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#499216 - 06/21/20 11:10 PM
Re: Anyone selling a Roland G70?
[Re: Dnj]
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Member
Registered: 04/28/06
Posts: 834
Loc: North Texas, USA
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Roland has only itself to blame. You can't readily find their arrangers in musical instrument stores, especially in the big chain stores. Instead of sticking with a consistent approach, they seemingly start over with a new development team for every generation. So exciting features are added (or resurrected like the Chord Sequencer), but others are dropped without explanation. Some of their products don't really hit their stride until "version 2," and by then a lot of the buzz or initial hype is lost.
Yamaha is haughty (see my comments on the other thread) but Roland seem to have no interaction with, nor a mechanism to elicit input from their user base.
When I first got back into arrangers I bought a Yamaha because I was familiar with the brand, the interface seemed more approachable than Korg, and it was highly recommended by the salesperson at my local store. A year later I planned a trip along Route 66 to look at classic cars, etc. After hundreds of miles I grew a little road-weary and wanted a break from driving. I spied a small music store on the side of the road and decided to check it out. THey just happened to have a dusty EXR-5 on display. I bungled my way through the OS well enough to understand the Roland chord intelligence, bass inversion, EP Chord, etc. I concluded that compared to Yamaha's "nearest black key to the left" nonsense, this was indeed a better mousetrap! If not for that encounter, I probably wouldn't be playing Roland today.
On a subsequent road trip to NM or AZ, I forget exactly where, in another small music store I stumbled onto a GEM SK-series, which I also found easy and fun to play, packed with thoughtful features. If it weren't so big and heavy I might have brought it home.
Yamaha's marketing muscle makes it the dominant brand in the US, and probably in Oceania too. But that kind of hegemony isn't good for the long-term health of the hobby. "Peak arranger" was circa year 2000. Since then we've lost GEM, Technics, and now probably Roland too. Medeli, Debeg, Kurzweil arrangers are inferior copies of Yamaha products that literally offer nothing over a PSR-SX700. If these companies really want to step up and compete, one of them should make Roland a blockbuster offer for full intellectual property rights to its arranger technologies, and continue to develop them! If not, well there's always eBay!!
Edited by TedS (06/21/20 11:11 PM)
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