1/31/2024 0 Comments Scannerz orb dizksFor more information call Paul Shelley on (Contact Details).Įxpanding the boundaries of Time and Space While AMG are off concentrating on the production of new CD-ROMs and audio CDs, including libraries from the likes of Gota Yashiki of Simply Red and Tim Farriss of INXS, Time+Space have become the UK distributor for all of their existing range, and if this isn't enough, the German-produced 'Best Service' range of audio CDs and CD-ROMs as well. ![]() The event seemingly therefore is going to require a stiff upper lip and some form of business apparel, and if this seems bearable then perhaps the Innovation Gallery, a feature devoted to demonstrating new and developing products, will be worth seeing. For more information contact: Roland UK, (Contact Details).īy its own admission, the Multimedia '94 show, which is to be held at Earls Court 2, London, between the 7th and 9th of June, is going to be "a showcase for companies selling multimedia to businesses". The MT-120S can store up to 40,000 events per song in its 5-track sequencer, and has additional audio inputs so that other instruments can be mixed. Not to be confused with another MT-120S, this one features (amongst familiar GM/GS facilities) a built-in 14W powered speaker system, and a 3.5" disk drive that loads SMF and MIDI ISM data formats. ![]() The MT-120S sound module represents another poke at General MIDI for Roland, but this time incorporating a more 'all-in-one' music source. The SDX-330 will retail for £745 including VAT. Effects offered include 3-dimensional chorus, panning, flange, phasing and a 3-band parametric EQ, of which certain parameters (up to a maximum of five), like rotation speed or panning, can be controlled via MIDI. Utilising the RSS technology first implemented by Roland in 1990, the SDX-330 is able to move audio signals around a 3-dimensional sound field using conventional stereo speakers. The SDX-330 is Roland's latest step in their ventures into 3-dimensional sound. £1,499 will buy you 56-note polyphony and 24-part multitimbrality with a wealth of sounds and expansion capabilities. The JV-90, a better-endowed 76-note keyboard, has been designed by Roland to be both a live keyboard, with its comprehensive controller sliders and a velocity- and aftertouch-sensitive keyboard, and a synth for studio/sequencing applications. The JV-50 has all the functions of the JV-35 but with the addition of a SMF player, all for the retail price of £1,350. The JV-35, which retails at £1,099, comes in the physical form of a 61-note velocity-sensitive keyboard and with the aid of a pre-installed VE-JV1 expansion board offers 56-note polyphony and 16-part multitimbrality. ![]() The new generation of synths - the JV-35, JV-50 and JV-90 - have each been designed to be upgradeable via expansion boards, to increase the polyphony, multitimbrality and the total number of sounds available. At the head of a stampede of new Roland products, which include a new dimensional expander, are more JVs than Jim Davidson could shake a stick at.
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