Originally posted by hitman:
Hi guys,
I am new to the discussion board, but have been folowing it a little.
I own a VA-76 and have to admit that the internal sounds are basically JUNK. But somehow I've managed to get them to sound decent with the internal EQ. I didn't like the VA76 that much, but I bought it because of the zip drive, and because the good old G800 was worn out.
I was looking for something spectacular from the new G, but it didn'f impress me at all. I think that Roland is running around in circles and loosing the battle to KORG and Yamaha. The New G should have a SAMPLER, but they missed the call.
Now ME and probably 40 other guys that I know ( VA owners also ), are switching to PA1x pro and the 9000 pro. The capabilities of these instruments will beat the G-70 any time.
It really hurts to part with Roland, but they simply don't offer anything for the money!
just to mantion, me and these other guys earn our living with these arrangers.
Greetings to everybody!
Hi
It looks as if your reasons for choosing the VA were much the same as mine. The integration of the zip drive into the instrument as a whole is an act of genius (I beleive the older G1000 was similar).
My logic was that the thing did what I wanted, and no other keyboard did. Namely, to associate all the settings needed for two handed playing - splits, layers, FX and so on - with a specific midifile, and to be able to save the whole for instant recall.
For this ability, I was prepared to make some scarifices in the sound quality. Most audiences are tone deaf anyway :-) so it would only bother me and the rest of the band.
I was also prepared to forgo using the thing as a live arranger on stage, although I have to confess that I am somewhat taken aback at just how bad the VA is when used in that mode. Basically, duff styles & totally uncontrollable.
My reaction to the G-70 is a bit different from your own, however. On paper, a lot of it looks very promising. The mix of a lot of dedicated hard buttons & sliders on the panel, plus a touch screen for editing in more detail, seems to be a good way of accessing the operating system. In terms of the overall specification, I actually think that Roland are on the right track in trying to do the basics well, rather than heaping ever more features of dubious value (variphrase? how we laughed.....) onto an otherwise badly designed arranger.
As a case in point, when eventually bought a Korg i30 as a potential replacement for the old i3 I used to use, I found that Korg had broken the golden rule of "if it ain't broke, dont fix it".
The panel layout of the older instrument was brilliant. Huge unmissable buttons for all the things you wanted in a hurry - like drum breaks, stop/start etc. That newer instrument had a long row of identical little buttons in a row above the keyboard. The most stupid was placing the "Save" button right next to "Start/Stop". You were guaranteed to hit the wrong one mid gig - then have to escape out of the "save" sequence. Dumb!
In the same way, the older instrument used to work great with the Digitech VHM5 vocal harmony box I used. The newer one had a different - worse - midi spec, which meant that it only transmitted the notes you played with your left hand, if you actually had a tone sounding on those keys, which you may not always want. Mute the left hand live part & suddenly - no vocal harmonies! This problem was confirmed by Korg to be true. At that point I gave up struggling with the thing and ditched it.
For me, a lot will depend on how the G-70 actually sounds, and how good the arranger mode is. I am looking for styles which sound up to date & "fresh", rather than the early 80's organ Bossanova cheese flavour, which seems to colour most of Rolands efforts so far.
In terms of controllability, I would have preferred the style part/break buttons somewhere near the middle of the panel, rather than on the left. Am I alone in wanting to access these with either hand? I normally use my right hand (being right handed) for speed and accuracy. I also might want to trigger a half bar break at the moment a chord change is due. Bit difficult if your left hand is operating the buttons :-)
Roland also mention four variations and six breaks per style for the G-70. Sounds good, but I don't see six individual drum break buttons anywhere on the front panel......