Roland SD-35 Vintage online Midifileplayer Disklaufwerk GM-Soundmodul mi

$87.00
#SN.448107
Roland SD-35 Vintage online Midifileplayer Disklaufwerk GM-Soundmodul mi, Biete einen gebrauchten Roland SD-35 Midifileplayer mit Netzteil und MidikabelTechnisch einwandfrei geprüft Optisch geringe Gebrauchsspuren Original Fotos.
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Product code: Roland SD-35 Vintage online Midifileplayer Disklaufwerk GM-Soundmodul mi
Biete einen gebrauchten Roland SD-35 Midifileplayer mit Netzteil und Midikabel.Technisch einwandfrei, geprüft, Optisch geringe Gebrauchsspuren, Original Fotos folgen noch.The SD-35 is a version of the Roland SC-50 with a built-in MIDI sequencer.SpecificationsYear Released: 1993Polyphony: 28 notesMultitimbral: 16 partsROM: 223 tones, 8 drumsets, samples 16-bit at 32 kHzThis is a tabletop module.The SD-35 is a GM/GS module with a built-in disk drive capable of playing Standard MIDI Files and up to 16 parts simultaneously. It has 128 main or capital sounds plus 95 variations, nine Drum Sets, eight types of reverb and chorus. Maximum polyphony is 28 voices, but some sounds use two voices and this online will reduce the overall polyphony.The sounds can be edited but you'll need a computer-based software editor for that and the manual offers no information on this at all. Presumably Roland believe that if you're using the unit to playback GM/GS files you wouldn't want to edit the sounds anyway. But I would have thought this was an option the more adventurous user might well wish to explore.Any changes made to the SD-35 are stored on power down - although you can turn this backup function off. There are also GS and GM mode select options (for those who know the difference).A pair of stereo jack sockets provide the output for the unit and there's also a pair of stereo ins for mixing an audio signal with the internal sounds of the SD-35. There are three input select positions - Guitar, Mic and Line - which should cater for most types of equipment, and there's an input volume control on the top of the machine.Also included are Solo and Mute buttons - the latter used to mute Parts during playback so you can sing the melody or play that instrumental riff you've been practising. The Minus One button lets you mute a Part as far as internal playback is concerned, but play it live on a connected MIDI keyboard. This is okay for practising but for live use you may as well mime - everyone else does.There are MIDI In and Out sockets on the rear panel and a second MIDI In on the front. A soft Thru option will channel data arriving at the Ins to the Out socket and this can be switched off for either or both of the Ins.The small 3-digit LED display keeps you informed about what's going on. It shows the Instrument numbers, Part numbers, Song numbers and all sorts of other numbers, but uses the usual hieroglyphics to produce words where more meaningful information is required for the display of error messages etc. Keep the manual handy.The disk drive begins playing a song the moment you insert a disk - ideal for quick starts! - but you can disable this auto play function and select the songs manually. The drive reads the data directly from the disk, storing it in a small buffer. It doesn't load it into a RAM area first, so the length of a single song is limited only by the disk capacity.The unit will play through all the songs on the disk automatically with the option of setting the time interval between them - ideal for segues. You can also specify the order in which the songs will play and control playback via an optional foot pedal - more useful gig functions.When practising (what do you mean, you never practise?) it's possible to repeatedly play back an entire song or just a section of it to help you master the tricky bits. There's a pause button plus fast forward and rewind functions which show the bar number in the LED display as they scroll. These actually work more quickly if the file is in MIDI Format 0. The unit has a function to convert Format 1 files into Format 0, which can be useful as not all sequencers can easily save files in both formats.Recording is a one-take operation. You can't record tracks one at a time or edit them as you can on a dedicated sequencer, so in that respect the SD-35 has its limitations - but no more so than other MIDI Data Filers. You can record data into the SD-35 directly from another device, but unless you have a seq

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4.44 stars based on 126 reviews