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#89930 - 09/16/05 10:54 AM
Re: The "HYBRID" synth/arranger--Didn't Yamaha come close year ago?
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
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I had a very short run with one back in 1998, I can't remember all of its functions though. Sounds were fairly decent (up to date for the time. Sequencer was good. I think it had styles, phrases, ect. Good keybed, with aftertouch, Good quality construction, Screen was typical of the time, and I think remember reading a review a ways back about a owner comparing it to his PSR for chord work.
My guess is at the time (10 years ago) the stereotype on arrangers was much more harsh then. That has changed a lot over the years, but I would assume that the public wasn't ready for this type of keyboard yet just as they weren't ready for the Casio MZ-2000 when it was released. Many people probably saw styles on the QS and ignored the board.
It would be nice to see Yammie do it again. Basically they could do the same thing all over. Take the internal workings of the QY-100, beef up the sounds (by adding more of course), add a nice keybed, pitch/mod wheels, decent screen, ect and voila!
Squeak
[This message has been edited by squeak_D (edited 09-16-2005).]
_________________________
GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.
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#89932 - 09/16/05 12:12 PM
Re: The "HYBRID" synth/arranger--Didn't Yamaha come close year ago?
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
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Clif, How in depth was the voice editing on the 9000 Pro? How many elements per voice could you use to create user voices. Did it allow at least 4 elements per user voice, and could the user edit each element individually and set velocity curves.
Really if you think about it even the Casio MZ-2000 was a "hybrid". That board had an AWSOME synth engine (full editing-up to 4 elements). It even had aftertouch (a feature even the PSR-3000 doesn't have. When it was released it was basically up against the PSR-740 and in quite a few areas the MZ-2000 left the 740 in the dust (ESPECIALLY) in the recording department. The 740 couldn't even touch the MZ in terms of recording styles and user songs.
If the 9000 Pro had a full synth engine then I'd have to agree that the Pro was a "hybrid". Sadly though the pro took some negative hits because "idiot" online retailers were calling it the PSR-9000 Pro, even though Yamaha dropped the PSR from this model.
I even saw it in catalogs being called the PSR-9000 Pro.
Squeak
[This message has been edited by squeak_D (edited 09-16-2005).]
_________________________
GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.
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#89933 - 09/16/05 03:50 PM
Re: The "HYBRID" synth/arranger--Didn't Yamaha come close year ago?
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Member
Registered: 03/31/02
Posts: 491
Loc: California
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The 9000 Pro did have synthesis and editing capabilities, the synth engine was essentially an MU100R card inside the 9000 Pro and editing via the Pro's LCD screen wasn't easy. You could hook the 9000 Pro up to your computer and further edit the sounds with provided editing software but it would have been nice to have the 9000 Pro have full editing on board. Multi layer sounds each with their own envelopes, LFO, FX, filters, velocity, and more were possible.
With the PLG150-VL card installed the 9000 Pro had extensive synthesis capabilities but since the cards interface was very poorly supported (I stress poorly), editing via the 9000 Pro wasn't simple nor intuitive as it should have been. Once again you were forced to use computer software to edit with rather than edit directly from the 9000 Pro. When I spoke with Yamaha's Mark Anderson as to why they didn't develop the software further for better implementation of the PLG cards Mark told me Yamaha felt that users didn't want those features. I was a 9000 Pro owner/user and I wanted them. I doubt I was the only user who did want those features! I was left out in the cold and eventually Yamaha abandoned the 9000 Pro which was a real shame. The board sounded great, had an awesome key feel, expansion capabilities, and was built like a tank. Yamaha fell short with the 9000 Pro by not completing software fixes, limiting upgrades, and in general extremely poor customer support. Yamaha's poor support was enough for me to sell my 9000 Pro and move on to Technics which I really liked. Unfortunately Technics stopped making keyboards so I had to sell my Technics due to no future support. Many Technics users were sad to hear that Technics would no longer make instruments and had Technics kept going, I'm certain they would still be one of the top arranger keyboards made.
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