Members Sealed Posted October 22, 2007 Members Share Posted October 22, 2007 Roland D-110 page is added to my site.I uploaded a 8x multi-track demo made with Behringer DSP2024P. Also I added YAMAHA SU700 .mp3s used as multi-FX for D-110. I hope you'll enjoy the sounds of this cheapest synthesizer. http://deepsynthesis.net Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Don Solaris Posted October 22, 2007 Members Share Posted October 22, 2007 I like the multi track. Sounds very exotic. As of D-110, i was always curious about additional waveforms. I know they added a lot of them, specially the "jam loops" that became so popular. Interesting: originally they were part of the program that one Roland engineer made for fun to amuse Eric Pershing and others. If i remember correctly, D-10/20 have the same synthesis engine as the D-50. The difference was only in smaller effect section when compared to D-50, right? By listening to the demos, i got impression the converters in D-10/20 are different from those in D-50. The D-50 had converters that would give it a specific crystal / glass type of sound (fantastic for some far east bells) excellent response in high-end freqs. But then maybe, this has to do with mp3 compression in demos. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members flat earth Posted October 22, 2007 Members Share Posted October 22, 2007 If i remember correctly, D-10/20 have the same synthesis engine as the D-50. The difference was only in smaller effect section when compared to D-50, right? I think you are correct. The D50 always sounded much 'lusher' & 'classier' than the D10/D20. The D5 sounded 'ROUGH' ------------------------------------- Nice page as always Sealed! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Sealed Posted October 22, 2007 Author Members Share Posted October 22, 2007 Thank you very much, Don Solaris and flat earth! By listening to the demos, i got impression the converters in D-10/20 are different from those in D-50. The D-50 had converters that would give it a specific crystal / glass type of sound (fantastic for some far east bells) excellent response in high-end freqs. I have the same impression. D-110 has narrower frequency range than D-50. But some contemporary effects can make D-110 a little bit hi-fi. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Paolo Di Nicolantonio Posted October 23, 2007 Members Share Posted October 23, 2007 I think you are correct. The D50 always sounded much 'lusher' & 'classier' than the D10/D20. The D5 sounded 'ROUGH' ------------------------------------- Nice page as always Sealed! The D-5 sounded rough also because it didn't have any fx processor on board Bone dry! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Sealed Posted October 23, 2007 Author Members Share Posted October 23, 2007 Thanks very much, Paolo.D-110 has relatively thin (when dried) sound generator, but functionally it has some advanced features - 4-OSC digital wave generation, ring modulator, freaky jam loops and multi-step PEG. D-5 has several key modes - chord memory, harmony, chase and arpeggiator. It should be interesting when used with external effects. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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