Categories
Digital Polyphonic Synthesizer Synthesizer

Roland D-70

 Super LA Synthesizer

The sequel to the classic D-50 (even though it was really more like an upgrade of the U-20 – or “U-50” as found on the motherboard).

The D-70 is a wonderful synthesizer, that captures the spirit of the classic D-50, and takes it to a new dimension.  This is a quality synth from a bygone era.

Great features include 76 keys, sound layering, and a very expressive aftertouch.

Like the D-50, Eric Persing and team did an unbelievable job with the sounds of the D-70.  Patches like “Ghosties”, “Prologue” and “SpaceDream” are masterpieces of synth sound design.  The sounds in ROM have a very punchy, full, “complete” sonic character that sounds great even today.  The on-board effects are also of very high quality.

Roland D-70 audio demos

Roland D-70 factory demo – “Schizoid” by Eric Persing – copyright 1990 Eric Persing:

Roland D-70 manual

Roland D-70 factory patches in .mid and sysex

Note: You may need to slow down the transmission rate of the sysex, and the D-70 will receive it.

You can also press 5 when powering up and it will offer the menu to load sysex, but I found you don’t need it really… the D-70 receives the sysex from the main screen as well (which right now you see as a garbled mess – it’s okay).

The key in my case was to slow down the sysex transmission to very slow.

You can use any sysex software you like, but the shareware Bome’s SendSX or MIDI Ox worked well for me:

  1. Go to Options–>Settings and set the “Speed of Sending MIDI” to the lowest position
  2. In the same menu, set “Wrap long sysex messages upon loading”.
  3. Also don’t forget to select the MIDI interface that you are using, in the Bome’s “Midi Out” menu.
  4. Connect the MIDI out from your computer to the D-70’s MIDI In
  5. On the D-70, press Edit –>System Setup and set the “Exclusive RX” to ON and the Unit Number to “17”
  6. Send the sysex to the D-70 –

Roland D-70 photos

Roland D-70 specs

Year of release1990
Polyphony24
Sound generation methodL.A. synthesis / PCM
Preset memoriesPerformances, Patches, Tones
Keyboard76-key
MIDIin, out, thru
Sound expansion capabilitiesyes, via cards
Sequencerno
Arpeggiatorno
Velocityyes
Aftertouchyes
Optional accessories– RAM card M-256E
– PCM card SN-SPLA series, SN-U110 series
– Stereo headphones Rh-100
– Foot switch FS-1, FS-5L, FS-5U, DP-2, DP-6
– Expression pedal EV-5, EV-10
– Keyboard stand: KS-5, KS-7, KS-8
Dimensions 1196mm (W) x 310mm (D) x 85mm (H)
47-1/6″ x 12-3/16″ x 3-3/8″
Weight 12kg / 26 lb 7 oz

Roland D-70 links

www.roland.com

Categories
Rack Digital Polyphonic Synthesizer Synthesizer

Roland D-110

Multi Timbral Sound Module

image source: eBay#7422594884

The rack version of the popular D-10. Useful because of the separate outputs. As I remember, the D-110 was a very popular module at the time it came out. One of the main reasons was the fact that it was multi-timbral.

This 1-U rack synthesizer is based on the proven L.A. (Linear Arithmetic) synthesis employed in the classic D-50, although the synthesis structure is not as complete and versatile as its big brother. It is much more similar to the D-10, D-5 and D-20, and even sports a front slot for a memory card, like those keyboards also had.

It is not the easiest module to use, in comparison with other modules from the day (the E-mu Proteus comes to mind), because there is a small two-line display, and an intricate system of button-pushing and sub-menus to edit it. Even then, if you are a bit familiar with Roland’s “partial” structure, this follows the same lines.

One thing that it takes from its cousin MT-32 and I’m puzzled about: the unit, when reset to factory settings (by loading the sysex presets), sets its eight channels starting from MIDI channel 2, not 1. This could lead to frustration (hey, this thing doesn’t play!) when all you need to do is call up the parts, and renumber the MIDI channels according to each part: 1 to 1, 2 to 2 and so forth.

The sounds on the D-110 are typical L.A. synthesis, and there are a lot of those “usual suspects” heard in other instruments that belong to this line.

Roland D-110 audio demos

Roland D-110 factory demo songs

Roland D-110 factory patch audio demos

Roland D-110 rhythm set audio demo

Roland D-110 factory patches in .mid and sysex

Roland D-110 manual

Roland D-110 specs

Year of release:1990
Polyphony:32 partials
Sound generation method:Linear Arithmetic (LA)
Preset memories2 banks of 64 patches; tones; partials.
MIDI:in, out, thru
Sound expansion capabilities:cards
Sequencerno
Arpeggiatorno
EffectsReverb, Chorus
Velocityyes
Aftertouch 

Roland D-110 photos

Roland D-110 links

www.roland.com