Heres the latest info on the Variphrase and the vp-9000:
http://www.sonicstate.com/synth_reviews/roland_vp9000.cfm?p=0 Kypski kyp@aol.com a professional user from NYC writes:
oh gosh i am not happy with these reviews. I have an internet friend who works at Roland Japan and he said that Roland was hesitant to put it out yet as they wanted to use more up to date parts but decided just to use old stock ( stuff that dated as far back as 1991!) and build the system around that.
Well Roland , this is what happens when you cut corners. You are going to have to rebuild this unit now because once word gets out you will have a bunch of unwanted stock laying around.
Rating: 1 out of 5 posted Saturday-Jul-15-2000 at 14:06
Laurens Gunneweg gunneweg@hotmail.com a professional user from Utrecht,Holland writes:
I am SOOOOO furious at myself for buying this thing without reading these limited but accurate reviews. This "thing" should not even have been released yet. 1st hour using it, I put 6 samples in there, all diff tempos...ran them through the processor...results....nothing but complete nonsense. Poor sync, nothing in key, notes hanging, and then BOOM!.....instant crash. I tried to reboot but it said "Prcsr Error Overload". In the manual it says when you get that message it must be serviced. I tried again and again to get it to resume working. That message will not go away and there is a high pitch eminating from the outputs. I almost started crying because here in Holland they are nearly $4500 american plan!
This is not worth it for any price because it is unstable,unusable, and unworthy of any price tag. I cannot re-sell it as the buyer would hate me once he found out that I had sold him something this unusable.
There is something wrong with this machine and I dont thing any OS upgrade could help. It's the slow processor and bad internal programming that makes it unusable and the sound quality is almost as bad as the Casio Sk-1.
Anyone want mine? I live in Utrecht so you must pick it up but I will sell for 300 dutch or trade for a Atari ST plus 100 dutch g.
-5 marks
Simply the worst piece of garbage Roland has ever made. It is not even finished and they put it out on the market.
They just lost a customer ....FOR LIFE! a Leowner smoney m,sharp ta outputs keep are is
Rating: 1 out of 5 posted Saturday-Jul-15-2000 at 13:59
Adam Nonni ANoni@myemail.com a professional user from Long Island USA writes:
the VP9000 unit is a pain to own at this time, because Roland Japan simply did not do their homework before shipping it.
Some examples: Most memory that meets Roland’s published specs will not work in this machine. Roland doesn’t warn you, so I will. The memory you buy will probably not work. There’s only one vendor, Vital Technologies (
www.vitaltechnology.com/samplers.html) that Roland US believes can supply working memory at this time. I can’t personally vouch that this is so. Hopefully in the future Roland will post a list of memory products that will work.
Another problem: The add-ons are out of date parts that are quite hard to find. The memory is a throwback to the days of 68K Macs. You’ll want to find an external SCSI CD ROM, but those aren’t easily available any more, especially if you want o buy a new one with a warranty. Roland believes that only certain models of CD ROM will work, but they can’t supply a list yet. The list they’re working on suggests that you buy a new SCSI CDR drive, but waste the "R" part of it. Also, if you want to upgrade the operating system, and you’ll have to, you can only do it via MIDI sysex, and if something screws up while the update is in progress, the machine can’t be descrozzled in the field. This would not be as big a hassle if the machine was already stable and well understood, but it really is more of a beta test unit at this point. A very very cool one, but as I write this, in May 2000, it’s probably wiser to wait a while until some of the early adopters have earned street smarts and there are users groups with web sites to lean on when the going gets rough.
Overall Rating: 1 If it were lost, I’d wait a year and then think about buying one again. By that time there will be cheaper software-based tools to do the same thing. I hate to say it, but overall I regret this purchase. Too much of a headache. Roland should be paying me to be the first on the block to figure this stuff out. The worst case of early adopter syndrome I’ve run across in the synth world.
Rating: 1 out of 5 posted Thursday-Jul-13-2000 at 14:19
nubey a professional user from USA writes:
Do these really sound that bad? And at $2600 it's got to be plastic fantastiic, not... My local studio has one, but I've never actually seen it used.. Why is new roland gear always so darned expensive -- I still remember paying almost $800 for an MC-303 (me=sucker)...
Seems like a really good idea, to have realtime timestretching/slowing and all the other neat effects it provides but currently the price is plain stupid, and the reviews have been anything but glowing... so I just don't know --- 3 marks I guess...
-nubey
Rating: 3 out of 5 posted Thursday-Jul-13-2000 at 11:46
Nikolai Papas Paninni@mikos.net.gr a professional user from Santorini Island, Greece writes:
YOU CAN NOT SAMPLE LESS THAN ANYTHING LESS THAN 120 bpm BECAUSE THE SAMPLES DRIFT OUT OF TUME NO MATTER WHAT SETTING YOU HAVE IT ON. THIS THING REMINDS ME OF HOW BAD THE FIZMO WAS. Woops sorry, the caps lock was on. ANYWAYS, the quality of the sound is so poor. It does exactly what Acid does but ALOT worse because the pitch shifting on this degrades the quality of samples to that of one of those 99¢ samplers that come in Hallmark greeting cards. My studio bought 2 of them on a whim, our engineer read the manual and sampled random bpm loops from his cd's and current loops that were in his player . Guess what , the out come sucked when you did more than two loops especially over 120 bpm. After that the processor starts to lag and will freeze up if the khz is above 29. We have tried everything but we think it just left the factory a year too soon. Wait a couple of years for another company to get it right. What is compounded by this sad machine is it's price tag. You see , even if it was priced to the general public at $299 it still would be a TERRIBLE investment. At $2600 you could by the BEST computer at 1000mhz , a CD-r , Antares Auto-Tuner, and a ton of software , and 500 extra to pick yourself up a DSS-1 for added effect if you so choose.
Anyways , to sum it up , the price is way way too high for something that just plain does not do it's job. Even if you are a studio and can afford to buy 1 or 2 like we did , you will never use it if you want your productions to be of any substantial quality. Poor syncing of tempos, TERRIBLE PITCH SHIFTING (UNDERLINING PROBLEM), cut-rate quality from underpaid labour (it really shows....this may have been made in some Laotian guys' bathtub which also doubled as a part-time meth lab), terrible sound quality, and the inability to make anything of musical or non-musical variety.
We have already sent both of ours back and are still waiting for the credit. Too bad there wasn't an review for us to read.
Thank you Nick and Sonic-State.
and Hello from Greece!!
Rating: 1 out of 5 posted Wednesday-Jul-12-2000 at 19:58
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