Actually, Fran, there's something they talked about that is FAR better than Roland's system...
The 'Chord Track'. Roland have nothing like this.
Imagine you used the Recorder to capture an arranger performance, but made a few timing errors in inputting the chords, or a chord mistake, whatever. Sadly every single track derived from that erroneous input now has a problem (a nightmare to edit all of them!
). But with the Korg's, you can go in and simply edit the chord track, and then redo the 'capture', now with the timing and chords absolutely perfect!
I sure wish the Roland had something like that...
And yes, I sure wish the Recorder allowed you to 'continue' or 'punch in/out' on an existing Recording. The only way to combine multiple takes is to blow them over to your computer sequencer, and combine them there. Every time you start recording on the Recorder (remember, this is different to the 'one track at a time' 16 Track Sequencer), it erases the previous recording, and starts a new one from scratch. Admittedly, that's what I do all the time, as I FAR prefer to sequence in Cubase, but many (dare I say most?) seem to be much happier doing it all in the box.
I also wish that you could record into the 16 track sequencer on more than one track at a time. Layers and splits have to be input with the wrong sound, and then the layers and splits have to be put on afterwards. No way to do it in the box, AFAIK.
Yes, the Roland has a very, very good sequencer, especially when compared against Yamaha, but there is plenty of room for improvement