This guy led me down the rabbit hole. Good personal friend stocked it with the best SRX expansion cards.
I can't live without the choirs. Best Multi Timbral IMHO.
Last edited by DSC (Dec 18, 2015 5:29 am)
chipmusic.org is an online community in respect and relation to chip music, art and its parallels.
You are not logged in. Please login or register.
ChipMusic.org / Forums / Other Hardware / MULTIMBRAL MAYHEM: A guide and list of multitimbral synths
The Alesis Ion has 4-part/8-voice multi-timbral, the Micron has 8-part/8-voice and they can both be controlled by this thing.
It's pretty rad, tbh.
Oh and Delek, the DX7, DX7iiFD, DX7iiD, DX21, DX27, and DX100 are not multitimbral unfortunately. And I don't think the DX9 is either, but never confirmed for myself.
I went to the store that was selling the PMA-5, but instead walked away with a JV-1010.. pretty much instant satisfaction, this thing is AMAZING
pretty much the perfect size for my setup too!
I too love the JV-1010, it's almost too many sounds, haha. But once you setup templates of all the banks and what not, it's not that bad to keep recalling the patches from a computer/midi etc
I went to the store that was selling the PMA-5, but instead walked away with a JV-1010.. pretty much instant satisfaction, this thing is AMAZING
pretty much the perfect size for my setup too!
Roland MT-32 *under $100!*
-8 voice, 9 parts
Love this one! Still sounds very nice (though a lot of people seem to resent the factory presets for sake of being used too much), tons of retrogames that can use this, tons of instrument presets available.
There's also a decent open source emulator for it, munt