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#204315 - 11/03/05 06:17 AM
Re: Synth = Arranger
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Member
Registered: 02/21/01
Posts: 109
Loc: Milan, Italy
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dear friend,
Pro Arrangers are a different beast compared to synth workstations. Your equation is not really correct in all regards.
Just to help: if you use your keaboard to play live (ie. u don't use complex programming, sequencing, phrases and loops a lot), and mainly play the "voices" (sounds), then a pro arranger can do this as well as your synths do. I'd venture to say that some new arrangers (T2 for example) have even better sounds that some synths, and definetly include the vast majority of those functions (split mode that you mentioned).
On top of this, Arrangers do much more than simply play sounds, are more user friendly in sequencing and programming, and as you said, are fun to play. In most cases, they result inspiring to the player.
I personally owned quite a few synths in the past (Roland D50, Ydx7, SY77, Korg 01Wfd, EMU modules, etc), then got rid of most of them and went for a simpler solution: arranger+piano+pc.
The final answer is up to what you need/like, and the money you can spend. Most of us on this forum find that a good arranger, with the help of a digital piano and a PC, can provide an excellent pro equipment in most circumstances.
Good luck
Amelio
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Amelio
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#204319 - 11/03/05 07:10 AM
Re: Synth = Arranger
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Member
Registered: 12/03/99
Posts: 732
Loc: Phoenix, AZ USA
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jpapas,
almost all arrangers will allow you to split and layer, and most will do it easier than the regular synth - for example, Tyros allows you to layer up to three sounds for the right half of the keyboard, and a separate sound for the left hand. Roland (G70) allows you to split the keyboard into up to three zones, and layer two sounds for the right hand, two for the left hand, and have an additional sound for the middle section. I think Ketron allows up to 4 zones, but they have to be set up ahead of time (as programs). Some of the lower-end arrangers will not play the left hand sounds unless the auto-accompaniment is going (though you could mute the accompaniment part), but I don't believe this is an issue with any high-end instrument. Of course, any arranger can be played in the full keyboard mode, where you do not use splits, and simply play the right hand voice(s) across the entire keyboard.
Keep in mind, though, that for the most part, the arrangers are made to play back the built-in sounds, and any high-end arranger will do it very well, with large quantities of very high quality sounds. While some arrangers (especially Korg PA1X) will allow you to create new sounds, that is not the primary purpose of the arranger, so sound-editing tools are usually buried in the menus. The synths, on the other hand, make emphasis on creating new sounds, and will usually provide knobs and buttons right up front to make this task easier. Keep this difference in mind if creating sounds is a priority for you. Some new arrangers let you expand the sound set via expansion boards, or sampling, but for a die-hard sound creation enthusiast the arranger capabilities may fall short.
On the other hand, if you like to play and not to tweak, arrangers are way more fun, and will provide you musical gratification right out of the box.
Good luck, Alex
_________________________
Regards, Alex
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#204321 - 11/03/05 03:39 PM
Re: Synth = Arranger
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
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Synth is a pretty broad term jpapas. It really depends on what you're going to do. When I think of a "synth", neither of these types of boards are the first thing to come to mind for me. Boards like a Nord lead, Prophet 5, Moog Voyager, V-synth.... these are what I think of. Still, a sample based workstation is definitely a type of synth.
Really, In my way of thinking, the short answer is if you already have an Es and a regular Mo, and you don't need the phrase factory functions and arps, the mlan setup, or access for plug ins like the AN150 or PLG piano board, etc, then something like a Tyros II could probably suitably replace one or both of your boards for what you want to do.
I didn't mention the sampling functions on the Motif series because to me they are hardly worth the bother vs inexpensive and much more intuitive software samplers.
If you're looking for a synth to do primarily analogue ( or an modeled ) stuff or cutting edge synth voices, then neither an arranger or a workstation would be the best choices.
AJ
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AJ
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