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#504893 - 02/08/22 08:54 AM
Re: Roland E-A7 sounds quality
[Re: Yul]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
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Edited by Dnj (02/08/22 08:55 AM)
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#504898 - 02/09/22 12:57 AM
Re: Roland E-A7 sounds quality
[Re: Yul]
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Member
Registered: 03/02/07
Posts: 100
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Hi Yul! I have had the Roland EA-7, but sold it again. It did not meet the sound quality I was looking for. If I may recommend you a keyboard in about that price range, it's Korg PA 1000.
/fozzie
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Ketron Audya-76, Ketron SD 90, Ketron SD1000, Yamaha Genos2, Zoom R-24, Zoom H2n, Guitars, Amps, Band in a box 2023 audiophile, Ipad PRO with Auria and iConnect AUDIO4 interface, etc. etc.
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#505085 - 03/05/22 02:21 PM
Re: Roland E-A7 sounds quality
[Re: Yul]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
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Yui’s post is a bit of a contradiction…. On the one hand he wants the immediacy and quick workflow of an inexpensive arranger, on the other hand he wants the deep editing of a workstation.
I think at the EA7’s price point, I rather feel it’s an either/or situation. It’s telling that those that put down the EA7 and got something else went with things that are triple the price or so! Korg have excellent voice editing, but you get what you pay for. Likewise Audya or Genos.
I never had (or have even seen) an EA7, so I can’t really comment on the D/A converter quality, but I haven’t heard any real complaints from those who used to own G70’s or E80’s.
Personally, I think at the price point the EA7 is a very capable unit, but you DO have to get your head around the ‘Roland way’, which has oddities like no editable voice storage (or at least a very clunky version unique to the EA7) and no effects edited storage (you always start from the factory ROM settings, you can’t store your own except in the Performance/Registation).
Each manufacturer have their own ‘sound’ and things they are best at, and things they are weak at. For me, Roland have a very strong edge in ease of editing style and sequence headers (the overall patches, effects and drum kits) and are without doubt (IMHO) the easiest to adjust a style’s overall sound. Maybe not the easiest to create one in the first place, but few of us do that, but we’ve all got thousands of third party and legacy styles, none of which tend to sound as good as the best ROM styles. Roland make it a snap to easily edit those older styles to use better sounds, better kits, better effects and adjust dynamics so older non-dynamic styles work well with newer multi-velocity sounds. And, if it’s easy, you tend to do it!
But, bottom line, if you’re looking for the ultimate acoustic sounds, or deep editing, the arranger isn’t really what you want. You’re already comfortable with computer synths, computer acoustic libraries are also several levels better than even the best arranger.
What an arranger is best at is throwing together a very quick base bed for a track, and then you replace most of it with better VSTi’s. And for that, it doesn’t matter a whole lot what the arranger sounds like. It’s much more important that the basic style selection has a lot of styles in the area that you are most interested in, and that they don’t sound TOO close to well known songs (I’m getting a little tired of factory styles that are so close to a hit record you can’t really use them on anything but that one song!).
It may be a different approach, but if recording is your focus, most of the advice from gigging arranger players isn’t really all that useful. An arranger is a very handy tool for certain jobs, but you are asking advice at a site where it’s often the ONLY consideration, and that’s not really good advice!
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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