the way the progam also has TX81Z editing.
> 2)What does your program actually do?
I have Timbre, Patch and Tone editing working. Its done
in numbers and I'm working on the graph drawing code at
the moment (uses EGA). I have not worked on rhythm
editing worked out yet.
> 3)Might it work on an AT clone hooked up to VOYETRA's OPS4001?
It should work on the OPS4001. The program will use
graphics and colour if its available otherwise it uses
b&w and character cell.
> 4)What is your shoe size?
9
If your interested mail me and I'll put a copy on the
enet for you to get hold of.
BArry
|
1396.46 | Stick it to Steinberg | WARDER::KENT | | Thu Dec 15 1988 12:34 | 10 |
|
Re a few back..
Yes Steinberg have produced a d10 atari editor.
I use their D50 editor and have never bothered with the Abysmal
Roland manual. The program was a far better teacher...
Paul.
|
1396.47 | See Keyboard. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Thu Dec 15 1988 13:47 | 7 |
| For what it's worth, I think you will find the latest (January)
Keyboard to be quite informative in this vein.
A heck of a lot more useful than the foul-mouthed drivel of David Bryan
in last month's issue.
-b
|
1396.48 | Bug in version D10 1.02 | MARVIN::SCOTT | BArry A. Scott | Wed Dec 21 1988 20:04 | 9 |
| Version 1.02 of the D10 software has lots and lots of
bugs in the SysEx support code. It is inpossible to get
an external device to get any data out of the D10.
version 1.10 Roland says fixes the problems.
In the U.K. at least version 1.02 is being shipped in
new units of the D10, beware.
BArry
|
1396.49 | New Sound Cards? | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Schedule, Schedule,..and Schedule | Thu Jan 12 1989 18:24 | 13 |
| Bill, where did you get the new sound cards from? how much? etc.?
/Mitch
>==============================================================================
>Note 1640.62 Sequencer + Expander =? Drum Machine? 62 of 69
>MUSKIE::ALLEN 27 lines 11-JAN-1989 17:56
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> re .47
> There are
> some cards out now with "new" drum sounds, which I just loaded into
> my D110 editor/Lib. I haven't spent that much time with them, but
> they do sound like some welcome variety. (Although I think they
> are based on the same basic tones as the stock sounds).
|
1396.50 | The same place I got the D110... | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Fri Jan 13 1989 19:36 | 8 |
| Your local ROLAND dealer should have the two new sound cards. I
believe the official names are: Unique "D" Sounds (card #1) and
Rhythym and Bass (card #2). The cost quoted to me was $89.95 at
retail. I am going to give a close listen to them over the weekend
and will put something on the wire early next week for Dpeople
(the cards will work with the D10 and D20, as well as D110).
Bill Allen
|
1396.51 | $90 = %15 cost of the machine! | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Schedule, Schedule,..and Schedule | Fri Jan 13 1989 19:53 | 8 |
| Thanks for the reply, Bill. I had given one of the Roland sound cards a
listen while in a noisy store. Based on that listen, I couldn't
justify $90 for new patches, some of which sounded redundant or
similar to what I already have.
Now, $40 from a third party company....maybe.
/Mitch
|
1396.52 | D20 help sought - moved by moderator. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Tue Jan 17 1989 14:30 | 19 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note Roland D-20,E-20 Reports ?
GOBO::ARSENAULT "Life, the ultimate experience" 14 lines 16-JAN-1989 16:11
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----- User Reports Sought -----
I am considering the purchase of a Roland D-20 or E-20 to complement
my other MIDI gear and expand my home-based recording studio.
I would be interested in your opinion as to how they 'STACK' up,
especially if you own one of the units. I am especially impressed
with the 16 note poly, voicings, and built in 8 track sequencer.
Are they really as good as they seem ?
Thanks in advance.....
Dennis
|
1396.53 | New Sounds for the D-10/20/110 | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Tue Jan 17 1989 20:05 | 48 |
| After spending most of Saturday with these two new Sound Cards from
ROLAND, I am glad I have them but also very glad I didn't have to
spend $180.00 to get them. There are several usable sounds and
in general they further extend the variety available. Many of the
tones take better advantage of the time variance available to the
Pitch and Amplitude generators to come up with sounds in the D-50
tradition.
PN-D10-01 (Unique "D" Sounds) has 63 new synth tones. Most of these
are string and voice sounds but there are also quite a few sound
effects. I found JX STRINGS and AURORA to be very appealing with
a smooth analog feeling to them (if I understand the meaning of
that term, now). SYN LEAD 1 and ZIP LEAD had the kind of "fatness"
that I have read people waxing poetic about, and GROWLEAD would
make a good bass version of this type of sound. There was an ANALOG
BRASS which sounded alot like the brass patches I have heard on
the COMMUSIC tapes. But my favorites were the slow attack, Honda
commercial tones like SLOW STRINGS, D-50 VOICE, and SYN CHOIR.
Stacked with a good strong piano or dyna patch and a little reverb,
the combination is sheer delight! I mean even simple tunes like
X-mas carols come out sounding yummy !!! :-).
There are also a bunch of weird effects which at first blush don't
seem much use. Things like DROP HIT 2, CUTTING HAMMER, UNDERGROUND,
JET STREAM, SHIFT and TOM & JERRY. Many of these are knockoffs
of patchs on the D-50 and (if my memory serves me) the ESQ-1. Some
are unique like UGUISU which sounds just the way you say it. I
figure I might be able to use these to help come up with new sounds.
Ther rhythym tones on PN-D10-01 are the same ones that come standard
in the machine. The second card, PN-D10-02 RHYTHYM & BASS, has
about sixteen bass tones. Most of these are minor variations from
the stock ones in Group B on the machine. The only one that stood
out to me was MINI BASS 2, which I thought would be good for layering.
The Drum sounds are again, mostly variations of the stock drum sounds
although here there are a few nice new ones. Some of the new snares
in particluar have a nice feel to them especially for fusion or
new wave rock. Those who can't live with the looping of the long
crashes will still not like the cymbals here, but there are a few
short HiHat tips and taps one could find useful. There is also
a sound called a GRANKAS which sounds like a cross between a timpani
and a gated bass. (Just the ticket to begin that tender ballad).8-)
All in all, some interesting stuff, but try to take a test drive
or borrow the card for download before you commit the ducats.
Clusters,
Bill Allen @MPO
|
1396.54 | Moved by Moderator | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Thu Feb 09 1989 19:29 | 11 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note 1900.0 D-20 Synth RAM/ROM cards No replies
DISCVR::HAJI 6 lines 9-FEB-1989 11:35
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Has anyone tried the new RAM/ROM cards for the D-20 synths?
I have heard a couple of them that I liked. Have you heard any
new ones lately that you liked? Also, I am looking for some new
drum patterns for the D-20. are there any available on cards?
Hamid,
|
1396.55 | PROTOCOL PROBLEMS D10 | UTROP1::VDBOS | | Thu Feb 09 1989 20:39 | 16 |
|
Recently mu D10 was upgraded from version 1.01 to 1.03. This solved
one problem but it seems an other one is introduced. From the net
I have the voice dump untility. When I dump voice information into
the atariu I can't send it back simply because the D10 doesn't seem
to recognize the protocol.
Is there someone out there who discoverd simmular problems???
Please send your replies to UTROP1::VDBOS
Thanks,
Pete
|
1396.56 | ... but what about rhythm voices? | NRPUR::DEATON | | Thu Feb 16 1989 16:15 | 12 |
| I think I know the answer to this, but I'll ask anyway...
On the D110, you have up to 32 voice polyphony, depending on the
patches you use. What about the drum voices? Do they also steal from this
total of 32 voices? Or are they separate in some way?
I realize, with dynamic voice allocation, this may not be a problem,
but I wonder what happens should you set up a very busy rhythmic sequence
alongside a set of complex (multi-partial) patches.
Dan
|
1396.57 | Not usually a problem | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Thu Feb 16 1989 17:44 | 8 |
| The drum parts on the D10/D20/D110 and the MT-32 do not count against
the 32 layers(partials) that you can have at any given time.
There is the capability of using drum parts that are made up of layers
(partials) & these would count against the 32, but the stock drum
sounds do not use these.
Jens
|
1396.58 | | NRPUR::DEATON | | Thu Feb 16 1989 17:58 | 8 |
| RE < Note 1396.57 by TYFYS::MOLLER "Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7" >
O.K., then... How much polyphony does the rhythm portion of the D110
give you (i.e., how many drums can sound simultaneously)? I haven't seen any
mention of it in any of the literature I have.
Dan
|
1396.59 | Duhh... | FGVAXX::MASHIA | We're all playing in the same band | Thu Feb 16 1989 19:26 | 3 |
| Are the D110's drum sounds samples, or are they synthesized?
Rodney M.
|
1396.60 | yes | SUBSYS::ORIN | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Thu Feb 16 1989 19:56 | 9 |
| < Note 1396.59 by FGVAXX::MASHIA "We're all playing in the same band" >
-< Duhh... >-
> Are the D110's drum sounds samples, or are they synthesized?
They are PCM samples for the most part. In some cases, there are additional
drum timbres that have been layered with other partials (synthed or PCM).
dave
|
1396.61 | A slick concept | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Thu Feb 16 1989 20:02 | 41 |
| The D10/D20/D110/MT-32's drum sounds can all be sounded at the same
time (if you so desire, the open hi-hats should probably cancel the
closed hi-hats, and any other dependant sounds that might cancel each
other). I looked thru the MT-32 users manual to see what they said it
was (and it says absolutely nothing about how the drum parts were
created), I think that some (probably most of them) are sampled sounds
& some are looped to some degree. (I own the MT-32 & I have 2 nephews,
one with a D10 & The other with a D110).
In my opinion, the drums sound very good an all of these units. The
D110 has the extream benifit of allowing you to assign different MIDI
channels to seperate outputs. I've also noted that the drum section is
not quite as loud as the rest of the synth is capable of (minor issue,
but something to be aware of when setting MIDI levels (Controller 007).
If you want to get a good idea of what these sound like, go and listen
to the built in demo sequences on the D110. The MT-32 is real similar
but equalized in a peculiar manner that can be dealt with with some
experimentation & has no easy access to creating your own sounds. The
D110 has a front panel that lets you do all sorts of bizzare and
potentially useful things.
The MT-32 has 34 drums associated with 34 different midi notes (note
#'s). Some are repeats (like you have 2 identical: Bass Drums, Lower
mid and upper Toms). The D10/D20/D110 has 63 (maybe a few more or
less), but a very useful and real sounding drum setup. It even responds
to pitch bend, however this affects all drum sounds at the same time.
For recording purposes, the D110 is the easiest to use (I like my drums
on a seperate tape track; this can also be accomplished with a sequencer
that outputs a TAPE midi sync signal (works just fine on the MT-32)
where you set the levels of all other midi channels to 000 & record the
drums independant of the other parts.
In general, I have the highest regards for this type of device, lots of
bang for the buck. It (the MT-32) and a sequencer is the heart of my
'Live' gig gear, as well as my studio.
As I say, give it (D110) a listen & you decide if it'll work for you.
Jens
|
1396.62 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | quality first cause quality lasts | Fri Feb 17 1989 00:00 | 4 |
| Anybody care to list the percussion sounds available? (Any ... um
... vibraslaps?)
Steve
|
1396.63 | the beat goes on | SUBSYS::ORIN | A waist is a terrible thing to mind | Fri Feb 17 1989 13:07 | 56 |
| < Note 1396.62 by MIZZOU::SHERMAN "quality first cause quality lasts" >
> Anybody care to list the percussion sounds available? (Any ... um
> ... vibraslaps?)
Yes, I think they call the vibraslap a Quijada. I'm not sure if that is
exactly the same instrument though?
Here they are...
Bass Drum 1-4
Snare Drum 1-6
Lo Tom 1-3
Mid Tom 1-3
High Tom 1-3
Rim Shot
Hand Clap
Cls HiHat 1-2
Opn HiHat 1-2
Crash
Ride
China Cymbal
Cup
Tambourine
Splash Cymbal
Cowbell
Crash Cymbal (muted)
Ride Cymbal (muted)
High Bongo
Lo Bongo
High Conga
Low Conga
High Conga (muted)
High Timbale
Low Timbale
High Agogo
Low Agogo
Cabasa
Maracas
Short Whistle
Long Whistle
Quijada (vibraslap?)
Cup (muted)
Claves
Brush 1-2
Castanets
Triangle
High Pitch Tom 1-2
Wood Block
Bell
Crash Cymbal (short)
Ride Cymbal (short)
Native Drum 1-3
dave
|
1396.64 | something fishy | HPSMEG::LEITZ | kumquat, drum squat | Fri Feb 17 1989 13:26 | 5 |
| I thought a quijada was like those fish-looking gourds with the ridges
that you stroke with a little stick. A sample taken in the middle of
a vibra-slap playing maaaay sound like a quijada. If the 'quijada' sound
you've got has the same attack-then-decay that a vibra-slap has, i think
it's misnamed. It oughta be called a vibra-slap.
|
1396.65 | Not To Be Confused With A Washboard... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Feb 27 1989 18:07 | 7 |
| I think Butch is right - there's a quijada in the TR-727, and it
doesn't sound like a vibraslap; it sounds like the thing he described.
I think there's a similar instrument called the guiro or something
like that. We unimaginatibe North Americans call it a "scraper".
len.
|
1396.66 | how to restore factory settings | OASS::B_MCMILLAN | | Wed Jul 26 1989 17:09 | 5 |
| Anybody know the power-up sequence that can be used to restore
the factory settings on a D10?
thanks............Bruce
|
1396.67 | Remove & replace internal battery | TKTV05::FUKUNO | The real NEKOMORIST. | Thu Jul 27 1989 04:25 | 17 |
| Perhaps Roland D-series has no function to restore the factory
settings. I tried to look for it, but I could not.
Remove and replace internal battery for initialize backup-RAM, or
reconstruct your equipment if you need.
In my case, I reconstructed my D110 for restore the factory settings.
It has a bit of difficulty and risk(warranty becomes avoid),
but I think it is useful.
Reference note written in Japanese as follows,
topic #18.0
TKTV20::$1$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MIDI_IN_JAPAN.NOTE;1
notice: You need KANJI terminal to look it.
Fukuno.
|
1396.68 | I think there is a way... | NRPUR::DEATON | | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:06 | 8 |
| RE < Note 1396.67 by TKTV05::FUKUNO "The real NEKOMORIST." >
I seem to recall an article in Electronic Musician that gave
initialization procedures for most Roland synths (as well as Oberheim Xpander).
I'll see if I can dig it out...
Dan
|
1396.69 | Hope you can still use this info on re-init. | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Wed Aug 02 1989 18:46 | 17 |
| According to ROLAND, the re-initialization procedure for the D110,
is to turn the unit ON while depressing the WRITE/COPY button.
You should get a message asking "INITIALIZE - Yes or No?". At that
point you should depress the ENTER button and your D110 will be
re-initialized.
I need to do this myself today, because I am having some problems
with my unit. It seems I am jamming to much data into it to fast
with my Dr. T's Ed/Lib (at least that is what Dr. T's think's).
As usual, ROLAND is totally uncooperative on their "Technical Support"
line. "Well, geez, you shouldn' have to chant with Strawbery Incense
to get it to respond to MIDI input, man". Thanks, Roland. That's
the reason I called you bozos in the first place. :-(
Clusters,
Bill (who's real glad I got the Kurweil now) Allen
|
1396.70 | BE CAREFULL WITH INIT... | UTROP1::VDBOS | | Fri Aug 11 1989 08:46 | 12 |
| High,
I don't know if you are aware what will happen if you initialize
the unit. I tried this Write/Copy sequence once and indeed all the
factory settings were back..........and the user memory, mostly
performance mode sounds, was EMPTY! So first backup the user memory
contents before you lose all the nice sounds!
Good Luck!
Pete
|
1396.71 | What price for D10 used? | STAR::ROBINSON | | Mon Aug 28 1989 20:03 | 5 |
| What is a reasonable price for a used D10?
Is $795 way too much?
Thanks in advance
Dave
|
1396.72 | way too high, I think. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Mon Aug 28 1989 20:09 | 4 |
| There's one in the want ads here (Dayton Oh area) for $400. Don't
know where you're located.
-b
|
1396.73 | too low?!? | NORGE::CHAD | | Tue Aug 29 1989 00:06 | 7 |
| Brad, is that a D10 or a D110 for $400? The D110 is good at $400 I
would think but an unbelievably good deal for a D10 (with keyboard).
Chad
STAR:: is ZK
|
1396.74 | D10 init sequence revisited | OASS::B_MCMILLAN | | Tue Aug 29 1989 14:09 | 13 |
| The init funtion for the D10 is different (surprise, surprise)
from that of the D110.
D10 uses Tune function and Write held down during power-up
It will *not* ask if you want to init yes/no. And as described
in .70 will not bring back the performance mode sounds as the unit
comes from the factory. The Roland people state that the only way
to recover the factory sounds is to get them from your dealer.
Thank goodness for editor/librarians!
Bruce
|
1396.75 | | STAR::ROBINSON | | Tue Aug 29 1989 17:22 | 3 |
| re: .72, .73 So does that mean $795 might be reasonble for
the D10 (with keyboard), or is Chicago much cheaper than Nashua? ;-)
Dave
|
1396.76 | ????? | NORGE::CHAD | | Tue Aug 29 1989 17:42 | 4 |
| Couldn't tell you. What is an existing list price and a going price off the
sticker at a place like Daddy's?
Chad
|
1396.77 | about 100 too much? | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Wed Aug 30 1989 08:28 | 6 |
|
Given that dollar-pound is about equal for this sort of gear, maybe
it's worth bearing in mind that they go for about 6-700 in the U.K.
(used).
Richard.
|
1396.78 | | STAR::ROBINSON | | Thu Aug 31 1989 16:32 | 10 |
| Without any haggling I just got a quote of $1095 at Acton Music.
The $795 (used) was at Daddy's. How much discount can I hope
for on these? ... maybe I had better go re-read those DECMS notes.
Also, Acton has a D5 that eliminates drum patterns and reverb (?)
of the d10 and adds some arpeggio and automatic chord dodahs for
advertised $775 (new). It has the same sounds including the drums.
Any comments on this one?
Dave
|
1396.79 | moved by co-mod... | DCSVAX::COTE | There, but for the fins, go I... | Mon Dec 04 1989 09:42 | 23 |
| <<< NOVA::DVD12:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;1 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2191.0 D110 LEVEL PROBLEMS. No replies
TDCIS3::RENOUVEL 17 lines 4-DEC-1989 05:49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AGAIN A PROBLEM WITH MY D110.
THE DRUM PART VOLUME LEVEL IS ALWAYS UNDER THE OTHERS.
OR I HAVE TO DO LIKE THE FOLLOWING EXAMPLE :
PART 1 PART 2 PART 3 ...etc PART R
LEVEL 20 LEVEL 20 LEVEL 20 ... LEVEL 100
IS THAT NORMAL .
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ANSWERS.
BYE.
PAT.
|
1396.80 | moved by co-mod... | DCSVAX::COTE | There, but for the fins, go I... | Mon Dec 04 1989 09:44 | 29 |
| <<< NOVA::DVD12:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;1 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2190.0 D110/PATCHS PROBLEMS... No replies
TDCIS3::RENOUVEL 23 lines 4-DEC-1989 05:38
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HI,
MY NAME IS PATRICK AND I HAVE A D110 EXPANDER.
MY PROBLEM IS THE FOLLOWING:
IN THE PART "R" RYTHMES , YOU CAN HAVE DRUMS SOUNDS,AND FUNNY
SOUNDS LIKE WOLFS,STRANGES BELLS ETC....
I CAN NOTE HAVE THE DRUMS SOUNDS ON A PATCH THAT WE WILL CALL
"FIRST", AND HAVE ALL THE INTERNAL FUNNY SOUNDS ON ANOTHER PATCH
THAT WE WILL CALL "SECOND" IS THAT NORMAL ?
DO I HAVE TO BUY A MEMORY CARD TO SAVE ALL THE PATCHS WITH DRUMS
SOUNDS AND ANOTHER ONE TO SAVE FUNNY SOUNDS PATCHS?
THANKS A LOT FOR HELPING ME...
REGARDS
PAT.
|
1396.81 | This is normal | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Mon Dec 04 1989 14:08 | 6 |
| The Roland gear (in general) has its drum levels lower than the
other patches. On any of a MT-32, D-110 or U-110, I usually run
CC7 on the drums at 10 to 20 higher than the other patches. It's
just the way that Roland does things.
Jens
|
1396.82 | 2 questions | HAMER::COCCOLI | monitoring reality......... | Mon Dec 04 1989 14:35 | 11 |
|
What's a fair price for a used D110?. $500?.
Is pitch bend defined per patch or globally across the machine?.
I need a 4 step PB for midiguitar and 2 step for my cheesy Jan
Hammer imitations.
Looking into one.......Rich
|
1396.83 | ok | NORGE::CHAD | | Mon Dec 04 1989 15:59 | 4 |
| Guitar Center had them at $499 new recently. I'd say $450-$500 is good for
a used one however, but not great. Most new I've seen is $599-650.
Chad
|
1396.84 | moved by co-mod... | WEFXEM::COTE | There, but for the fins, go I... | Wed Dec 06 1989 11:18 | 20 |
| <<< NOVA::DVD12:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;1 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2196.0 D110/PATCHS PROBLEMS... No replies
TDCIS3::RENOUVEL 14 lines 6-DEC-1989 07:10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HI
WELL I JUST BOUGHT AN OCTAPAD.
CAN I HAVE ALL THE DRUMS SOUNDS ON MY D110 ON A PATCH,
AND ALL THE EFFECTS ON ANOTHER PATCH ,WITHOUT HAVE TWO HOURS WITH
PROGRAMMING MY D110 ?
THANKS A LOT.
PAT.
|
1396.85 | COUCOU ME REVOILOU !!!! | TDCIS3::RENOUVEL | | Thu Dec 07 1989 10:14 | 11 |
| THANK YOU JENS ,
But can you explain me the two other points I wrote in my note?
thank you very much.
ps: excuse me for my english.
PAT.
|
1396.86 | coucou me too | HAMER::COCCOLI | monitoring reality......... | Thu Dec 07 1989 12:14 | 11 |
|
How does one invoke the demo sequences of this beastie? (d110)
Rich
|
1396.87 | Pretend that you're in a restaurant, look at menues | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Thu Dec 07 1989 14:12 | 18 |
| > How does one invoke the demo sequences of this beastie? (d110)
I don't remember exactly, but it's a menu option that you choose.
I wish that it sent the demo out the MIDI port so I could see
what they are doing. I'm surprized that they couldn't make the
D-110 (or the U-110) have fewer buttons, as I'm sure that they could
have added more and more menues (In other words, it irritates me
to have all these menus). The toughest thing about using the D-110
is probably making sense out of the doucumentation. The MT-32 is
so similar, but so much simpler to use (except some of the buttons
that you have to press to do things isn't that obvious either).
Jens
|
1396.88 | yeh | HAMER::COCCOLI | monitoring reality......... | Thu Dec 07 1989 14:23 | 9 |
|
I just played with one at Rogue for about an hour(rough job eh?)
without the manual. Took me about 7 minutes to figure out how to
get out of the performance mode. Cool drums. I'm going back tonight
to pick it up. Heard the demo on the D10 (rom play). I'll have to
rip it off.*^]
Rich
|
1396.89 | D110/U110 U/I | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Beauty, Feeling, Play, Creativity | Thu Dec 07 1989 15:08 | 34 |
| > <<< Note 1396.87 by CSC32::MOLLER "Nightmare on Sesame Street" >>>
> -< Pretend that you're in a restaurant, look at menues >-
> > How does one invoke the demo sequences of this beastie? (d110)
> I don't remember exactly, but it's a menu option that you choose.
I don't think so. In fact the D110 is not even really menu driven. It
has plenty of 'modes', but no real menues. The U110, on the other
hand, is clearly menu driven.
ROM play on the D110 is envoked by pressing two button simultaneously.
I don't know the two buttons off hand, but I beleive one is the
enter button (bottom right), and I seem to recall the other one
being in the upper left. I'm not 100% sure of this... maybe 75%
sure.
ROM play on the U110 is more clearly a menu selection.
D110 U/I in general is a complete hack. I no longer touch the buttons
on the D110 front panel for fear of not being able to get it into
my favored setup again (without >30 minutes of futsing).
U110 U/I is very nice.
------------
D110 drums are still my mainstay drums. Excellent variety. Can't wait
to get a set of pads.
I have been having trouble lately losing notes on the complex L/A sounds
during some sequences which previously did not lose notes. I must
have somehow screwed up the allocation scheme while futsing with
the stupid U/I buttons.
/Mitch
|
1396.90 | D110 ROMPLAY | TDCIS3::RENOUVEL | | Fri Dec 08 1989 13:29 | 11 |
| WELL I THINK I CAN REMENBER THAT YOU HAVE TO PUSH IN THE SAME TIME
THE ENTER BUTTON ON THE RIGHT SIDE AND THE OTHER AT THE LEFT AND
BOTTOM.
THEM UOU CAN SEE ROMPLAY
PRESS ENTER ANOTHER TIME TO START SEQUENCE.
OR YOU CAN MAKE YOUR CHOICE WITH THE ARROWS.
SEE YOU .
PAT.
|
1396.91 | | HAMER::COCCOLI | monitoring reality......... | Fri Dec 08 1989 14:00 | 5 |
|
Well, I got one last night.Holding enter and pressing EDIT does
it. Pretty impressive demos.
|
1396.92 | ??? | HAMER::COCCOLI | monitoring reality......... | Mon Dec 11 1989 12:18 | 7 |
|
Is there a D10/D110 patch topic in Commusic?. I realize one would
need a looong template.
(yup, the UI s**ks)
Rich
|
1396.93 | doesn't appear to be one. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Mon Dec 11 1989 14:06 | 0 |
1396.94 | You Hurt Mine Eyes | OTOO01::ELLACOTT | Freddie's Revenge | Mon Dec 11 1989 16:21 | 4 |
| re .90
Would You Stop Shouting !!!!!!
|
1396.95 | How do I do this?? | DCSVAX::COTE | Call *who* Ishmael??? | Fri Jan 12 1990 18:36 | 13 |
|
A friend owns a D110. Not owning one myself, I couldn't answer his
question (Although I'm sure I could figure it out in 30 minutes.
Or an hour if I use the Roland manual! ;^))
What parameters are tweaked in a D110 to route velocity to attack?
Seems like it should be simple. More velocity=faster attack, less
velocity = slower attack.
Tanx.
Edd
|
1396.96 | "They call me Mr. T1." | CARP::ALLEN | | Fri Jan 12 1990 20:06 | 10 |
| re .95
I think it is the "T1" parameter on the "TVA" window. Depending
on the value of this parameter the slope of that particular partial
will be steeper (fast attack) or more gradual (slow attack).
I'll double check when I go home tonight.
Clusters,
Bill Allen
|
1396.97 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Call *who* Ishmael??? | Mon Jan 15 1990 11:01 | 6 |
| Is that dependant on velocity?
I'm unfamiliar with the D110, but given your description, T1 seems like
the A in a classic ADSR envelope.
Edd
|
1396.98 | D-550 Does | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Jan 15 1990 15:08 | 12 |
| re .97 re .96 - It is - T1 corresponds to the A segment of a classic
ADSR envelope. I'm pretty sure there is a parameter on the D-50/550
that controls modulation of T1 as a function of keyboard velocity.
I doubt there's an analogous parameter on the D-110, as it's one
of the more obvious things to dump in order to make the instrument
less expensive.
I can look this up tonight if you're not in a desparate hurry, but
even then, the answer will be for the D-550, not the D-110.
len.
|
1396.99 | Hit me harder, faster, oooo, louder, oh baby... | WEFXEM::COTE | My kingdom for a pizza... | Mon Jan 15 1990 15:16 | 11 |
| > one of the more obvious things to dump...
Nah, can't be. Dump velocity sesitivity??? Even my DX-21 which has
a keyboard that doesn't generate velocity allows you to tweak the
patches to respond to velocity... (KEY-VELO)
I'd expect it from Yamaha, not Roland...
Why, even my MIRAGE allows it!!
Edd
|
1396.100 | Details | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Jan 15 1990 15:35 | 17 |
| No, not velocity sensitivity, but velocity modulation of envelope
time parameters. In order of decreasing probability of support,
"velocity sensitivity" usually means:
VCA (envelope sustain) level (almost always there)
VCF (envelope sustain) level (usually there)
VCF/VCA attack/decay times (usually only there in high end synths)
Note that VCA/VCF level and VCA/VCF envelope sustain level are two
different things, as velocity modulation of the latter will change the
relative level of the attack transient, while velocity modulation
of the former will leave the relative levels unchanged.
len.
|
1396.101 | Here It Is | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Jan 16 1990 12:48 | 17 |
| The D-50/550 and D-10/20/110 all support a parameter named (with
minor variations within the documentation even for a single synth;
trust Roland to make it easy for users)
TVA Envelope Velocity Follow (T1)
This parameter is in the TVA Envelope Group (which includes a keyboard
follow parameter as well).
On the D-50/550, this parameter can be valued from 0 to 4. It governs
the rate at which T1 (the attack time) decreases as the velocity
increases.
There is no analogous parameter for the TVF envelope.
len.
|
1396.102 | That's it... | WEFXEM::COTE | My kingdom for a pizza... | Tue Jan 16 1990 15:16 | 5 |
| Zactly what I was looking for.
tnx
Edd
|
1396.103 | You got it. | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Tue Jan 16 1990 20:32 | 7 |
| Yes,
the "A" stands for attack and that is what the T1 parameter
controls. There is also another menu for something called TVA,
but I forget exactly how this one affects the sound.
Bill
|
1396.104 | OOOooopps! | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Tue Jan 16 1990 20:34 | 4 |
| Did I miss something?
:-)
|
1396.105 | STEADY BEATS...? | USEM::SEAWARD | | Wed Jan 31 1990 19:52 | 5 |
| During recording in Multitimbral mode, I have the impression that
the automatic metronome slows down slightly - has anyone else
experienced this ? I've heard this from one other D-20 user.
How can it be fixed ? Otherwise, I am certainly happy with the
wide range of functionality this machine provides...
|
1396.106 | D10 initialization sequence | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Thu Feb 01 1990 15:03 | 12 |
|
I tried the TUNE/FUNCTION + WRITE in order to reinitialize my D10
and it set up the multi-timbral mode sounds correctly, but the
performance sounds were all splits with bank A being a mirror-image
of bank B (i.e. A11 = sound_x upper and sound_y lower, while B11 =
sound_y upper and sound_x lower). Also, all of the patch names were
initialized to blank (you have to display the upper and lower tone
names to see what you're playing).
Anyone noticed this?
Richard.
|
1396.107 | that's just the way it is | OASS::MCMILLAN_B | | Mon Feb 05 1990 12:47 | 13 |
| Richard:
I noticed this the hard way just as you have. I called Roland
support and they stated that this is 'normal' for the reinit. The only
way to recover the performance sounds is to restore from a RAM card.
If anyone has a RAM card with the factory performance sounds that I can
borrow, I would greatly appreciate it. I hate to buy one because I will
only need it once since I am now using the Sound Quest D10 editor.
Bruce Mc
|
1396.108 | If you need them... | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Mon Feb 05 1990 13:43 | 12 |
| Aha!
Funnily enough, I borrowed a RAM card and restored the noises this
weekend. I can send you an ATARI-formatted disk of the factory sounds
if you have trouble (plus a few more PD banks). Not that I know
anything about ATARIs, it's just that I was given these disks when I
bought the synth.
The init sequence also does strange things to the internal programmable
tones (in the multitimbral mode). I don't think I'll do it again.
Richard.
|
1396.109 | ok for now | OASS::MCMILLAN_B | | Tue Feb 06 1990 11:38 | 6 |
| Thanks Richard, but I got a line on a RAM card in town that one of my
friend's friend has. If that falls through I will be giving you a
call.
Bruce Mc
|
1396.110 | FY (possible) I | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Fri Feb 09 1990 09:50 | 15 |
|
I didn't know whether to put this in the 'anti-aliasing' notes or
what. Anyway, I was talking to the Roland service people in the U.K.
about noise on D10/D50 synths (well discussed in this conference).
They said that aliasing noise can be reduced to an optimum level (!)
bny tweaking the internals of the synth while in diagnostic mode. The
chap I spoke to said it was a digital adjustment (mumble most
significant bit mumble) that has to be done by service personnel if
you want it done.
The question is, is this rubbish or not? Are we talking digitally-
controlled-analogue-filter tweaking, or just adjusting the speed that
some gate or other closes, or what? Anyone hazard a guess?
Richard.
|
1396.111 | talking to myself | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Mon Feb 12 1990 07:35 | 11 |
|
O.K. -- I found out and did it myself.
There's a variable resistor that hits you smack in the eye as soon as
you take the bottom off the synth. It controls an analogue filter. Turn
it one way, more noise. Turn it too far the other way, more noise. Get
it right, and no noticeable noise at all. To perform this adjustment,
you require a very sensitive piece of test gear -- your ear (or somebody
else's, even).
Richard.
|
1396.112 | latest D20 O/S in U.K. | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Mon Mar 19 1990 07:45 | 7 |
|
Latest D20 O/S in the U.K. is 1.04 (ROMS A+B) 1.03 (ROM C).
Upgrade costs 10 pounds from Roland U.K. in Brentford (to a
second user).
Richard.
|
1396.113 | SW upgrades, what does it solve?? | UTROP1::VDBOS | | Tue Mar 20 1990 06:40 | 10 |
| Hi,
I have seen a lot of discussions about revision levels of the ROM
software of the D10 etc. Does anybody know what kind of problems
will solve the software upgrade's? (Or what kind of problems it
create's for that matter)
Pete
|
1396.114 | problems when hooked up to a computer | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Tue Mar 20 1990 07:23 | 6 |
| Somewhere back in this topic you'll find all that. Missing info in
SYSEX data means you have a hard time transferring data to/from your
Dn if you have a duff version. I know 1.04 on the D10 and 1.04/1.03
on the D20 work o.k. I don't know of any problems created byupgrading.
Richard.
|
1396.115 | Sysex Dumping | AQUA::ROST | Bikini Girls With Machine Guns | Tue Mar 20 1990 13:57 | 11 |
|
Can some D-110 owner out there answer a question for me?
I understand it is possible to do sys-ex dumps from the front panel of
the D-110. Is it possible to save portions of memory as opposed to the
whole thing? I.e. as I understand it, memory contains voice
information as well as multi-timbral setup information. Can these be
saved seperately? Does the total dump exceed 64Kbytes?
Brian
|
1396.116 | part answer | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Wed Mar 21 1990 16:40 | 8 |
| I can only tell you what the D-10 does in this regard, Brian. From the
"front panel", you can dump the "sounds" (all of the timbres), the
"rhythms" (all of the drum patterns, etc) or "all" (both of the above,
plus the system configuration parameters). You can't dump individual
timbres, or memory locations (from the panel). I would expect the D-110
is the same, or less.
- Ram
|
1396.117 | RAM card | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Thu Mar 22 1990 07:55 | 5 |
|
If you have a RAM card, you can save individual patches/timbres to
that, of course.
Richard.
|
1396.118 | advice hungry | SHAPES::BROWNM | This is MY decade! | Wed Mar 28 1990 11:14 | 11 |
| Can anyone give me the lowdown of the D20's sequencer without confusing
me? I've read loads of notes, and advertising, but that's all I know.
I haven't had any physical experience of MIDI and this'll be my first real
keyboard.
I know it has a 1 song limit (16,000 notes) and is 8 track plus rhythm.
I've also read that it has overdub. That's all I know! What's missing
and what isn't.
matty
|
1396.119 | no step time | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Wed Mar 28 1990 11:49 | 8 |
| I've recently got one, and the only thing that's missing that some
people really want is step-time entry. (You know -- next beat, add
note, next beat, add note...).
Overdub is for volume and stereo panning. Very quick to learn,
*very* quick to set up sounds/tracks.
Richard.
|
1396.120 | no edit | PEKING::SMITHO | | Thu Mar 29 1990 07:06 | 16 |
| I've owned a D20 for over a year and the most annoying thing about
it is you cannot "step edit" any track other than the rhythm track.
This can prove to be fatal if the user isn't good at "real-time"
playing. Best advice I can offer is that until you are comfortable
with the machine, sequence your song in sections and don't proceed
until you are sure about the last section that you sequenced.
Also, if you midi the D20 to other SGU's, you can only monitor either
the D20 or the SGU. This effects the monitoring track by track,
so if you want to trigger a SGU for track 1, you must mute track
1 on the D20 and the SGU will then perform. It's strange, weird
and wonderful at the same time. If you want to know more about it,
e-mail me on PEKING::SMITHO. More than glad to help.
Cheers,
Otha
|
1396.121 | D110 Program Change Off | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Thu Mar 29 1990 16:26 | 25 |
| Here in Utah, the local Guitar City is having a sale on Roland D110s
for $275. That sounds like one heck-uv-a price, isn't it?
I was wondering if anyone knows if the setup I want to use is do-able
on the D110.
I want to set certain instruments to certain channels and set a
volume level from the front panel. I'm fairly certain I can do
that on the D110. Then I want to turn off response to all further
program changes and volume changes that it receives on the midi
channels.
I also need so set some of the 2-10 channels to ignore all data on
those channels - I guess I can mute those channels? I want my K4
to play those notes instead of the D110.
Anyone know if I can do the above? If so, I think I'll buy the
D110 unless someone knows unless someone knows something else in
the $275 that will get me those kind of sounds and the extra notes
I need.
Thanks in advance for any replies.
Terry Luke
|
1396.122 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Thu Mar 29 1990 16:47 | 4 |
| $275!?!?! Are these used units or something? I've seen MT32s going
for more. Sounds like the deal of the century.
Steve
|
1396.123 | *WOW* | WEFXEM::COTE | Bain Dramaged | Thu Mar 29 1990 17:00 | 5 |
| $275!!!!! I'll buy all they have for that price!!!
It must be a mistake...
Edd (nuthin_good_ever_happens_to_me)
|
1396.124 | D110s All Gone! | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Thu Mar 29 1990 20:15 | 5 |
| Well the price WAS correct. The sale starts tomorrow (Friday).
I called today to confirm the price and found out that they only
had three and they are all sold - the day before the sale starts.
I guess it was too good to be true. BTW, they WERE new.
|
1396.125 | Now where's that 4-sale note??? ;^) | WEFXEM::COTE | Bain Dramaged | Thu Mar 29 1990 21:18 | 11 |
| > Well the price WAS correct...
>> I'll buy every one they have for $295....
Like I said...
;^)
Edd
|
1396.126 | get it. | GLOWS::COCCOLI | mutanturbandweller | Thu Mar 29 1990 23:07 | 21 |
|
re .121
Everything you describe in .121 in "do-able" with the D110.
The machine gets a "overall" channel assignment, and each of the
eight "parts" (nine including the drums, stuck on channel 10) can
be set to any channel, or *off**. There is a setting that will allow
you to enable/disable "virtual instrument" type patch changes (patch
changes within patches). Catch my drift?.
Each of the "parts" (I hate Roland terminology) has it's own
volume level and stereo position, and theres a front panel rotary
for the entire unit.
The D110, in my opinion, is capable of much more than what the
factory patches reveal. After spending about 20 hours working with
it as a synth and ignoring the "sample player" side of it, i've
come up with some fairly decent moogish(?) synth sounds.
RC
|
1396.127 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Fri Mar 30 1990 00:32 | 5 |
| 3 sold before the sale, where they're supposed to be on sale. Uh huh.
Wonder who they sold 'em to. Now, nobody said "bait and switch"
but ...
Steve
|
1396.128 | Pitch bender blues | OASS::MCMILLAN_B | | Mon Apr 02 1990 12:18 | 17 |
| I was working last night with the D10 and Sequencer Plus when
something bizarre happened. One of the tracks I was using was a solo
line that had quite a few subtle pitch bends. I had been fooling
around with the pan parameters on several of the parts and decided to
reinit the D10. Once this happened the solo line with the subtle pitch
bends now sounded like a slide whistle!
I have never (sure you have heard this before) modified *any* of
the default patches and have never seen any of the system related
parameters that map to pitch bend sensitivity. Furthermore, I have
reinited the D10 many times and never come up with this problem before.
The pitch bender works fine now, only it seems a bit more sensitive (or
is that just me?). I hate to re-record the solo line, any ideas? Will
be trying Roland later this afternoon.
thanks.............Bruce Mc
|
1396.129 | try scaling at the source before re-recording | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Too much, too soon? | Mon Apr 02 1990 14:21 | 3 |
| One idea is to scale all of your pitch bend values at the sequencer end.
/Mitch
|
1396.130 | a painful init.. | GLOWS::COCCOLI | mutanturbandweller | Mon Apr 02 1990 21:29 | 12 |
|
Once you initialized the D10, all PB parameters were defaulted
to 12 half steps. Not easily controllable for subtle pb's, imho.
To set PB on a voice, go to "tone edit mode", then hit the up
arrow to the right of the "part" arrows to step through transpose,
tuning and pb parameters for individual voices.
Rich
|
1396.131 | dazed and confused | OASS::MCMILLAN_B | | Tue Apr 03 1990 13:47 | 26 |
| Rich:
The wierd thing is that I have init'd many times before and never
come across this problem. I talked with one of the 'product
specialists' from Roland yesterday and he suggested the same thing as
you. I did try that, decreasing the value from 12 to 2. That still
did not make the pitch bend subtle enough and at a value of 1 it was
almost non-existent. I have never had to 'tweak' any of the patch
parameters in the past, the only changes I made were 'system' level
(reverb, pan, etc...).
Out of the box the modulation section of the pitch bend lever
always seemed 'tight' and never provided what I thought was enough
modulation (as compared to the Matrix-6r and Xk controller I was used
to using). Is that normal for the D10 and it's factory settings?
Could I be having some hardware problems with the calibration of the
pitch bender?
I restored from backup a copy of the song that I was working
(sanity check mainly) and that works fine, so I know that it was
nothing strange happening on the sequencer end.
any more ideas?
Bruce Mc
|
1396.132 | more info | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Tue Apr 03 1990 14:35 | 11 |
| Maybe you need to explain what you mean by "reinited the D10".
I don't really understand what you did, because if you just powered it
off and on the D10 should have come back up in the same state it was in
before. But as the previous note indicated, whatever you did must have
changed the pitch bend parameter for the timbre you were using, which
can easily be set back to whatever it should have been. When I got my
D10 (which I got used, so it might have been modified) the pitch bend
parameter for most timbres was set to 2 (a whole step). On the MT-32
the default setting seems to be 12 (an octave).
- Ram
|
1396.133 | clarify, please | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | Change! | Tue Apr 03 1990 16:04 | 13 |
| > I restored from backup a copy of the song that I was working
> (sanity check mainly) and that works fine, so I know that it was
> nothing strange happening on the sequencer end.
On the contrary, If one copy of your sequece works fine, and another copy
produces a problem, then it's your sequence that got modified, not your
synth parameters. So, when you said that "that works fine", did you mean
that it produces the same (bad) results, or that it produced good
results?
Maybe I'm reading you wrong.
/Mitch
|
1396.134 | my real name is Joe (Isuzu) | OASS::MCMILLAN_B | | Tue Apr 03 1990 16:21 | 18 |
| Mitch:
Sorry, I lied. What I meant to say was that *neither* of the
sequences worked. It seemed as though the problem was with the D10.
Ram:
To reinit the D10 use the following:
Tune function and Write held down during power-up
Reference my note 1396.74 which explains that this power-up sequence
restores the D10 to the factory settings (minus the performace sounds
and combinations). These are the same factory settings I never
changed!
Bruce Mc
|
1396.135 | keep trying | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Tue Apr 03 1990 16:46 | 14 |
| I'm baffled. Like I said, the D10 seems to have the default pitch bend
parameter for most timbres set to 2. As you noted, this doesn't give
much of a bend effect when using the pitch lever, at least not the
typical synth effect most people are used to. I happen to prefer it,
because I mostly use bends for things like bass lines or harmonica
parts, things that don't naturally bend more than a step or so anyway.
But it seems very strange that if the bend paramater is set to 2 it
would bend more than a step. Maybe you ought to create a test sequence
to try this out. When I've run into MIDI strangeness such as this I've
usually discovered it was due to something non-obvious that I had done
myself inadvertantly, not a failure in the equipment.
- Ram
|
1396.136 | mixed up | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Tue Apr 03 1990 16:56 | 26 |
| Not to change the subject, but I've been running into a little
weirdness myself that maybe a better audio or electronics engineer than
I could explain. I'm running two identical synths (happens to be a D-10
and a D-110) through a 4-channel stereo mixer into a pair of
headphones. That is, stereo out from each synth into 2 of the four
channels, with each channel on the mixer panned left or right
appropriately so I get a single combined stereo output.
Everything sounds fine unless I have the rhythm track play on both
synths. In this case I get an effect that sounds like the signals are
out of phase, almost like a flanger. It's most noticeable on the snare
drum, which almost gets cancelled out at times it is so severe. It's
actually an interesting effect, similar to running things through a
Leslie speaker, but not one I'm looking for. I should mention that the
effect is significantly less noticeable if I set the mixer output to
mono, maybe even non-existent. I've previously used this same setup
with an MT-32 instead of the D-110, and I never noticed the effect
then - but the MT-32 rhythm section is not identical to the D-10, the
generated sounds are slightly different.
The question is, what's going on here? I'm feeding two identical stereo
inputs through the mixer, and instead of mixing they seem to be
intermittantly cancelling. Is this a defect in the mixer, like leakage
between the channels? Is it normal audio cancellation? Any ideas?
- Ram
|
1396.137 | Seen it happen often... | WEFXEM::COTE | Bain Dramaged | Tue Apr 03 1990 17:30 | 17 |
| I'd be willing to bet it's entirely normal...
Do you have MIDI OUT (or THRU) on one connected to IN on the other?
If so, you are attempting to fire the same sound *almost* at exactly
the same time from 2 sources. Since they don't fire at *exactly* the
same time, you get some phase cancellation, just like a flanger!
I get the same effect on my HR-16 by setting up 2 pads with the exact
same tuning, voice, and output. Everytime I send the appropriate note
on, I get a KILLER flange. The HR-16 can't read the same sample twice
simultaneously, but it CAN do it real quickly in succession.
Why it's so obvious on percussion and not on other instruments I don't
know...
/edd
|
1396.138 | A cheap solution... | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Tue Apr 03 1990 17:38 | 37 |
| It may be the result of simply being out of phase. If this is
the case, you might try to build the following 'phase reverser'
out of radio shack parts:
10 k
+-----/\/\/\-----+
| |
| |
| |\ |
10 uf 10k | | \ |
o--+--||-----/\/\/\----+---|- \ | 10 uf
| + | >--------+------||----o
/ +-----------|+ /
\ 1 | | / 741 or other
/ meg / |/ generic OP amp
\ \ 10k
| /
gnd \
|
gnd Use 2 9 volt batteries:
+------+ +------+
+ V <===| + - |===+===| + - |===> - V
+------+ | +------+
|
gnd
This is just a generic unity gain voltage follower that inverts the
signal (so no special op amp is needed).
I run a D-110 with an MT-32 and a U-110 occasionally, and I have not run
into phasing errors, but I can select phasing on the mixers I use (I built
them myself), using the above circuit.
Jens
|
1396.139 | even cheaper - don't do it | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Tue Apr 03 1990 19:50 | 27 |
| Yow, I've got my hands full trying to find time to make music after
doing all this MIDI stuff, and now I have to build *circuits*?
Just kidding Jens, it's quite possible that this is a phasing problem,
and your circuit would solve it. I don't understand, however, why the
two synths would be out of phase, or why swapping the channels on the
stereo inputs wouldn't solve this.
Edd's proposal seems more likely. I'm driving the two synths from the
two MIDI outs on the MC-500, and they are not connected together in any
way other than this. However, it's very probable that the MC-500
doesn't send the signals at exactly the same time on the two ports,
causing them to be generated slightly out of phase. Like you said, Edd,
I don't know why this is so much more noticeable on the drum parts, but
it's probably because they have steeper slopes (stronger transients)
which makes the phasing effect more obvious. It probably wasn't
noticeable with the MT-32 and the D-10 in combination because the
waveforms they generate are actually slightly different.
If this latter explanation is true, I don't know that there's any
solution other than not to use the rhythm sections of both synths in
synch (or feed them out to different audio amplifiers, separated enough
spatially so that the phasing isn't noticeable). Since they sound
identical there's no real reason I need to do this anyway. Forewarned
is forearmed.
- Ram
|
1396.140 | Could be..... | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Tue Apr 03 1990 21:50 | 18 |
| I'll still bet that this is phase related. If 2 signals are the
same, but 1 is 180 degrees out of phase with the other, the
net result is cancellation.
If you have a guitar stomp box or 2 lying around, you'll find
that these often change the phase of the output signal in their
'just passing the input signal' mode. You might want to stuff
one in the signal path and try it (I know that you play guitar,
and most guitar players have a stomp box or 2 lying about).
On my MT-32, if I mix the left and right channels 100% to the center,
my drums dissappear (almost entirely). The Phase monster is reponsible
in this case. The only thing that is predominant when I do this is
the drum sounds that the digital reverb send thru (they don't appear
to cancel each other). Interesting effect, but nothing that I would
find all that useful during live performance.
Jens
|
1396.141 | instant flange? | GLOWS::COCCOLI | mutanturbandweller | Wed Apr 04 1990 02:19 | 12 |
|
RE .136 Phase problem
Perhaps the stereo positioning of the individual drum
"tones"(bleecchh-Rolandese)on channel 10 are not exactly identical.
This could be the problem. Try killing the volume of part "R"
on one synth.
Rich
|
1396.142 | also works to remove vocals from recordings.. | AQUA::GRUNDMANN | | Tue Jun 12 1990 17:12 | 3 |
| You can get 180 degree phase shifting by running the audio signal
through a transformer. There's a little loss of signal strength, but no
batteries required!
|
1396.143 | D20 noisssssse... | COPCLU::SANDGREN | Walking Tall | Thu Jul 05 1990 08:23 | 17 |
|
I've got a noise problem with my D20. It is clearly heard on the bass sounds,
as different 'hiss', varying with which key you press - it's becoming more and
more annoying, if it really increases or it just does it in my brain, I can't
tell...I can hear it also on the AcouPiano sounds, where the noise sounds like
distorted overtones.
I read an earlier reply mentioning a potmeter on a D10/50 that one could ad-
just to minimum noise. Does that also apply for the D20? And can this type of
noise be removed by an adjustment? I'm planning to get a work manual for this
machine, so if it has got adjustment procedures, I'll make a copy of it here.
Also, my ROM version number is 1.0 - could that be a problem?
If anybody has something to say about this, please add your comments!
Poul
|
1396.144 | 'Timbass' is perhaps the worst patch! | HEART::MACHIN | | Thu Jul 05 1990 08:32 | 13 |
|
There's not a lot you can do about the noise heard while the note
is playing, but the adjustment inside trims the noise once the
the note is released. There's a mixture of digital grunge and pure
noise on the D-series machines that you can't do much about. I bet
you're playing with headphones. This sort of noise is lost completely
in a mix -- say, during a sequence -- and is certainly swallowed up
by the p.a. when you use it live.
Very few of these sample/synth based instruments are completely
quiet, and if you let it bug you you'll end up mad, grey and penniless.
Richard.
|
1396.145 | I AM already mad, grey and penniless... | COPCLU::SANDGREN | Walking Tall | Thu Jul 05 1990 11:37 | 7 |
|
That's what I call quick response - thanks for your input, and yes, you're
right, I was doing a late_night_session with my headphones on...also, on
moments like this, you imagine all sort of ghosts in the machine...
Poul
|
1396.146 | noise is music... | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Thu Jul 05 1990 15:52 | 11 |
| I suspect this is not "noise", but a component of the patch. I use
the D-10 and the D-110, and some of the bass patches do have a slightly
annoying "hiss", a kind of "aspirated" bass. I really sounds to me like
this is a function of the ring modulator or some other component of the
patch that is required to get the right general characteristics in the
tone.
As has been noted, this is only really observable with the headphones,
and disappears in the general "noise" of a real sequence.
- Ram
|
1396.148 | D110 with Sierra games? | READ::IGOE | | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:48 | 16 |
|
Has anyone used the D-110 with any of Sierra On-Line's software that
supports the MT-32?
Are the timbre locations similar enough that appropriate instruments
are selected? Is that a non-issue? Will it not work at all?
I was looking at one of the "Leisure Suit Larry" books that have
popped up in the computer section of the book store and it barely said
anything about the MIDI implementation. It did list some files that
were used, though. Could these be edited to adapt it to a different
synth?
- Pat
|
1396.149 | help is on the way | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Mon Jul 30 1990 21:20 | 123 |
| > Has anyone used the D-110 with any of Sierra On-Line's software that
>supports the MT-32?
No, but I used to have an MT-32, now have a D-110, and I had to convert
all of my sequences from the MT-32 to run on the D-110, so I know a
fair amount about their compatibility.
> Are the timbre locations similar enough that appropriate instruments
>are selected? Is that a non-issue? Will it not work at all?
No, even though they have many of the same timbres, in many cases they
are in different locations. For the most part you just have to change
the program assignment in the sequence (but I don't know how easy that
is for you). Just to be a nice guy I'll include at the bottom a mapping
of the MT-32 timbres to those on the D-110, which I did to facilitate
my own conversions. You should note that a few of the special effects
things like "One-Note Jam" don't map in my chart because I don't use
them and replaced the presets in my D-110 with other timbres. You
should also note that in some cases the mapping is a judgement call
because the timbres are not identical in every respect. But this should
provide a useful start. When converting an MT-32 sequence I do it first
"by the book", then go back and see if I like the result.
> I was looking at one of the "Leisure Suit Larry" books that have
>popped up in the computer section of the book store and it barely said
>anything about the MIDI implementation. It did list some files that
>were used, though. Could these be edited to adapt it to a different
>synth?
You lost me. If you're asking whether MIDI files for the MT-32 could be
adapted to run on some other synth, I would say it is very likely.
- Ram
MT-32 to D-10/110 Translation Chart
-----------------------------------
MT32/D10 Voice MT32/D10 Voice
001 001 Acoustic Piano 1 033 065 Fantasy
002 002 Acoustic Piano 2 034 066 Harmo Pan
003 003 Acoustic Piano 3 035 067 Chorale
004 005 Electric Piano 1 036 068 Glasses
005 006 Electric Piano 2 037 069 Soundtrack
006 007 Electric Piano 3 038 070 Atmosphere
007 008 Electric Piano 4 039 071 Warm Bell
008 004 Honky Tonk Piano 040 xxx Funny Vox
009 009 Electric Organ 1 041 073 Echo Bell
010 010 Electric Organ 2 042 074 Ice Rains
011 011 Electric Organ 3 043 075 Oboe 2001
012 012 Electric Organ 4 044 076 Echo Pan
013 013 Pipe Organ 1 045 xxx Doctor Solo
014 014 Pipe Organ 2 046 xxx School Daze
015 015 Pipe Organ 3 047 077 Bellsinger
016 016 Accordian 048 078 Square Wave
017 017 Harpsichord 1 049 033 String Section 1
018 018 Harpsichord 2 050 034 String Section 2
019 019 Harpsichord 3 051 035 String Section 3
020 020 Clavinet 1 052 030 Pizzacato
021 021 Clavinet 2 053 025 Violin 1
022 022 Clavinet 3 054 026 Violin 2
023 023 Celesta 1 055 027 Cello 1
024 024 Celesta 2 056 028 Cello 2
025 037 Synth Brass 1 057 029 Contrabass
026 038 Synth Brass 2 058 031 Harp 1
027 039 Synth Brass 3 059 032 Harp 2
028 040 Synth Brass 4 060 101 Acoustic Guitar 1
029 085 Synth Bass 1 061 102 Acoustic Guitar 2
030 086 Synth Bass 2 062 103 Electric Guitar 1
031 087 Synth Bass 3 063 104 Electric Guitar 2
032 088 Synth Bass 4 064 xxx Sitar
MT-32 to D-10/110 Translation Chart
-----------------------------------
MT32/D10 Voice MT32/D10 Voice
065 089 Acoustic Bass 1 097 038 Brass Section 2
066 090 Acoustic Bass 2 098 097 Vibe 1
067 091 Electric Bass 1 099 097 Vibe 2
068 092 Electric Bass 2 100 xxx Synth Mallet
069 093 Slap Bass 1 101 119 Wind Bell
070 094 Slap Bass 2 102 098 Glockenspiel
071 095 Fretless Bass 1 103 120 Tube Bell
072 096 Fretless Bass 2 104 100 Xylophone
073 049 Flute 1 105 099 Marimba
074 050 Flute 2 106 105 Koto
075 051 Piccolo 1 107 108 Sho
076 051 Piccolo 2 108 109 Shakuhachi
077 052 Recorder 109 056 Whistle 1
078 053 Pan Pipes 110 056 Whistle 2
079 057 Sax 1 111 054 Bottleblow
080 058 Sax 2 112 055 Breathpipe
081 059 Sax 3 113 xxx Timpani
082 057 Sax 4 114 114 Melodic Tom
083 060 Clarinet 1 115 113 Deep Snare
084 061 Clarinet 2 116 xxx Electric Perc 1
085 062 Oboe 117 xxx Electric Perc 2
086 047 English Horn 118 xxx Taiko
087 063 Bassoon 119 xxx Taiko Rim
088 064 Harmonica 120 xxx Cymbal
089 041 Trumpet 1 121 xxx Castanets
090 042 Trumpet 2 122 xxx Triangle
091 043 Trombone 1 123 121 Orchestra Hit
092 044 Trombone 2 124 xxx Telephone
093 046 French Horn 1 125 xxx Bird Tweet
094 046 French Horn 2 126 xxx One Note Jam
095 048 Tuba 127 xxx Water Bells
096 037 Brass Section 1 128 xxx Jungle Tune
|
1396.150 | more Sierra drivel... | READ::IGOE | | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:13 | 22 |
| >>anything about the MIDI implementation. It did list some files that
>>were used, though. Could these be edited to adapt it to a different
>>synth?
>You lost me. If you're asking whether MIDI files for the MT-32 could be
>adapted to run on some other synth, I would say it is very likely.
Oops. I guess that was a bit confusing. The book listed files that
come with the game, named MT32.something, FB01.something, that have some
relation to the MIDI implementation. I was curious as to whether
anyone had played with those files enough to know what they were and
whether or not they contained patch numbers and such.
I don't have any of these games, but I would buy one as a novelty
if I knew it would use the D110 somewhat properly.
Thanks for the table. I now can just save my D110 current
settings to disk and do a massive timbre reorganization to set up a
MT-32 emulation.
- Pat
|
1396.151 | I think they use SYSEX for custom MT32 patches | NORGE::CHAD | | Tue Jul 31 1990 16:47 | 11 |
| I don't know how these games work really, never having seen one working, but
somehow I am on Sierra's mailing list and receive about three copies of their
magazine every so many months. I put them in the bathroom as reading material.
One day I read about their MIDI stuff and it seemed that for the MT32 they had
programmed all their own patches and dump them as SYSEX when you play the game.
That would mean that it wouldn't help you unless the D110 will take MT32 sysex.
They also have a generic MIDI setup I believe so that you can set your synth
to have appropriate voices.
Chad
|
1396.152 | d110 factory patches wanted | NORGE::CHAD | | Thu Aug 09 1990 15:16 | 9 |
| favor
Does anyone have the factory D110 patches in a sysexe bulkdump format?
I need the file for an acquaintance who accidentally blew his away
without backup. Prefered Mac disk but any will do.
thanks
chad
|
1396.153 | Loud applause! | EICMFG::WJONES | Captain Loon: Stardate Gibble | Thu Aug 30 1990 11:40 | 20 |
| Re: .149
Buy this person a drink! Or two! I just bought a couple of MIDIMusic disks
at MacWorld and found out that they are geared for the MT32. I have a D-110.
You have saved me countless hours of trial and error and I am forever grateful.
While I'm here... I'm another of those people who finds the documentation less
than helpful. Can anyone provide a simple explanation of how to access the
various stored sounds and how to move sounds around?
Access: my Mac/MIDI setup translates MIDI instruments numbers 1-128 into the
sounds shown on the "preset" card. However, I noticed that there are other
sounds on the PCM ref card which look interesting. What I want to do is
replace some of the presets with the interesting sounds but I don't want to
do irrevocable damage... (I've read some of the notes in here about people
who've zapped everything!)
Gavin
(I'm a technical writer by trade and I'm beginning to think that there's a
market in certain quarters for my skills... Roland, Pioneer?)
|
1396.154 | Documentation | JANUS::CWALSH | Paw City | Thu Aug 30 1990 12:26 | 28 |
|
On the subject of documentation, last month's issue of Sound on Sound (or it
could have been Music Technology, or...hell, it could have been Market Gardener
and Masochist Monthly) featured a reply from the head of Roland's documentation
department to a customer's complaint in the previous issue about the general
standard of documentation (not just Roland's).
He seemed to be appreciative of the shortcomings and to be concerned with
improving the state of affairs (but then one would hardly expect him to compose
a reply that said, basically, "People, I couldn't give a wet fish!") The main
source of his problems, he says, is that the documentation unit is based in
Japan and produces its stuff by translating material from the Japanese. He cites
basic cultural differences in the oriental and occidental ways of expressing
detail as the root of translation difficulties. Japanese, he says, is a very
ambiguous language in which vague concepts are easier to express than the kind
of heads-down, no-nonsense detail that manual readers need.
Now, not being a Japanese speaker, I can't say whether what he says about the
language is true. What I can say is that I think it misses the point entirely.
I would hazard a guess that the substantial majority of Roland's customers have
English as a first or second language; more to the point, I would imagine that
relatively few of them speak Japanese at all. I would therefore suggest that,
rather than saddle themselves with the problems inherent in translation from the
Japanese, Roland sat down and wrote their documentation in the language that most
of their customers speak.
Chris
|
1396.155 | There is! There is! And they seem to be making money! | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | This is your brain on Unix | Thu Aug 30 1990 13:45 | 23 |
| re: .153 (Jones)
> (I'm a technical writer by trade and I'm beginning to think that
> there's a market in certain quarters for my skills... Roland, Pioneer?)
There most certainly is AND... it's already being filled. There are
a number of publishing companies producing what I (sardonically)
refer to as "3rd party manuals".
IMHO, the success of those companies to make money at that should
evoke nothing short of shame from the manufacturers.
Now I hold Ensoniq up as an example of a company committed to good
documentation. There ARE some third party books about Ensoniq
equipment but not very much (probably 1 Ensoniq book for every 50
Roland book) and the purpose of the Ensoniq books that I HAVE seen
is nothing like a "substitute for the manual" which is usually the
case with the Roland books.
The Ensoniq books I've seen are more like "programming tips", "patch
books", etc. that presume that you have already read the manual.
db
|
1396.156 | I would say that what the Roland guy said is strongly supported | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | This is your brain on Unix | Thu Aug 30 1990 13:49 | 17 |
| BTW, if anyone has seen third party manual for the Roland S-550
PLEASE let me know.
In fairness, I will say that the documentation that came with my
Roland U-220 is, with some effort, understandable and sufficient
although not even close to "reasonably good". It has better
organization.
Also in fairness, I will have to say that the problems *I* have with
the Roland manuals STRONGLY support what the Roland rep said in that
letter. The content is really all there, it's that the nomenclature
is never formally presented and the organization is terrible.
One more reason to buy american (not that I ever do anything other
than buy the best product for the price).
db - who drives a Subaru
|
1396.157 | Any titles? | EICMFG::WJONES | Captain Loon: Stardate Gibble | Thu Aug 30 1990 14:55 | 8 |
| Looks like Roland (and others) have forgotten the basic rules of translation:
Translate *into* the mother tongue of the translator
That said... anyone seen a third party book on the 110? (I've never seen any
on any machine, but that comes of living in Europe, I suppose :-( )
Gavin
|
1396.158 | Translate it to French first! | CSC32::MOLLER | Who you gonna call? Code Busters! | Thu Aug 30 1990 17:23 | 5 |
| Maybe Roland would do well to have the copy proof read in the United States
and have someone try to use the manual to use the gear. I rely heavily on
Roland gear, but I have problems understanding the manuals also.
Jens
|
1396.159 | | WEFXEM::COTE | To play, turn bottom up... | Thu Aug 30 1990 18:08 | 3 |
| I've said previous echoes, if make wishing fix touch Roland!
Edd
|
1396.160 | It would only cost me a few bucks a week in red ink pens | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | This is your brain on Unix | Thu Aug 30 1990 20:25 | 4 |
| > Maybe Roland would do well to have the copy proof read in the United
> States
I volunteer!
|
1396.161 | | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Fri Aug 31 1990 08:20 | 29 |
| Hi there !
The topic about quality of documentation is also of great interest for my job.
I was working in the group that was repsonsible for localizing products for the
German market (like ALL-IN-1). Due to a decision high up the localization
strategy has changed recently so that it will be done in central places for all
languages. In line with that is also to use mainly external contractors for
doing the translation (as opposed to DEC User Information people of the
countries). I don't think this will give satisfactory results, what you guys
wrote about documentation for musical instruments predicts it.
Why ?
There are large differences in the quality of manuals. I think they are mainly
driven by the factors expirience in writing in general and knowledge of the
technology. This is true for original writing and translation. Hence, I don't
think that writing the manuals in English would be any better (sorry guys), at
least that's my impression from DEC documentation.
I think the only way to get good quality is to have a good documentation
concept first (again writing skills and technological skills needed) and have
people in the countries that do the translation with similar skills. Agencies
and contractors cannot cope with that.
What does it help ????? NOTHING.
OA$SIGH
Richard
|
1396.162 | A quick aside and then back we go... | EICMFG::WJONES | Captain Loon: Stardate Gibble | Fri Aug 31 1990 10:36 | 28 |
| >I think the only way to get good quality is to have a good documentation
>concept first (again writing skills and technological skills needed) and have
>people in the countries that do the translation with similar skills. Agencies
>and contractors cannot cope with that.
This is going down a rathole but... as a highly-skilled and (I'm told)
valuable contract technical writer I really cannot let that remark go by
without comment!
Any project can have very good documentation, be it for a complex system like
VMS or for a simple video recorder. Essentially, all you need is a skilled
writer who is given the resources to do the job. Resources include access to
the material (in this case a D-110), access to the people who created the
material, enough time to do the work, a management team that supports the
writer and so on. I've been lucky so far and have had everything needed to do
the job. The suspicion I have about virtually all the major equipment
manufacturers is that the management is not interested in the quality of the
documentation *content*, but in its appearance. I don't think the Japanese
language has anything to do with it; have you read the manual that came with
your GM car, for instance?
Anyway, we could carp internally as much as we want; no-one will hear us since
this is a private medium. As a result of this discussion, however, I'm going to
express my views directly to the Sales Manager at Roland and see what response
I get... I'll keep you posted.
Gavin
PS My question still stands: how do I access the PCM sounds? :-)
|
1396.163 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Fri Aug 31 1990 13:23 | 16 |
| I used to know some people in the contract translation business. They
said there are three main points that make for a good technical
translation:
1. Translation must be done be somebody who is very knowledgable
in the field being discussed.
2. This person must also be a native speaker of the language being
translated into.
3. The translation must be checked by someone who is very
knowledgable in the field *and* is a native speaker of the
*original* language.
So you need two people who share both languages, one as a native
speaker of each, and who both know the subject.
|
1396.164 | Contract writers HAVE to be better | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | This is your brain on Unix | Fri Aug 31 1990 14:52 | 18 |
| I think a "contract writer" at Digital may mean something entirely
than contracting a manual at other places.
In my experience, contract writers function identically to non-contract
writers - they just happen not to be DEC employees.
The key point IMO is that writers absolutely need regular face-to-face
contact with the product and the developers in order to produce the
best documentation.
I think in a more typical contract writing situation that is not the
case - the writer's office isn't within shouting distance of the
developer.
It may be possible to produce good documentation that way, but it would
be hard to convince me that it's not significantly more difficult.
db
|
1396.165 | here you get your PCM's... | COPCLU::SANDGREN | Walking Tall | Sun Sep 02 1990 18:39 | 26 |
|
Gavin, (.162):
On my D20, I do as follows to select the PCM sounds:
You have to choose a Timbral sound you can overwrite. When you have this,
you go into EDIT mode and go for TONE, rather than TIMBRE.
With the DISPLAY button choose WG FORM/ PITCH ENV. Press BANK 3 to select
PCM WAVE BANK/NUMBER.
Look in the documentation for which PCM sound you want. Use appropriate
WRITE procedure to store your sound.
PRESTO! (if it works the same way on your synth...)
All others:
I don't find the documentation for my D20 that bad. In fact, after I got
used to it, it's quite easy. But I must admit that I had my problems in
the beginning, but this might as well be due to the fact that I was com-
pletely new to the structure in a synthesizer. After a while, it all
seems much more logical...
Poul
|
1396.166 | | EICMFG::WJONES | Captain Loon: Stardate Gibble | Mon Sep 03 1990 07:58 | 15 |
| >You have to choose a Timbral sound you can overwrite. When you have this,
>you go into EDIT mode and go for TONE, rather than TIMBRE.
Therein lies the problem/fear... What do I do with the sound I'm overwriting?
The documentation isn't exactly overclear about temporary sound stores and
permanent sound stores.
Taking the Yamaha DX27 as an example; there are eight banks of non-erasable
sounds and one bank of erasable. You copy sounds from the eight banks into the
other one. MIDI instrument numbers start with the temporary bank so copying is
the only way to get at some of the sounds in the "higher" permanent banks...
It's also non-destructive.
Gavin
|
1396.167 | make a BACKUP, my friend... | COPCLU::SANDGREN | Walking Tall | Mon Sep 03 1990 14:57 | 26 |
|
Well, Gavin,
I have to state, all advices that I give you is only what I KNOW works on
my D20...so don't blaim me if you end up with your synth totally screwed
up...
Does your synth include a diskette station? (mine does). If so, make a
copy of the whole setup before you start doing anything. Choose DATA
TRANSFER and SAVE, then choose ALL with right/left button. After this, go
ahead and do what you want! But I would guess that you have a diskette
with the original setup on it...or you ought to have it :-)...
If you have a diskette, you can see what's on it by doing DATA TRANSFER -
LOAD and then use DISPLAY buttons to look what titles you have on it;
titles with THREE signs as extent (.xxx) cover the whole setup of the
synth, basically i 1-64, r 1-64 and what you have chosen for A/B Multi-
timbral and Performance patches + your drum patterns (P11-P88), as well
as keyboard drum sound assignments...you can't delete a 1-64 and b 1-64,
so don't worry about them...
I won't say RTFM (because I'm a nice person :-)), but give the documenta-
tion a chance...
Good luck!
Poul
|
1396.168 | | EICMFG::WJONES | Captain Loon: Stardate Gibble | Tue Sep 04 1990 10:34 | 11 |
| I don't have a RAM card so, unfortunately, that's not an option.
>I won't say RTFM (because I'm a nice person :-)), but give the documenta-
>tion a chance...
I have; French and English versions.
Anyone recommend a third-party book?
Gavin
|
1396.169 | More Questions | AQUA::ROST | Mahavishnu versus Motormouth | Mon Sep 10 1990 12:58 | 22 |
| A couple more dumb D-110 questions:
1. Can card data be copied into the internal memory of the unit? Can
you dump card data by sys-ex directly, or does it have to copied to the
internal memory first?
2. From some earlier replies this was unclear: are you limited at any
point in time to accessing either internal or card data on a given
timbre, i.e. is it possible to go from a timbre stored on card to one
stored in internal memory with a single program change message?
3. What sort of modulation capabilities are there? I.e. what sort of
LFO routings are possible? I assume envelopes are all dedicated (as
opposed to Obie and Ensoniq architectures which let you assign
envelopes wherever you like), is this correct? Does the D-110 allow
PWM?
4. I have heard rumors that sending aftertouch information (which it
doesn't respond to) to a D-110 can cause the box to lock up, has anyone
actually ever experienced this?
Brian
|
1396.170 | aftertouch | RICKS::NORCROSS | | Mon Sep 10 1990 15:59 | 11 |
| > 4. I have heard rumors that sending aftertouch information (which it
> doesn't respond to) to a D-110 can cause the box to lock up, has anyone
> actually ever experienced this?
I don't know the answers to any of your questions, but I will run home
tonight and send some aftertouch to my D-110 to see if that locks it up -
My D-110 has been locking up on occasion, and while I usually turn
after-touch off, it is possible that sometimes I don't. Somehow I don't
think this is the problem.
/Mitch
|
1396.171 | half-answers | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Mon Sep 10 1990 17:10 | 56 |
| > <<< Note 1396.169 by AQUA::ROST "Mahavishnu versus Motormouth" >>>
> -< More Questions >-
>
> A couple more dumb D-110 questions:
>
> 1. Can card data be copied into the internal memory of the unit? Can
> you dump card data by sys-ex directly, or does it have to copied to the
> internal memory first?
>
Yes, card data can be copied into other "banks". Think of the D-110 as
having (potentially) three banks of 64 timbres, A, B and CARD. A and B are
internal. Any timbre can be modified. I don't recall off-hand if you
can dump timbres directly from the card (I don't use cards, so I've
never tried it). Technically I don't see any reason why this shouldn't
be possible, but somehow I suspect it isn't.
> 2. From some earlier replies this was unclear: are you limited at any
> point in time to accessing either internal or card data on a given
> timbre, i.e. is it possible to go from a timbre stored on card to one
> stored in internal memory with a single program change message?
>
Yes, there are limits on the accessibility. As I said, I don't use
cards, but if I remember correctly the card data can *only* be called
up from the front panel. PG 1-128 always access banks A and B. (That's
one of the main reasons I don't use cards. Their only value with
respect to driving the D-110 from a sequencer is as a convenient way of
storing data off-line. And if your sequencer can already do that, who
needs cards?)
> 3. What sort of modulation capabilities are there? I.e. what sort of
> LFO routings are possible? I assume envelopes are all dedicated (as
> opposed to Obie and Ensoniq architectures which let you assign
> envelopes wherever you like), is this correct? Does the D-110 allow
> PWM?
>
I rarely edit the tones, and I'm no expert on modulation techniques
(as I'm sure someone will point out). And I'm not sure what you mean
the the envelopes being "dedicated". My recollection is that they can
be inserted at several places in the modulation chain, but I suspect
that it is not as flexible as what you are suggesting.
> 4. I have heard rumors that sending aftertouch information (which it
> doesn't respond to) to a D-110 can cause the box to lock up, has anyone
> actually ever experienced this?
>
I've never done this. Thanks for the warning.
- Ram
P.S. : If you want to stop by my place and take a look at the D-110 let
me know.
|
1396.172 | More on Modulation Routing | AQUA::ROST | Mahavishnu versus Motormouth | Mon Sep 10 1990 19:18 | 25 |
| Re: dedicated envelopes
Ram,
Two examples I'm familiar with:
On a Casio CZ, you have six envelope generators per voice; there are
two oscillators per voice, and each has an envelope to modulate pitch,
one to modulate the "filter" and one to modulate the overall amplitude.
You cannot use these envelopes to do any other kind of modulation. The
single LFO performs vibrato effects only.
On an ESQ-1, you have one envelope that is dedicated to the final DCA.
The other three DCAs, the three oscillators and the single filter all
accept two modulators. In fact, the four envelopes and three LFOs also
accept two modulators. These modulators are picked from a pool of
velocity, aftertouch, CV pedal, MIDI CC, keyboard scaling, the four
envelope generators and the three LFOs.
I'm assuming the D-110 is closer to the CZ than the ESQ-1 in modulation
flexibility, but wasn't sure, thus the question about routings. The
LFO routing in particular is of interest, LFOs are useful for much more
than just vibrato effects.
Brian
|
1396.173 | D-110 RAM card usage | RICKS::NORCROSS | | Thu Sep 13 1990 15:50 | 27 |
| >> 2. From some earlier replies this was unclear: are you limited at any
>> point in time to accessing either internal or card data on a given
>> timbre, i.e. is it possible to go from a timbre stored on card to one
>> stored in internal memory with a single program change message?
>>
>
> Yes, there are limits on the accessibility. As I said, I don't use
> cards, but if I remember correctly the card data can *only* be called
> up from the front panel. PG 1-128 always access banks A and B. (That's
> one of the main reasons I don't use cards. Their only value with
> respect to driving the D-110 from a sequencer is as a convenient way of
> storing data off-line. And if your sequencer can already do that, who
> needs cards?)
Hi Ram. Correction: PC 1-128 can also access the card timbres. I do
this regularly and this is the only thing I use the card for. I use a
RAM card, not a ROM card - and I only really use half of the RAM card -
it allows me to access the third bank of factory preset tones which are
otherwise not accessible (unless you use the front panel or use PATCHes,
neither of which I use). The restriction is that these timbres are only
available on parts (channels) which I have preselected. I suspect that I
have explained all of this in one of the D-110 related Notes.
Brian, I haven't been able to check on the aftertouch lockup scenario
yet. Maybe someday soon.
/Mitch
|
1396.174 | you heard wrong - at least about my d-110 | RICKS::NORCROSS | | Mon Sep 17 1990 00:40 | 4 |
| Brian, I just tried sending aftertouch from my MKB-200 - the D-110 did
not lock up.
/Mitch
|
1396.175 | How do I change the drum sounds? | COPCLU::SANDGREN | Walking Tall | Mon Sep 17 1990 08:14 | 30 |
|
I wonder if anybody has a comment/solution on this.
On my D20, I've been trying to tweak the drum setup parameters. In detail,
I've been working with the pitch of internal drumsounds r1/r3 (ClsdHiHat/
OpenHiHat), which I think is too low. Furthermore, when r3 has a pitch of
A#3, r1 has one of A3, and you can actually hear the difference (very
clearly). So I wanna set them both to a pitch of, say C4. This is very ea-
sy, just change it, and write it into an 'i' location, then go and edit the
manual drum setup...
Then, I have the problem:
In the original r1/r3 setup, you first press r3 and then r1 to mute it.
Very efficient, sounds just like a real drummer does it. BUT, when I use
my new substitutes for r1/r3, THIS FEATURE IS ALL GONE: r1 DOES NOT mute
r3 anymore!
First, I tried to fiddle with all kind of tone parameters...finally, I
found out that the feature is burried in the un-writeable r1-r64 locations.
THIS IS VERY ANNOYING! How could Roland do a beef like this! (that's what
we call it in danish :^) )...
Do I have to go inside the machine and cut something? *8-O
Has anybody else noticed this before?
Poul
|
1396.176 | CAn a D100 patch editor work on D10? D5? | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Mon Sep 17 1990 16:45 | 20 |
| This appears to be the right place to ask.
According to my manual, the Roland D5 sysex messages are the same as
the D10, but with the reverb removed (and associated values ignored)
and the (mostly useless) keyboard effcts added. I am (therefore)
convinced that a D10 patch editor will work with the D5, allowing that
the reverb information will be ignored.
Also, there appears to be an assumption going around that the D10 and
the D110 are compatible, but I haven't seen that confirmed anywhere.
Does this mean that a D110 patch editor will work with with the D5?
The bottom line is that I'm considering getting Dr. T's "Caged Artist"
for the 110, in order to use it on a D5. It's on sale for $50 bucks.
I'll be running it on an Atari ST. I'm also interested in alternatives,
if you have any to offer.
(I'm really interested in editing, not just in librarying. I'd write
one myself, but I have some other interesting programming ideas I want
to persue.)
|
1396.177 | a definate bummer | GLOWS::COCCOLI | boycott Sinead O'Connor | Tue Sep 18 1990 21:40 | 17 |
|
re .175
Yep, I noticed it also. I too could not stand the closed hi-hat
and edited and stored a better sounding version, which didn't cancel
the open hat ring.
Perhaps leaving them in a patch format, as opposed to including
them in the drum kit will work. But I doubt it...
RichC (back from a 2 week jury duty) Can you say deliberation?
I knew you could.
|
1396.178 | D-10 / D-110 compatibility | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Wed Sep 19 1990 17:17 | 28 |
| re .176 (hi Jeff)
I think I've mentioned in here before, I have both a D-10 and a D-110,
and they are 99.9% compatible. The D-110 apparently cam out later than
the D-10, and has a few added features, such as the ability to send
individual patches out the MIDI port (the D-10 can only dump the entire
contents of the sound memory, from which you have to extract individual
patches - both can load individual patches).
The D-110 does not have the built-in rhythm pattern memory.
The D-110 has a set of stereo, as well as 6 mono outputs. Channels can
be assigned to any of the mono outputs. The D-10 has only stereo outs.
The output on the D-110 doesn't seem to be quite as "hot" as the D-10.
That is, with the volume on both cranked up all the way the D-10 sounds
louder.
The only arbitrary incompatibility I've run across is that onthe D-10,
if you send CC 121 (reset all controllers) it doesn't affect the CC 7
(volume) setting for the channel. On the D-110 it does. You have to set
the volume level *after* resetting the controllers.
I don't believe any of these differences would affect anything you are
planning to do with the D-110. In general I use the D-10 and the D-110
interchangeably.
- Ram
|
1396.179 | | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Fri Sep 21 1990 16:07 | 4 |
| Re .178, Thanks Ram. That's great news. Combined with what it says
in the D5 programming manual, I'm sure that any D110 patch editor would
work fine with the D5. I'm going to get Caged Artist and start making
some new sounds.
|
1396.180 | SQ-80/D110 Incompatible? | AQUA::ROST | She moves me, man | Mon Sep 24 1990 12:34 | 36 |
| Of possible interest to folks planning on using a D-110 with an SQ-80:
From: kennyz@pawl.rpi.edu (Kenny Zalewski)
Subject: Problems with SQ-80 and D-110
Date: 20 Sep 90 07:24:17 GMT
Hi everyone --
Path: kennyz
Here's an interesting problem I'm having, and I hope someone can help.
I just got an Ensoniq SQ-80, and I'm using its sequencer to drive the
rest of my setup. One of the units which the sequences drives is my
Roland D-110. I use the D-110 for drums only on this particular track.
Here's the problem: after playing the drums for some random period of
time, the D-110 freezes, and its internal memory is totally scrambled.
I have to perform a re-initialization every time this happens (holding
down the write key while turning on the unit.)
Originally, I thought that the SQ-80 might be sending Sys-Ex messages
to the D-110 which were re-programming it in some way, causing it to
crash. Well, I sent the exact same drum tracks thru my Korg M3r, and
after 2 hours, still not crash. I really suspect that either my D-110
is broken, or that it at least needs an operating system upgrade. The
current Op Sys in my D-110 is Version 1.06, April 5, 1988.
Is anyone else using an SQ-80 with a D-110? That would be the most
helpful, but any other help at all is greatly appreciated. Thanks in
advance. I'll post a summary if responses are sent over E-mail.
--- Kenny Z.
--
Kenny Zalewski
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 65 13th Street, 1st floor, Troy, NY, 12180
kennyz@pawl.rpi.edu | Kenny_Zalewski@mts.rpi.edu | userfvct@rpitsmts.BITNET
|
1396.181 | Very interesting | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | This is your brain on Unix | Mon Sep 24 1990 20:01 | 14 |
| Brian,
I'd sure appreciate it if you would post any responses to that here.
I'm planning on getting a D-110 and it will definitely be paired with
my SQ-80. As this will be mainly for gigs where I can't afford to
have it freeze up, this note is of great concern to me.
There isn't much you CAN do on an SQ-80 that should cause an SGU
to freeze up. It can only send note data, velocity, pressure (both),
key changes and CC7 (MIDI volume).
I suspect it's a bug in the Roland but if it's a bug that I'm going to
have problems with, I'd like to know before I shell out for the D-110.
|
1396.182 | My experiances... | CSC32::MOLLER | Give me Portability, not excuses | Mon Sep 24 1990 21:04 | 20 |
| I've never had a problem with the ESQ-1 as a MIDI controller
for a D-110 (or MT-32, or U-110 either). A friend of mine
had an SQ-80/D-110 combo & used it for quite a while before
upgrading to an EPS & getting a VFXsd system. I don't recall
him ever having a problem with the combination (they were
heavily sequenced & used the D-110's drums a lot).
The only problems that I've had are where I'm changing channels
on the ESQ-1 when it is playing back a sequence (ie, I decide that
instead of sending on channel 1, I decide to shift to channel 14).
This has hosed up my rack completely more than once. I'd suspect
that you might have similar functionality in the SQ-80 as the ESQ-1
in this area. By the way, the only instrument that wasn't messed
up was my MT-32 (the FB01, U-110 and REX-50 were not at all where
they were supposed to be - the MIDI reset/panic button on the
MX-8 was the only thing that stopped the howling). Of course the
Yamaha SHS-10 has even done worse things to my gear when it
hiccuped (the MT-32 was quite confused by this).
Jens
|
1396.183 | fwiw, my D-110 problem... | RICKS::NORCROSS | | Tue Sep 25 1990 17:58 | 12 |
| As I've mentioned in here before, my D-110 has been "hanging" almost
regularly for the past 6-9 months. I haven't bothered to gather alot of
data around my problem, so I can't say for sure whether it is a
D-110-only problem or perhaps a D-110-in-my-system problem - but I
strongly suspect that it is a D-110-only hardware (not software/firmware)
problem. I'd be very happy if it were an OS problem.
In any case, I don't know what I'd do without the D-110. I have alot of
sequences which depend on the D-110 sounds and drum setup. Some day, I
will either fix or replace the D-110 with another D-110.
/Mitch
|
1396.184 | It's the firmware | RUGRAT::POWELL | Dan Powell/221-5916 | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:19 | 5 |
| The lockup problem is usually caused by the firmware. I had similar
problems when downloading patches from a Macintosh. You should have
version 1.10. Give Roland a call, the firmware is free.
Dan
|
1396.185 | Firmware Version Check? | RICKS::NORCROSS | | Wed Sep 26 1990 19:37 | 29 |
| Thanks. I will try to check and see which version I have...
Actually I tried the procedure mentioned in .147 once before, and it
didn't work. Maybe I was doing something stupid. Can anyone confirm
that the procedure for checking the firmware version mentioned in .147 is
correct?
I do know that I've got a relatively old machine. I acquired it within 6
months of its introduction.
Thanks,
/Mitch
================================================================================
Note 1396.147 Roland D10 /D110(rackmount) /D20 LA Synths 147 of 184
CHEFS::BAIN "Alex Bain @REO" 11 lines 10-JUL-1990 12:56
-< D110 ROM Version 1.12 >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FYI:-
Latest version of the D110 OS ROM is 1.12
To see what version you have got, hold down the first, third and
fifth buttons on the bottom row and switch on the power.
This Rom has apparently been in use for some time now, so unless
your D110 is an early one, you probably have this version.
Alex
|
1396.186 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | Are you WARPed yet? | Mon Oct 01 1990 10:40 | 3 |
| Sorry to but in, but does anyone know the average cost of a D110?
matty
|
1396.187 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Locutus: Fact or Fraud? | Mon Oct 01 1990 14:10 | 3 |
| Daddy's had 'em for $399.
Burns
|
1396.188 | | HEART::MACHIN | | Mon Oct 01 1990 14:14 | 2 |
|
300 pounds U.K.
|
1396.189 | Be Careful With Poly-Aftertouch | AQUA::ROST | She moves me, man | Mon Oct 01 1990 16:03 | 38 |
| Re: SQ-80 compatibility
This from USENET, a followup to the earlier posting about
incompatibility between the SQ80 and the D110. Apparently
poly-aftertouch is fatal but channel aftertouch is OK. Food for
thought...
From: kennyz@pawl.rpi.edu (Kenny Zalewski)
Subject: Re: Problems with SQ-80 and D-110
Date: 26 Sep 90 03:31:32 GMT
>Kenny, a letter in the Transoniq Hacker a few issues ago mentioned a "known"
>problem with poly-pressure and the D110. The D110 doesn't respond to it, of
>course, but supposedly sending it to the D110 could crash it.
>
> [... etc ...]
>
To Brian, and all others who responded to my problem thru E-mail:
Thanks for all the help. After putting many of your suggestions to work,
this preceeding posting from Brian was the climax. Sure enough, it was
the after-touch pressure setting on the SQ-80... I was recording and
sending after-touch, but the D-110 doesn't recognize it, and furthermore,
crashes after a while if I use after-touch. I checked the D-110 MIDI
implementation sheet, and it appears it can not receive or transmit after-
touch. However, the unit crashing seems like a bug to me, so I'd still like
to get the Op Sys upgrade. Anyone know if that bug was remedied in a later
version (post-V1.06)?
Anyway, recording without after-touch saves mondo memory, and reduces the
MIDI bandwidth too. So this should all work out for the better. My
advice to you, Brian, is to get the D-110. It's a nice unit that packs
alot of power in a small space. What a nice way to end the day! Thanks!
--
Kenny Zalewski
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 65 13th Street, 1st floor, Troy, NY, 12180
kennyz@pawl.rpi.edu | Kenny_Zalewski@mts.rpi.edu | userfvct@rpitsmts.BITNET
|
1396.190 | Only 3 times US price... | EICMFG::WJONES | Captain Loon: Stardate Gibble | Mon Oct 01 1990 16:47 | 4 |
| Around FF5500 in France at moderate discount. Translates to a little over
580 pounds or around $950. Thank you, French importers.
Gavin
|
1396.191 | | GLOWS::COCCOLI | crop circle watchers inc | Mon Oct 01 1990 19:32 | 11 |
|
Sam Ash has been blowing them out for $399. The # is 1-800-4SAM-ASH.
It ain't gonna get no cheaper....
RichC
|
1396.192 | 30 days before Halloween | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Mon Oct 01 1990 21:43 | 25 |
| I had a curious thing happen the other night when I was working with my
D-10 and D-110. I was programming (inputting on the D-10) away when I
suddenly noticed that the C5 note on the D-110 was stayin on after I
released the key. I had to change patches to get it to go off. None of
the other notes were doing this. It didn't happen when I played back
the sequence, only when I entered it from the D-10.
Then a few minutes later, I noticed the same note staying on in the
D-10. Only in this case it *didn't* stay on when I played it live, only
when I played back the sequence. Needless to say I was somewhat
disconcerted, as this seemed to be a strange electrical problem
striking both synthesizers at the same time and in almost the same way.
I eventually gave up and just transposed the sequence down an octave to
avoid it (see how artistic I am?).
The next day I went back and transposed the sequence up an octave, and
it worked fine on both synthesizers.
My conclusion is that my town is trying to save energy costs by
reducing power at night, and I was the victim of something like that.
I've had similar weird problems in the past with Roland equipment and
flakey power, as reported in some previous notes. Anyone have any
better ideas?
- Ram
|
1396.193 | Patch & Timbre memories | CHEFS::BAIN | Alex Bain @REO | Tue Oct 02 1990 15:36 | 44 |
| from .19
> The next block in the D110 is called a timbre (was called a patch in the MT)
> There are 128 storage locations in the D110. Each timbre cooresponds to a
> MIDI program change number and contains several parameters. The first tells
> which tone is assigned to it: Bank A 1-64, Bank B 1-64, Rhythm tones 1-64
> internal tones 1-64 or memory card tones 1-64. The second is the keyshift
> parameter which allows the tone to be adjusted up or down by 24 half steps.
> The fine tune, bend range and output assign (stereo mix or individual outs)
> can also be adjusted for each timbre. So, when you send a MIDI program
> change to a particular channel, the D110 goes and looks in this timbre
> map, pulls out the sound you have selected, sets the keyshift etc and places
> all this in the part associated with that MIDI channel. Simple huh ?
> Now we come to the last block of parameters, patches. This is something
> which didn't exist in the MT. Patches are sort of like global setups.
> You specify a reverb setting, the desired timbres for each part and a rhythm
> setup. You then give this a name and save it in one of 64 locations. Now,
> by selecting that particular patch, you will load all the parts with the
> timbres you specified, set the reverb and pull in the rhythm setup. All
> with one command. Neat huh ?
I've just bought a D110, and discovered more timbre memories than I thought. In
addition to the 128 timbre memories described above, each patch has its own
seperate timbre memory for each of the 8 parts. When you call up a new patch,
you get the 8 timbres that are in the patch timbre memory. You only get the
timbres in the 128 location timbre memory when you send a program change
command to the appropriate part.
For me this means that I can out together a number of patches with unique
timbres which I can use to layer with my D50 when playing live. For sequencing
work, I'll use the timbre memory - always remembering to send appropriate
program change numbers for each part before the start of any sequence.
BTW, I have also been driving my D110 from the preset rythm/accompianment
section of a Roland E20. Some of these are fairly complex, involving complex
drum rythms and multiple accompianment midi channels with 2 or three program
change commands per bar. I've not had any problems with lock-up. I can't
remember what version of the OS ROM I've got - it's not the latest, but it
isnt the earliest one either.
Alex
|
1396.194 | How D-50ish is the D-10? | RANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERT | Tom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid! | Wed Oct 03 1990 13:28 | 29 |
|
Excuse me for not reading through all 193 of these replies, I don't
any of us who have the time/patience to do that. I did read the first 20
or so...
I've been debating over a D[5]50 / D[1]10 for a while now. I want that
famous D50 L/A sound. (I had a MT-32 but that didn't seem to cut it)
The D[1]10 is great since it's multi-timbral, indivual outs, etc.
But is it a "D-50"? I know the D-50 can have more partials per patch
than the D-10 and it is said the D-50 has a "cleaner" sound. But can
you still get what is considered the D-50 sound from the D-10?
I had a D110 for a short time, but not long enough to really bang on it.
Basically long enough to listen to the demos and play a few of the patches.
Also for a very short time I had a D-50 next to it. Playing one and then
the other (although neither extensively) they sounded like two different
machines. Granted this has a lot to do with the patches (I didn't have time
to really match up comparable patches and the D-50 had been updated with
Vahala patches) But the sound characteristics were still different enough
to make me wonder.
Does the number of partials/cleaner sound make that big of a difference, or
is there something I'm missing? Can anyone give an accurate comparison of
the "sound" of the two architectures, not just the internal "guts"?
Thanks.
-Tom
|
1396.195 | D-50s On Sale | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:03 | 6 |
| BTW, Roland was recently (and still may be) selling D-50s for <$1K.
(Like, $995, but still attractive).
len (ecstatic D-550 owner, and no, I'm not interested in parting with
it).
|
1396.196 | | RANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERT | Tom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid! | Wed Oct 03 1990 20:39 | 7 |
|
Yes, I've been quoted $995 at Daddy's, Nashua, and $945 at Carusos.
However, Daddy's and others has the D-110 for $399. Granted you get the
D-50 including keyboard for the higher price, but's it still $600 (over
2x) as much! Both are great buys, but which one?????
-Tom
|
1396.197 | | HEART::MACHIN | | Thu Oct 04 1990 09:51 | 4 |
|
Remember, the D10 doesn't have individual outs, only the D110.
Richard.
|
1396.198 | | RANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERT | Tom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid! | Thu Oct 04 1990 16:25 | 10 |
|
Yes, well I'd rather go rackmount anyways, so I'm looking at the D-110 over
the D-10. But this brings me to another question, what happened to the
D-550? Why did they stop manufacturing it before the D-50, or did they
just have that many more D-50s in stock?
I can't seem to find a D-550. And since the D-50 is going for <$1K, would
that mean the 550 would be $700-$800?
-Tom
|
1396.199 | | GLOWS::COCCOLI | crop circle watchers inc | Thu Oct 04 1990 19:30 | 9 |
|
As a D110 owner, I can tell you there is a *big* difference in
the sound between the D10/110 and the D50.
The D50 is much cleaner and fuller sounding.
But if you're looking for a band-in-a-box, the D110's got it beat.
|
1396.200 | | AQUA::ROST | She moves me, man | Thu Oct 04 1990 19:39 | 12 |
| As far as D-550s go, talking to some dealers I get the impression that,
despite what seems to be the norm amongst COMMUSIC noters, racks don't
sell as well as boards. I'm sure the fire sale on D-50s is to help
dealers clear the shelves before prices fall further due to the D-70.
I haven't seen any D-550 blow outs and don't expect to.
The baby D's have totally different sets of partials then the D-50, or
the MT-32 for that matter. I'm sure they cut costs soundwise in other
areas, how else can you make a D-5 list for less than half the list of
a D-50 if they sound the same?
Brian
|
1396.201 | Sssssssssssssss | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Thu Oct 04 1990 19:48 | 6 |
| The baby-D's have partials which are subsets of the D-50/550. Only a
few parameters are missing. The main difference is in the quality of
the implementation, mostly apparent as noise.
len (who loves his -550).
|
1396.202 | | AQUA::ROST | She moves me, man | Thu Oct 04 1990 19:56 | 12 |
| Re: .201
I think we may be misunderstanding Rolandese here...the actual PCM
sample set in the baby Ds is not the same set as in the D50. From
stuff I've read in EM, the baby Ds actually have *more* samples than
the D50 does, and that the MT-32 has yet another set. Am I incorrect
in this?
As far as *programming* the partials into tones, timbres or whatever
Roland calls them this week, I agree with you, Len.
Brian
|
1396.203 | Correction on ROMs | CHEFS::BAIN | Alex Bain @REO | Fri Oct 05 1990 09:55 | 25 |
| From my original note .147:-
Latest version of the D110 OS ROM is 1.12
> To see what version you have got, hold down the first, third and
> fifth buttons on the bottom row and switch on the power.
I did'nt have a D110 when I wrote this and I thought it only had 5
buttons on each row. The buttons you should actually hold down when
you switch on the power are numbers 4, 6 & 8 on the bottom
row. (part, bank & enter).
> This Rom has apparently been in use for some time now, so unless
> your D110 is an early one, you probably have this version.
In fact the latest version I've actually seen was the new one in
Kingfisher Music - its version 1.11 (April 89). The D110 I've got
(bought used) is vn 1.10 (Aug30 88)
BTW, now I've got a D110 and a D50, I can compare them. I agree with
.199 - if you want D50 sounds, you need a D50 - especialy if you've
already got the MT32 and you dont think thats near enough.
Alex
|
1396.204 | | RANGER::ECLPSE::ROBERT | Tom rOss Robert - The DeLorean Kid! | Fri Oct 05 1990 16:37 | 13 |
|
Thanks, that's what I was looking for. I was up at Daddy's last night
playing with their D-50 on the floor and talking to the salesmen. I got
pretty much the same impression from them. I have to weigh the importance
of the barebone "sounds" against the features/price. (In this case D-110
vs D-50, we're talking around $600, granted the keyboard on the 50 makes
up for a lot of that, but we're still talking 600 scubs)
I decided the sound was more important, I have enough multi-timbral
instruments to suffice, so I'm going with the D-50! (now to get up
the scubs... c'est la vie!)
-Tom
|
1396.206 | Problems in copying land... | EICMFG::WJONES | Ghengis Loon (PR As You Conquer) | Mon Nov 12 1990 08:54 | 20 |
| Could some D-110 expert help out this struggling novice, please? :-)
I finally succumbed and bought a ROM card for the D-110; card PN-D10-03,
"Natural Variations".
I selected timbre C-A23 (tone C11, Sustained A Piano). Manual in hand, I copied
it into I-A11. Looked good, no problems.
When I ran a test piece, I-A11 contained something called "Rich Wood". Panic
sort of set in at this point. I read the manual's list of what's where and the
sheet that came with the card. Could I find any reference to "Rich Wood" to
see what I'd done? No sirree.
So I tried copying another timbre. Again, during the copy procedure all seemed
well. Only, when I came to use the new sound, it was not the one I expected!
So, am *I* doing something wrong or have I got a duff card? (Naturally, I
prefer the former option...)
Gavin
|
1396.207 | Atari PD Patch Editor Posted To MIDIlib | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Thu Nov 15 1990 19:45 | 5 |
|
I have posted the PD MT32 editor for the Atari ST to MIDIlib. Docs say
it works for D110 also.
Brian
|
1396.208 | | HEART::MACHIN | | Mon Nov 19 1990 10:06 | 6 |
|
I reckon you're not WRITEing it -- are you going throught the protection off
and WRITE procedure? If not, the patch will only be there until you re-select
it, at which time that location reverts to the original patch.
Richard.
|
1396.209 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Ghengis Loon (PR As You Conquer) | Mon Nov 19 1990 10:50 | 9 |
| >I reckon you're not WRITEing it -- are you going throught the protection off
>and WRITE procedure? If not, the patch will only be there until you re-select
>it, at which time that location reverts to the original patch.
The original patch was Accoustic Piano 2. I'm following the manual carefully.
I'm still confused about where this came from, though... It definitely writes
to the location, since I've switched the unit on and off a number of times.
Gavin
|
1396.210 | Disabling Patch Changes? | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Mon Nov 19 1990 18:45 | 14 |
| re .121 &.126
> The machine gets a "overall" channel assignment, and each of
> the eight "parts" (nine including the drums, stuck on channel 10)
> can be set to any channel, or *off**. There is a setting that will
> allow you to enable/disable "virtual instrument" type patch changes
> (patch changes within patches). Catch my drift?.
After months of working with my D110 and reading the manual, I still
haven't figured out how to disable "virtual instrument" type patch
changes. Anybody out there know just how this is done?
Thanks,
Terry
|
1396.211 | | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Mon Nov 19 1990 19:05 | 8 |
|
Well, just don't send out patch changes on the channels you've
assigned sounds to, which requires you to keep one channel open as a
"control" channel.
Won't work if you've used up all sixteen channels already.
Brian
|
1396.212 | I really need to turn patch changes off | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Mon Nov 19 1990 20:00 | 9 |
| > Well, just don't send out patch changes on the channel you've
> assign sounds to,
Unfortunately, that won't work for me. I'm using Roland's CA-30
Intelligent Arranger which automatically sends out patch changes
for the MT32. I consistently get FANTASY for bass parts and great
sounds like ICE BELLS for the lead. I set up patches with the sounds
I want, but the CA-30 keeps changing them.
|
1396.213 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | All On You (Perfume) - Paris Angels | Tue Nov 20 1990 10:37 | 14 |
| Question; (from a non D20 owner who has occasional use of one)
Let's say I've recorded a bassline into one of the tracks on the
internal sequencer. I've seen a guy in a shop edit the parameters of
the sound while the sequence was playing, using the value slider. The
sound he came up with was the `acid House' squelchy sound.
What parameter do I edit? and how do I record my editing onto that
sequence?
I apologise for ignorance!
matty
|
1396.214 | Read The Manual? | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Tue Nov 20 1990 11:12 | 10 |
| Re: .212
Sounds like you need to check your CA30 manual. It must have an option
*somewhere* to let you pick the patches you want. The problem is not
that it sends out patch changes, it's that it sends out patch changes
that are *different* from what you want to use. That's supposed to be
a helpful feature, i.e. you don't have to remember to set up the
patches on your module, you let the sequencer do it for you.
Brian
|
1396.215 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | wanting... waiting... needing... | Wed Nov 21 1990 10:29 | 10 |
| RE.-2,
Sorry to press, but I'm going into a studio on Saturday and I really
need to know how to do this. I should have said that the sound he
started off with was a synthetic, sharp attacking, high modulating bass
sound.
Did I explain clearly?
matty
|
1396.216 | I need a "tingly" sound... | DCSVAX::COTE | Can't touch this... | Wed Nov 21 1990 11:12 | 21 |
| I'm sure nobody's purposely ignoring your request, Matt (We just love
to show off!), but there could be a variety of reasons why there's been
no response...
"Squelchy" is a vague term, at best. When I think of "squelchy"
a filter sweep from low to high comes to mind. Not being familiar
with "acid house" music doesn't help. I frankly don't have any
idea what you're talking about.
Maybe those who DO know are home diligently digging to respond,
but just haven't found the answer yet...
Why don't you ask the guy who you saw how he did it? I bet he'd be more
than happy to share.
I hope the studio you're going to is reasonably priced. The time to
figure out how to make a sound is NOT when the clock's running...
Best o' luck...
Edd
|
1396.217 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | wanting... waiting... needing... | Wed Nov 21 1990 12:07 | 27 |
| Thanks Edd, The studio costs 5 quid (pounds) for 5 hours!!!!. It's
only a D20, 644, Midiverb, Drumkit, Guitars, Amps etc, but it'll do.
Oh, and an Engineer of sorts.
My problem is I have these 5 hours to write, record and learn to play
drums! But my main problem is working out how to get this sound!
I tried to see the guy in the shop last Saturday, but it was soooo
busy, and I felt really guilty trying to get something for free while
all these other guys are coming in waiting to buy Guitars and Amps etc.
Let me try to explain. I pick a bass sound, synth bass as oppsoed to
guitar type bass. Then I choose parameter x and and change the values
while playing. Parameter x sort of changes the thickness and
`squechlyness' of the sound. I can get a similar sound on my little
PSS680 by changing the modulation value. If the modulation goes too
high the sound becomes white noise, if I go too low the sound becomes
too soft. Moving about somewhere between these `barrier' values
produces an almost `acid' sound.
So I need to know what parameter `x' is and how to inflict it upon a
bassline I've already recorded into the sequencer.
Hope that is a litlle clearer. (Probably not)
matty
|
1396.218 | | DCSVAX::COTE | Can't touch this... | Wed Nov 21 1990 12:28 | 12 |
| Not having a D-nn synth I could only make guesses as to what parameter
to diddle, so I won't.
But, could I offer you a bit of unsolicited advise? Unless 5 pounds is
not much money to you (I dunno what the $/pd exchange rate is), going
into the studio without having your song down COLD could only be
considered entertainment. (Maybe 5 pounds is a good price for 5 hours
of fun??)
Ah, what the heck, go for it and have a good time...
Edd
|
1396.219 | Cheap at twice the price. | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Ghengis Loon (PR As You Conquer) | Wed Nov 21 1990 14:53 | 6 |
| > considered entertainment. (Maybe 5 pounds is a good price for 5 hours
> of fun??)
Under ten bucks....
Gavin
|
1396.220 | I thought we were talking 2nd mtg.... | DCSVAX::COTE | Can't touch this... | Wed Nov 21 1990 15:05 | 3 |
| Trivial then... go, have fun...
Edd
|
1396.221 | Who said sequenced music wasn't spur of the moment?t | IGETIT::BROWNM | wanting... waiting... needing... | Wed Nov 21 1990 15:50 | 22 |
| 1 pound per hour works out cheaper than going to the cinema. Everyone
has the chance to go to the cinema though.
I been there 4 or 5 times before, only it was a free course on how to
use the stuff. It was supported by the local council.
I've done it before. I've walked in, made up and recorded a few chord
changes, put some `tinkly' and `breathy' noises on top and come up with
one hell of a wildlife documentary piece! To be honest I have a
bassline in my head and a few words to throw over the top. House
rhythms are all pretty similar, so it won't be too difficult to
sequence a drum track.
My problem comes with the fact that all I have is the drum track and
a very repetitive bassline. This acid noise is one of the ways I plan
to fill the sound out. I'll make all the bleeps and chord when I get
there.
There must be a D20 owner who knows how to do this. :^Z
matty
|
1396.222 | | GLOWS::COCCOLI | it's moot | Wed Nov 21 1990 22:00 | 16 |
|
I own a D110, which is the rack version without the sequencer.
I really don't know what parameter you are talking about, but I
suspect altering the resonance frequency might produce the effect.
Alas, I've never heard this "acid house" music, although I may claim
to have dabbled in psychedelia.
As for 5 quid for five hours of entertainment, In my single past
I can honestly say I've spent up to $100 per hour for entertainment,
although this type was once followed by a trip to the local physician.
RichC
|
1396.223 | Cheapware Patch Editor for D110? | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Fri May 17 1991 15:19 | 15 |
| So I just ordered a D-110 (Manny's, $399).
I've looked all through (and I mean ALL) the notes with D110 keywords, and
I did not find anyone actually talking about a real, existing, free or shareware
patch editor or librarian, with the exception of Barry Scott, who said something
about writing one. However, I have seen nothing about availablilty. I wrote
to Barry.
There is an MT32 librarian in MIDILIB which I have grabbed.
Does anyone know of anything else around?
Thanks,
Burns
|
1396.224 | | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Fri May 17 1991 17:29 | 3 |
| Forgot to mention that I am looking for D110 s/w on an IBM PC.
Burns
|
1396.225 | | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Mon May 20 1991 15:28 | 21 |
| Well, I got my D-110 on Friday (amazing! Manny's told me they would ship it
Thursday; they actually got it out Wednesday and UPS got it here on Friday.
So I had a fun weekend, but not enough time.
Anyway, I am going through this topic for exciting tidbits, and every now
and again, I come up with an unanswered question that I can now answer.
Here is the first one:
re: 149
Sierra supplies a D110 driver via their bulletin board. You need to get
D110.COM and KQ4PATCH.COM (for example). When run, these self-extract into
some only vaguely readable documentation and D110.DRV and PATCH000.DAT. Put
these into the game directory and you are off and running. CAUTION: They
apparently write into TIMBRE memory. Save your stuff. Also, I tried just
pretending it was an MT32 with the existing drivers. It was only mediocre,
although it did, once again, manage to write all over TIMBRE memory. This
was before I had saved it too.
Burns
|
1396.226 | re .213 and virtual instrument patch changes | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Mon May 20 1991 15:45 | 8 |
| re 213: I think what you want to do is to not fool around with (I am using
Rolandese here) patches, but instead set up your Timbre memory to match an
MT32. When you send patch changes over a channel, that replaces the TIMBRE
selection for the part(s) listening to that channel. If you use the Timbre
memory to act like a translation table between D-110 sounds (Tone) numbers and
MT-32, that should do that trick.
Burns
|
1396.227 | What good is write-protect? | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Mon May 20 1991 15:48 | 6 |
| So what the heck good is write protect? Sysex memory writes seem to work with
total disregard for write protect. Doing it from the front panel seems to only
pay lip-service (you have to push "WRITE" one extra time).
Burns who had his Timbre memory overwritten almost before the D110 was out of
the box!
|
1396.228 | A bit of babbling, plus a question about control messages | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Tue May 21 1991 19:55 | 46 |
| aaaaaagh! A new toy! I need to talk about it!!!!
This is so much fun! I plugged my DH100 into it (via Cakewalk which changed
the midi channel for me) and tried a lot of the different sounds. What a kick!
And some of them are sooooooo good! (Unfortunately, the woodwinds are pretty
mediocre.)
Anyway, with some exceptions, I'm not sure this thing is so mysterious as all
that. The memories seem ~straightforward. There is a bunch of current state
memories that hold all the current tone assignments, performance parameters,
and stuff. All this stuff together is called a patch, and you can store some
number of complete patches. They only refer externally to tones. You can
load a patch into the current state by sending a patch change message over a
particular channel selected from the front panel. Don't select one of the
channels in use or strange things may happen!
You can replace bits and pieces of the current state as well. For example,
you can replace the current sound assignment, various performance parameters,
and stuff like the assignment of midi channels. There is a unit of interest
here called a PART which essentially groups the parameters of which midi channel
to listen to, what note range to listen to, where to locate the sound in the
stereo output, etc. There are no memories of these except in patches.
You can store combinations of (sound, a few other parameters) in a separate
memory called TIMBRE memory. You can load a TIMBRE into the current state
by a patch change command.
And finally, you can edit sounds (called Tones). There are 128 of these in ROM,
and another 64 (I think) that you can play with in RAM. You can also buy
ROM and RAM to plug in and get more.
Did I miss something?
----------------------------------------------------------------
Anyway, the real question I have is this: I kept having funny things happen
to me. Like notes not sounding, patches not changing, etc. I traced it down
to some parts getting changed to "OFF". The question is, how did this happen?
Presumably some SYSEX messages could do it, but I don't think that any such were
sent. I'm wondering if there are any "generic" control message sent on a
channel that could do it. I know I was playing one song which was written
for the MT-32 that sent controller messages (I think they were bender range,
but that's another question.) Can any controller message (other than a patch
change on the system channel) mess up the part's channel assignments?
Burns
|
1396.229 | Pitch bender range and other control signals | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Tue May 21 1991 20:05 | 22 |
| Plus another question: It looks to me from studying the D-100 midi
implementation documentation that in order to send a bender range, you have to
send two separate control messages, one with the LSB of the "parameter address"
and of the data, the other with the MSB of them. I have a song which was
designed for the MT-32. I played around with the TIMBRE memory (which I
think of as more of a translation table than anything) so that it looked like
the MT-32. Then I ran the song.
WEIRD things happened. Lots of notes stuck on, plus maybe the weird things
from .-1 were caused by this.
Looking at the song, however, I discovered that it was apparently sending
these bender range control sequences only 1 at a time, not in pairs. So
the questions are: Does this work? If not, what will happen when you do
it? Did this change from the MT-32? In general, are non-SYSEX stuff more-or-
less standardized? I.e. does bender-range work the same on all machines? In
particular, should I expect everything but SYSEX and the tone assignments to be
react the same between an MT-32 and a D-110?
Thanks,
Burns
|
1396.230 | What WAS the initial value? | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Tue May 21 1991 20:08 | 16 |
| Final question for today:
What WAS the initial value for the various memories? I am tempted to initialize
it just for the heck of it. Does this really get me back to how it came in the
box, or is it worse than that?
What was the initial state? Was Timbre memory set up to map 1-1 with tone
memory? What about patch memory? The all seem to be named "Patch 1" etc,
but were they all set identically? How about the writable tones?
Anyway...I've been monopolizing this note for several days now, but I'm kind
of excited. You can break the monopoly!
Thanks for any answers/comments.
Burns
|
1396.231 | Update on D-110 stuff | DECWIN::FISHER | "I am NOT a Merry Man"--Worf | Fri Jun 07 1991 16:01 | 23 |
| Well, I guess everyone is kind of bored with this old-technology stuff, but I
thought I would make a report for future reference:
1. D110s are now available from both Manny's and Sam Ash for $399. Manny's
is a bit of a pain 'cuz you have to either take it COD or else fax them
a picture of your credit card (and then they STILL insist on the shipping charge
being COD. I don't know if Sam Ash is any different. Ash probably has fewer
of them, though. A salesman just called to tell me that the just got "a few"
in.
2. The D-110 I got from Manny had fairly old firmware. Pressing the buttons
1, 3, and 5 on the bottom row ***counting from the RIGHT*** while powering up
tells you the firmware number and date. Mine was 1.07 dated in 1988. I called
Roland in LA and their service dept. sent me a new ROM with no trouble. It
is version 1.13, dated March 1990, if I remember right.
3. The 1.07 firmware has a serious problem with SYSEX. It seems that if you
ask for a dump of part of a memory bank (say you ask for a single tone memory),
it starts where you ask, but it dumps the entire rest of the memory from that
section. (I.e. ask for tone 1, you get the entire bank of tones). PITA! 1.13
fixes it.
Burns
|
1396.232 | D10 additional voices | MANTHN::EDD | Pour me a Cuban Breeze, Gretchen... | Tue Jul 30 1991 14:48 | 27 |
| <<< DNEAST::SYS$TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;2 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2693.0 D10 additional voices No replies
WOTVAX::JARROLDP "Peter Jarrold" 21 lines 30-JUL-1991 11:22
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have a D10 midi'd to an Atari 1040STe with cubase, satellite
switcher and band in a box.
I would like to be able to down load some different voices to the
D10 but am not sure what this will do to the D10 standard voice
set.
Will downloading additional voices overwrite existing sets?
If so, is there a way I can retain the standard D10 patches to
put back if I wish?
Is there a way of restoring original D10 patches on power up?
As you can gather I do not really understand what makes the
technology tick but my defence is that I really bought it to
play keyboard HONEST!!!
Forever hopeful
Pete Jarrold
|
1396.233 | | MANTHN::EDD | Pour me a Cuban Breeze, Gretchen... | Tue Jul 30 1991 15:28 | 22 |
| <<< DNEAST::SYS$TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COMMUSIC.NOTE;2 >>>
-< * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * >-
================================================================================
Note 2692.9 Note frequencies please ... 9 of 9
GLDOA::AGBEBIYI 15 lines 30-JUL-1991 12:21
-< Storing Sounds on D10 >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pete,
I assume the D-10 has a card slot. If it does, then you are going to
need two cards of which at least one must be RAM( I personally suggest
two RAM cards). One card will have the new sounds you want to use and
the other one is the one you will need to store your original sounds.
All you have to do is write your original sounds on one RAM card
(M-256, I think) and load the new sounds from the other card into it.
Whenever you want the original sounds back, just load the first RAM card.
Wiston
|
1396.234 | use Cubase Satellite ! | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Wed Jul 31 1991 07:07 | 11 |
| Hi Pete !
I suggest you have a look at the Cubase Tips and Tricks note somewhere in this
notesfile. This addresses EXACTLY what you want to do. Even though I use
different synths, a friend of mine has pretty much the same equipment that you
have and it works very well. It's cheaper, more comfortable and less error
prone than the RAM card approach.
best regards
Richard
|
1396.235 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Wed Jul 31 1991 10:58 | 30 |
| The card situation is as follows (at least on my D5 which is an almost
identical machine).
Rom cards are available which offer extra voices for the D10. If you
want to use one you just plug it in and tell the D10 to select voices
off the card (there should be an INTERNAL/CARD selector button). You
will not overwrite the internal sounds this way and therefore do not
need to save them to a ram card first. It IS possible to dump sounds
off the card to internal memory (therefore overwriting the internal
sounds) but I can see no value in doing this, since the sounds can be
accessed just as quickly off the card.
However, as a later reply suggests, cards are very expensive so if you
can find a way to dump sounds over midi to and from Cubase then this
would be much preferable. I do this using an atari and my own library
program written in GFA basic (not finished yet though!). I have
hundreds of D5/D10/D20 patches on disk which if all stored on rom cards
would have cost a fortune. Beware, though, as dumping sounds into the
synth across midi may well overwrite the internal memory (it doesn't
have to, as Roland uses temporary memory areas to hold the patch the
synth is currently playing, but unless you know what the software is
doing it's better to backup your D10 first).
You should be able to back up the D10 by selecting midi bulk dump and
recording the dump straight into Cubase.
Hope it helps,
tony I
|
1396.236 | D10-Cubase Voice dump | WOTVAX::JARROLDP | Peter Jarrold | Thu Aug 01 1991 08:49 | 7 |
| Thanks for your response Richard.
However having looked in the Cubase Tips and Tricks notes my problem is
unresolved.
Any more ideas?
Kind Regards
Pete
|
1396.237 | | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Fri Aug 02 1991 07:20 | 21 |
| Hi Pete !
Confused. You said you have an ATARI and a D10 and would like to be more
flexible in accessing your sounds. Did I get that right ?
If yes, I would do a dump of all presets and the default system setup using
Cubase Satellite. If that's unclear how to do, I'll have my friend giving me
some more info about the Roland specifics. The Satellite commands are the same
as described in that note.
I would recommend to make similar dumps for individual songs. Dumping a bunch
of single sounds and single patches (as opposed to a dump EVERYTHING) saves you
some transmission time when loading them again. But it may just be 5 sec
instead of 15 sec.
If you want to know more about the Satellite specifics, I would suggest to
transfer it to the Cubase note (so that it doesn't get lost for Cubase users).
best regards
Richard
|
1396.238 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Tue Aug 20 1991 15:41 | 18 |
| The original question was "Will I overwrite my built-in sounds" right?
If so, then the answer is:
Ignore the ram card for the moment. In the basic model there are something
like 256 built-in sounds in ROM. These are the most commonly used sounds and
CAN NOT be overwritten, no matter what you do. In addition, there is space
for another 256-or-so (maybe it's 128) user-supplied sounds. These you can
write over. Now the catch is that these RAM spaces come from the factory filled
with some additional sounds. This is undocumented if I remember right. In any
case, these WILL get written over if you load your own sounds. I'm not sure
it is all that much of a loss, actually. However, you can back them up first
as suggested earlier. Also, you can get the back by running the hidden reset
sequence. I forget what it is...something like push button 5 and 7 with your
left toe while standing on your head during a full moon. It is probably in this
note though.
Burns
|
1396.239 | Hidden reset sequence? | BAVIKI::good | Michael Good | Wed Aug 21 1991 12:13 | 13 |
| I could use help with the hidden reset sequence. When I
initially backed up my D5 there was a bug in the OS which
did not dump some of the sounds correctly, so they could
not all be restored.
Burns, did you write the note on the reset sequence or
do you remember reading about it from someone else in
this conference? I looked through your notes and some
(but not all) others in this note and couldn't find the
reference.
Thanks,
Michael
|
1396.240 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Wed Aug 21 1991 15:19 | 7 |
| No, I did not write it. I thought I had extracted it, but I don't have it
hanging around anymore. I would not be surprised if it were in this note
or one of the other LONG d110 notes.
I don't know if any of this is relavent for a D5, though.
Burns
|
1396.241 | here you go.. | GLOWS::COCCOLI | One size fits all... | Wed Aug 21 1991 23:20 | 8 |
|
Reference replies .21 and .74 for info about initializing a D110.
Be careful...practice sysex.
RichC
|
1396.242 | Opcode's Galaxy does wonders for my D-110 | EICMFG::WJONES | Commuting Loon: Autocheck-in Mode | Thu Aug 22 1991 10:29 | 13 |
| I recently bought Opcode's Galaxy Librarian and Editor for the Mac and
was playing around with it over the weekend. I understood more about the
inner workings of the D-110 after ten minutes with Galaxy than after three
days of reading Roland's "documentation". It's a universal editor, in that
it knows about a lots of gear, but each editor is specific to your setup
which you define at the beginning.
I renamed a load of patches in just a few minutes and had dumped backups of
everything onto disk in seconds.
I wish I'd bought it sooner.
Gavin
|
1396.243 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Thu Aug 22 1991 11:05 | 33 |
| I don't agree with some of the technical information in some of these
replies. Here's the way I see it (and I'm prepared to be shot down!!!).
Firstly, as far as the tone generator is concerned, D5=D10=D20. Patches
are fully interchangable between the 3 machines, as are ram cards. The
only differences are on-board effects and addition of sequencer and
reverb in the more expensive models.
The basic "sound" of the units is called a TONE. There are 4 banks:
BANK A: ROM 64 presets, cannot be overwritten
BANK B: ROM 64 " " " "
BANK I: RAM 64 user programmable.
BANK R: ROM 64 preset drum/rhythm sounds
Tones can be arranged into 128 Timbres (in multi-timbral mode) or 128
patches (in performance mode). A timbre is 1 tone+performance
parameters. A patch is 2 tones split or layered + performance
parameters. You can only hear a tone by creating a patch or timbre
which uses it. Patches and timbres only let you re-arrange the preset
sounds, to change the basic sounds the machine makes you have to load a
new set of tones into bank I and create a patch or timbre to use them.
When you load new tones they go into bank I. The unit comes from the
factory with 64 tones loaded into this bank which are not stored
anywhere else on the machine and therefore cannot be restored, except
from a backup copy. (IE not through an init.) I find the presets in
bank I contain the better of the factory sounds, so they are worth
preserving.
FWIW,
tony
|
1396.244 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:46 | 39 |
| I have a D-110, not a D10, so I don't know if there are diffs, but I disagree
with .243 on only a couple points:
1.
Tones can be arranged into 128 Timbres (in multi-timbral mode) or 128
patches (in performance mode). A timbre is 1 tone+performance
parameters. A patch is 2 tones split or layered + performance
parameters.
I don't think there is a "performance mode" on the D110. You can set a mode
that decides what it does with multiple "start notes" of the same note, but
I don't believe it makes any change in Timbre vs Patch.
My description of this stuff is that a Timbre is a tone+ a set of perf.
parameters, and it is a Timbre which gets selected by a MIDI patch select
command.
A patch is like a global setup. It includes the assignments of channel to
instrument (which is yet another characteristic), the initial timbres and
their definitions, etc. You can have a timbre in a patch which is not in
Timbre memory. However, you can also load a patch and then do a midi "patch
select" (note 2 different uses of the word patch) to select a new timbre. I
thought the book had quite a nice picture of this whole thing (one of the few
good points, I guess)
2. I'm reasonably sure that an init brings back the factory loaded tones. I
believe this because some software that I was using (all right, all right...it
was a game, if you must know) scrambled up the I bank before I figured out how
to save stuff. However, I'm pretty sure I got it back from init. Now that I
am all backed up, I'll have to try it again.
Burns
|
1396.245 | I just tried a D-110 init (power up with write held down) | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Tue Sep 03 1991 00:50 | 5 |
| FWIW: Init definitely brings back the initial factory preloads in RAM
on a D110. I can't vouch for a D10, though several notes in here have
said that it does not.
Burns
|
1396.246 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Tue Sep 03 1991 09:34 | 10 |
| I've got a D5 and haven't yet discovered the reset sequence so I can't
test it. The reason I doubted the keyboard could ever recover the
factory sounds is that Roland supply quite detailed memory maps at the
back of the manual and every last byte seems accounted for, so I
couldn't see where the factory sounds could be stored (other than in
RAM).
If anyones knows the D-5 key sequences then I'll give it a go!
Tony
|
1396.247 | | RGB::ROST | Fart Fig Newton | Tue Sep 03 1991 12:30 | 8 |
| Re: .246
Many manufacturers use a "shadow ROM" which lets you reload the RAM
area with the factory patches. Other than using the reload procedure,
you can't access the ROM. The Roland TR-505 drum machine has this
feature.
Brian
|
1396.248 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Thu Sep 05 1991 08:26 | 3 |
| Aha! Thanks for the info!
Tony
|
1396.249 | Patch Bank FTP Site | RGB::ROST | Busking for bucks | Thu Sep 05 1991 12:50 | 28 |
| For D5/10/20/110 owners, here's a source of some patches located on the
USENET. If you don't have anonymous ftp access go find some ULTRIX
wizard to help you out. No idea what sort of format these might be in.
Have fun!!!
From: mami@opal.cs.tu-berlin.de (Manfred Mirsch)
Subject: Soundbanks for ROLAND D5, D10 keyboards uploaded to 'ucsd.edu'
Date: 28 Aug 91 12:46:58 GMT
Organization: Technical University of Berlin, Germany
Grueazi Mitannand !
Since I asked for ftp-sites with sounddata for the ROLAND keyboard D5
about six weeks ago, I received some more requests for such a ftp-site,
spent two weeks sailing on the Eastern Sea between Germany and Sweden
and finally got the tip to look at ucsd.edu.
The sounds for the D5 and D10 are compatible and are stored under
/midi/patches/D10.
I uploaded 13 soundbanks to that directory and a short .doc file.
I would appreciate if anyone who has different sounds would also upload
them to this place and send me a mail or announce it in the newsgroup.
Manfred.
|
1396.250 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Thu Sep 05 1991 13:17 | 7 |
| Manfred,
any chance of making the patches you uploaded available on the easynet?
I don't know how to get stuff off usenet and it would save me having to
find out!!
Tony
|
1396.251 | | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Thu Sep 05 1991 15:26 | 6 |
| Well, Tony, I know how you feel, but unfortunately, Manfred is not a reader of
this conference...he works at the Technical University of Berlin, not DEC.
I bet someone can get these files and announce it here. (Please?)
Burns
|
1396.252 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Fri Sep 06 1991 06:41 | 6 |
| Whoops! Just re-read the original note and realised it was someone
posting a mail message from someone else, hence the confusion (I got
so engrossed in the idea of downloading D5 patches off easynet I didn't
realise this the first time!!)
Tony
|
1396.253 | | KVANT::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Tue Sep 24 1991 19:47 | 4 |
| I think I found out how to get them, although it may take a few days. I'll let
you know when/if. I guess I should put them in midilib if I actually get them.
Burns
|
1396.254 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Tue Oct 01 1991 09:48 | 5 |
| Yes, let us know.
PS Where's midilib??
Tony I (novice commusician!)
|
1396.255 | Midilib defined... | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Wed Oct 02 1991 14:26 | 8 |
| There is a disk kept by Dan Gosselin (spelling) where there is a bunch of PD
software that people from the conference deposit. I can't remember the full
address, but there is a note about it somewhere.
All I've gotten so far are a few non-interesting help files. I've just not
had the time to get the real thing, but soon...
Burns
|
1396.256 | Got them but have not tried them yet... | DECWIN::FISHER | Klingons don't "enter a relationship"...they conquer | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:44 | 8 |
| Ok, I got it, but it is not tested. Look through note 16 to see about midilib.
The quick scoop is:
midi::midi$dka100:[midilib...]
I put the stuff in [.DEPOSIT]. Presumably, Dan will move them to [.PATCHES.D10]
Burns
|
1396.257 | patches moved... | MIDI::DAN | Dan Gosselin, Bookreader development | Mon Oct 07 1991 20:08 | 5 |
| The files (as Burns guessed) are now in MIDI::A$:[MIDILIB.PATCHES.D10]
Have fun,
Dan
|
1396.258 | Are they normal sys-ex data? | AIRONE::MILOS | Roberto, VMS/Italy -VARESE | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:44 | 21 |
|
Hi, I've downloaded them but they don't seem sysex files.
I was expecting the usual sysex header at the beginning of
files but it begins with "bank.bk1" or something like that
and then a lot of hex data that does not look like sysex msgs.
Did I miss something obvious?
Are these files encoded in some (unknown to me) way?
BTW I've managed to blow away the internal tone #1 #2 of my D5
Is there any kind soul that would like to send me those two tones
in a sysex file?
Thank you
Roberto Milos
|
1396.259 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I understand your concerns. Request denied. | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:02 | 22 |
| Well, like I said, I did not test them. They claim to be downloadable with
any librarian, and certainly the D110 uses sysex to define "tones". There
is a part of the sysex command that names each tone. Could that be the "bank.bk1"
stuff?
BTW, it was *I* who put the "SYX" extension on them since I had no idea what
else to name them.
I wonder if they might be data in the format for some librarian or other.
=============
Finally, I'm reasonably sure that the UUencoded data came over ok since I had
no checksum errors or anything when I decoded them. However, it is conceivable
that the result of UUDECODE did not produce a file that your upload program
liked. In fact, I notice that they are variable length, and most times uploading
like fixed 512.
If you have a uudecode program on your PC, I'd be happy to mail you the UUencoded
version to try. It's a lot more data to upload, though.
Burns
|
1396.260 | | AIRONE::MILOS | Roberto, VMS/Italy -VARESE | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:14 | 22 |
|
Burns,
Also in my opinion those files are from a particular librarian,
and "bank1.bnk" the name of the tones collection.
This comes from the affinity between those files and those
generated by MusicX on my Amiga.
But what is really funny to me, is that there are no other ascii
strings that could be interpreted as tone names, in the whole file.
Perhaps that librarian compress the data when writing on the disk!
> If you have a uudecode program on your PC, I'd be happy to mail you the UUencoded
> version to try. It's a lot more data to upload, though.
Thank you for the offer, I'd like to try them,
but I'm pessimistic! :-)
> Burns
Roberto.
|
1396.261 | OS version and MIDI help | ROYALT::ORSHAW | Associate FTSG membership pending..... | Thu Oct 10 1991 01:14 | 17 |
| Well, I can't seem to find any good PD patch librarians so I'm off in
SYSEX land writing my own. I have 2 questions:
How can I find out the OS version of my d110?? The previous replies say
something about holding the edit and data transfer buttons while
turning the machine on. I have an edit button but I don't have a data
transfer button. I have tried holding the edit button in conjunction
with evry other button on the front panel but nothing works.
In looking thru the manual at the midi implementation, it appears that
you can only ask for the (64 tone) internal tone bank. I want to ask
for the (128 tone -- 2 banks at 64 tones each) preset tone bank(s).
Does anyone know if this is possible??
Thanks,
Jim
|
1396.262 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I understand your concerns. Request denied. | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:32 | 8 |
| To get the OS version on a D110, go to the bottom row of buttons and push the
first, third, and fifth button *FROM THE RIGHT* while you power on. I think
the latest rev is 14 (?)
I don't know of any way to get the preset tones, unless maybe you load them
into a patch, and then fetch the patch.
Burns
|
1396.263 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I understand your concerns. Request denied. | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:33 | 4 |
| Keep us up to date on your progress, btw. If you want FT sites, you will prob-
ably get volunteers here.
Burns
|
1396.264 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I understand your concerns. Request denied. | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:36 | 8 |
| Roberto,
You might also send mail to the guy in Berlin who originated the patches to
see what format they are in.
Also, the UUencoded files are in the mail.
Burns
|
1396.265 | pan/vol help needed | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | do it in dubly | Mon Oct 14 1991 00:45 | 8 |
| I got a question on the D20.
When I do a sequence and adjust each tracks pan and volume via the
dub function and then save it to disk and then reload I lose the volume
settings. What am I doing wrong??
Thanks in advance
P.K.
|
1396.266 | You didn't tell it to set them | BSS::STPALY::MOLLER | Fix it before it breaks | Mon Oct 14 1991 20:39 | 4 |
| Volume is CC 7, and pan is CC 10. You have to send out controller info to
the midi channels (like you have to send program change messages to set
the patch).
Jens
|
1396.267 | UH???? | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | do it in dubly | Tue Oct 15 1991 00:30 | 7 |
| RE -1
Thanks for your reply but I am still confused. I am not using an
external sequencer but the one built in. What is cc 7 and cc 10 are
they some sort of midi change info like program change messages.
Thanks P.K.
|
1396.268 | this is your brain on cc's...any questions? | GLOWS::COCCOLI | watch that spin cycle.. | Wed Oct 16 1991 00:52 | 19 |
|
"cc" stands for "continuous controller". They are messages, usually
containing a variable from 0 to 127.
I'm fairly sure you can't incorporate them into your sequences using
the fairly limited (sorry 8^} ) internal D20 sequencer. But your D20
will respond to them using another sequencer, or an "expression" pedal
capable of transmitting them.
For example, a pedal set to *transmit* cc10 (pan on the D20) on a
certain midi channel would move that sound source through the stereo
field as it was being depressed.
Somewhere in this notesfile is a listing of the various cc's and what
they control. Be aware...certain synths respond to some cc's, and thumb
their noses at others. =8^)
RichC
|
1396.269 | Are presets ROM? | ROYALT::ORSHAW | Associate FTSG membership pending..... | Tue Oct 22 1991 13:28 | 19 |
| I have another question:
Are the presets read-only?
I got confused reading previous notes about restoring the presets. All
I can see in the d-110 is a bank of 64 tones that can be changed (the i
bank). There are 2 other banks (A and B) and I assume these can not be
changed??
Since the i bank is the only one that can be changed, I can hard-code
the tone names from the A and B banks into my program. I can then ask
the d-110 about what it has stored in the i bank. Then I will have a
complete list ofall tones the d-110 know about (except the card).
Does that sound correct??
THanks,
Jim
|
1396.270 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I understand your concerns. Request denied. | Tue Oct 22 1991 14:27 | 6 |
| Yes, the A and B bank are read only. The question in the previous notes was
whether you can read the definitions of the tones in the A & B bank. You might
want to do this in order to "tweak" them and write the result back into the i
bank.
Burns
|
1396.271 | | AIRONE::MILOS | Roberto, VMS/Italy -VARESE | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:22 | 14 |
| Re: .264
Finally I've been able to understand the files format!!!
It was archive format that my own file-type-recon utility
didn't understand (don't ask me why :-))
Any way I have just extracted a bunch of sysex midi files and
this week-end I'll try them all.
Stay tuned.
Ciao,
Roberto.
|
1396.272 | | DECWIN::FISHER | RIP, Great Bird of the Galaxy | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:56 | 3 |
| Great! Do you mean they were compressed like zip files?
Burns
|
1396.273 | | AIRONE::MILOS | Roberto, VMS/Italy -VARESE | Sun Oct 27 1991 16:18 | 18 |
|
> Great! Do you mean they were compressed like zip files?
>
>Burns
I don't know zip format but they *are* compressed.
The result is 12 .bnk files with 64 tones each, no patches/timbre setup,
only tones.
A lot of them anyway, it will take a lot of time to try all (?) the possible
combination.
Cheers,
Roberto
|
1396.274 | HELP!!!!! | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | do it in dubly | Thu Oct 31 1991 01:12 | 16 |
| Can someone give me a hand?
Could someone who owns a D20 please tell me if they overdub pan and vo
lume messages on a track on a sequence if when that song is saved to
disk and restored the pan and volume settings are returned.
Secondly when I spoke to Roland here in Australia they said that
a ROM upgrade might cure the problem. The latest version is 1.12 and
I am running 1.10. Does anyone know the differences and if my problem
will be cured.
You can tell what version you have by powering up with the data
transfer and edit buttons.
I would really appreciate someones hlp.
|
1396.275 | More Questions... | ROYALT::ORSHAW | Associate FTSG membership pending..... | Fri Nov 01 1991 15:39 | 13 |
| Ok, here's another question: In going thru the midi implementation spec
for the d-110, it has foot notes about not being able to access some of
the memory via midi. Does anyone have more info on this??
What I want to do is ask the d-110 about its internal timbres and
tones (bank i) and the ones on the card (bank c). Is there a problem
with this via midi??
Are there any 3rd party books about the d-110 midi implementation??
THanks,
Jim
|
1396.276 | my name's not Rom | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Fri Nov 01 1991 18:37 | 10 |
| Just from memory (and I haven't done this for awhile), I don't think
there should be any problem dumping timbre and tone memory from the
D-110. I vaguely recall that there was some limitation compared to the
D-10 of accessing the memory for rhythm patterns, because the D-110
isn't programmable in that respect like the D-10. I distinctly remember
that I once went to a store, had them load tones from a ROM card into
memory, then took the D-110 home and dumped it via SYSEX. If you can't
figure it out let me know, and I'll try to restore my own memory.
- Ram
|
1396.277 | | DECWIN::FISHER | RIP, Great Bird of the Galaxy | Fri Nov 01 1991 23:21 | 8 |
| You can certainly read and write Bank i. In the Roland manual, page
117, you can see the addresses for this (Tone memory 1-64). I don't
believe you can read either the rom tone memory or the card, though you
may be able to copy from the card to "i" and read from there. I don't
have a card, so I have not tried copying from/to it.
Burns
|
1396.278 | | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Mon Nov 04 1991 13:38 | 8 |
| re. .271
Any chance of uploading the unscrambled files back onto the net, or at
least let us know how to uncompress the files? I don't have a file
de-compression utility so if it is a standard algorithm, would it be
simple for me to hack up my own decompression routine??
Tony
|
1396.279 | | AIRONE::MILOS | Roberto, VMS/Italy -VARESE | Thu Nov 07 1991 07:47 | 13 |
|
Re:.-1
Yes I'll put them on midilib look for files named
"*.bnk".
Anyway be sure to save your i-bank before uploading them
to your rag, or you'll lose it.
Cheers,
Roberto
|
1396.280 | thanks | KERNEL::IMBIERSKI | | Thu Nov 07 1991 09:25 | 1 |
|
|
1396.281 | | AIRONE::MILOS | Roberto, VMS/Italy -VARESE | Fri Nov 08 1991 05:04 | 18 |
|
Here they are:
Directory MIDI::A$:[MIDILIB.PATCHES.D10]
1ST_README.TXT;1 ANOTHER.BNK;1 BANK_1.BNK;1 BANK_10.BNK;1
BANK_2.BNK;1 BANK_3.BNK;1 BANK_4.BNK;1 BANK_5.BNK;1
BANK_6.BNK;1 BANK_7.BNK;1 BANK_8.BNK;1 BANK_9.BNK;1
D10BANK1.SYX;1 D10BANK2.SYX;1 D10BANK3.SYX;1 D10BANKS.TXT;1
D10DUMP.ARC;1 D10TON.ARC;1 D10VOX.ARC;1 D110.BNK;1
D20.BNK;1
Total of 21 files.
Roberto.
|
1396.282 | | DECWIN::FISHER | RIP, Great Bird of the Galaxy | Tue Nov 12 1991 14:40 | 16 |
| Thanks for making the uncompressed version of all this stuff available. It looks
to me like D110.BNK is actually the factory-supplied patches, btw.
In all this stuff, along with hundreds of the usual "Raunchy Mellophone" and
"SpitAccordian" were 10 or 20 patches that I really liked, including a half
decent clarinet, flute, and trombone. I still haven't found an oboe that I
like, though! If anyone has a good (read realistic, in my view) one, please
let me know!
Finally, these .bnk files were able to be read by Cakewalk. However, when I
sent them, I got a checksum error. I think the error occurred only on the last
block sent in most of them, so I probably missed 1 or 2 tones in each bank.
Burns
|
1396.283 | A real bizzare D110 bug | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Mon Dec 02 1991 14:34 | 21 |
| Has anyone heard of a problem similar to this with their D110?
I was using the trumpet patch (yes, I know...TONE) from the stuff mentioned in
the past few notes, and I discovered a strange thing. If you play the trumpet
by itself, all is well. However, if you play another instrument on another
channel at the same time, the trumpet goes el strango. If you know turn of the
other instrument, the trumpet stays el strango. I'll describe el strango as well
as I can:
It is first, much lower volume. Second, the tone quality is somewhat different,
though it is hard to describe. Not as bright, I guess, but really a more
significant difference than that. And finally (and this is *REALLY* weird), the
odd sounds seems to alternate more-or-less every other note with the correct
sound. I say more-or-less because I don't think that is the exact algorithm.
It is something more complicated like "if this note is the same as the last
note then don't switch from weird to normal. Otherwise switch (except if ????)"
The only way to get it back to normal mode is to power cycle. Reloading the tone
from tone memory does not help. Also, no other tones seem to have this problem.
Burns
|
1396.284 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Mon Dec 02 1991 14:38 | 15 |
| And while we are at it on the D110, one of my favorite tones from the aforemen-
tioned bunch of tones is the Flute. I had to edit it a bit (bring the PCM
down an octave), but it sounds pretty good. Except...
The PCM attack is really quite noisy. If you run a lot of quick notes it is
especially noticable...lots of clicks. Is this what people complain about with
the MT32/D110? If the D110 is better, I'd hate to hear the MT32! In any case,
I have not especially noticed stuff like this with the factory-supplied patches.
That implies to me that there must be some tone parameters that exaggerate it.
Does anyone have any ideas? Is there a filter parameter that tends to increase/
reduce these kinds of noises (which sound like switching transients, btw).
Thanks!
Burns
|
1396.285 | Check That Partial Count | RGB::ROST | Boozoo Chavis underwear endorsee | Mon Dec 02 1991 14:58 | 8 |
| Re: .283
First question is how many notes are being played and how many partials
do each tone use? If they each use four partials and you have more
than eight notes sounding, you may simply be a victim of voice stealing
(i.e. you've run out of oscillators).
Brian
|
1396.286 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 | Mon Dec 02 1991 15:47 | 9 |
| Dunno about the D110 specifically, but if you are in a solo mode with,
say, a flute it may be possible to introduce the clicks when notes from
an external MIDI source overlap. As to the original problem, my WAG is
that you may have bad sysex going around. Always practice safe sysex.
Another possibility is that your controller is sending a "control
channel" note as well as your regular note. The D70 can do this. I
suppose that under some circumstances this could be a feature ...
Steve
|
1396.287 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Mon Dec 02 1991 19:20 | 25 |
| re 285: I think that both voices use 4 partials. However I played these babies
in with a DH100. There is only one note at a time per channel. I tried it with
only the trumpet and one other instrument. Therefore, there should be plenty of
partials around. I suppose it is possible that there is somewhere a missing
note-off with a channel control being sent to mute the sound instead, but that
seems a bit farfetched, since everything works fine except this one tone. I'll
try another tone with the same number of partials, though. I can't remember if
I did that experiment.
re 286: I'm not sure what "solo mode" means. However, I have only my sequencer
and the D110 running. No other midi source. Safe sysex is a good concept. I
don't THINK that is it, since it seems like any other channel (which translates
to a Cakewalk track) is playing it triggers the odd behavior. I'll have to
try a completely different sequence file.
Thanks for the ideas...If anyone has more, keep 'em coming!
BTW, I don't know if I said this, but the flute is composed of 4 partials, each
pair consisting of 1 PCM and 1 square wave in ADD mode. In fact the 1/2 pair
and the 3/4 pair are set up essentially identically. It is very clear that the
transients are coming from the PCM part, because if I turn both these partials
off, it stops. (Of course, I don't get the attack sound either!) Turning on
either or both PCM partial causes the noise again. It is Flute Low, btw.
Burns
|
1396.288 | maybe it's the DH100 ? | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Tue Dec 03 1991 06:40 | 9 |
| Hi Burns !
I had similar symptoms caused by my breath controller. It seems that when the
sensitivity is set high enough, then a lot of controller changes are send. In
my case the TG55 cut some notes. I think that the DH100 sends aftertouch
instead of BC, but the effect could be the same, which is too many MIDI events
for the processor of the SGU.
Richard
|
1396.289 | Filter Out Aftertouch? | RGB::ROST | Boozoo Chavis underwear endorsee | Tue Dec 03 1991 12:05 | 15 |
| Re: .287,.288
In fact, the D-10 family has had known problems when fed lots of
aftertouch data, such as the DH100 would generate. Ensoniq keyboards
sending poly aftertouch (which generates *tons* of data) have been
documented as easily crashing and hanging D110s, for example.
Try running the DH-100 into your sequencer with the THRU function set
on, and set the controller filter of your sequecner (it has one,
right?) to filter OUT all aftertouch messages and see if you still get
the same symptoms.
Just something to try.
Brian
|
1396.290 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Tue Dec 03 1991 15:11 | 21 |
| Hmmm. That's a good thing to check. I have not been playing directly into
the D110, and I *thought* that I had filtered out the aftertouch messages from
.wrk file. However, I will double check.
More news: Last night I was able to reproduce the problem with a completely
different sequence. I think this eliminates unsafe sysex, since the sequence
file is where said stuff would be stored.
Also, I did not have any trouble with another 4-partial tone. Just the trumpet.
And finally, I discovered that I can trigger the problem another way. I have
only a single channel active, one note at a time. I have trumpet on one channel,
something else on another. I switch the outgoing channel from the one with
trumpet to the one with other, and then back. This triggers the trumpet to act
weird.
Sounds like a bug to me folks!
Thanks for any more ideas on this or the noisy pcm...
Burns
|
1396.291 | Another observer | EICMFG::BURKE | Jim Burke, @UFC | Wed Dec 18 1991 04:50 | 6 |
|
I know this isn't any help, but I too have noticed this phenomenon (bug).
The particular tone was a bass (SlapBass/FatBass ?) on Part 1.
I tried everything to eliminate it without success. Definitely a bug.
Jim
|
1396.292 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Thu Dec 19 1991 14:17 | 13 |
| Jim, was this one of the built-in tones, or a home-brew job? I'd love to be
able to get them to reproduce it. Also, does it only happen on part 1? I don't
think that was the case for me, but I'll check
BTW, I called Roland Tech support. They were sympathetic but not
especially helpful. Said I could send them the patch and they would look. Ok,
fine...I'll send a sysex file from Cakewalk. Sorry, all we have around here are
Macs. Groan.
Does anyone know what I might be able to send them which they could read on a
Mac? Or if Jim can reproduce this w/o a special patch, that is even better!
Burns
|
1396.293 | I'll have a go... | EICMFG::BURKE | Jim Burke, @UFC | Wed Jan 08 1992 04:53 | 6 |
| It's a while since I had the problem, but I think I have a sequence which shows
it up.
I think it was a home-brew patch, not a ROMmer.
If I find it, I'll put together a sysex + sequence.
Jim
|