stgiga wrote on Yesterday, 02:11:
I'll give you this: the SC-D70 was *not* the final Sound Canvas. It was the VA-76 and its lighter versions VA-7 and VA-5. They add to the 8850 starting in the Bank Select MSB 40s. And unlike some of their descendants they have the 4 maps and the MT+CM modes of proper SCs. Also they have additional effects and drums.
All of these are quite expensive. My Tyroland bank DOES support the VA-76 and its siblings' extensions. But I don't own the device. Some things it adds include folk instruments as well as extra synths, plus a Leslie, ZUNpet, Mariachi ZUNpet, a certain notable guitar not on SC-88x, and a few other cool things. Some of their 8850 patches are mapped differently than the 8850 has but still exist and this is only in small quantities. Also there was a column bug in the manual. Nothing lives in Bank 80.
If anyone has a VA-76, VA-7, or VA-5, you may want to test it. Also VA-76 and VA-7 both have 128-voice polyphony like 8850, the weaker have 64. Oh and VAs have LCD but it's shaped differently and more detailed than even 8850's beast of an LCD. Bad Apple on it wouldn't require stretching or boxing. Even the cheapest VAs in this series aren't cheap, and they're bulky, even if it's not VA-76. It's like how the Yamaha V50 has better OPZ-II chips in it than the normal OPZ keyboards but it's ridiculously expensive, or the DX1 is basically a richer DX7 but is rare as can be. The best GS device is a VA-76 or VA-7, period, if you can obtain one. Roland has the manual available. Also the VAs have a bunch of extra effect parameters due the VariPhrase stuff in it, and the quality a VA-76 demo on YouTube has may point to an increase in sound quality. Either way if you want a great GS device, the VAs are the final boss.
Correct, Roland continued to use the 8850 sounds in arranger keyboards going forward. In fact, the E-50 and 60 were still using the 8850 sounds AFTER the VA line, albeit without the Sound Canvas maps to the best of my knowledge. And also the G-70 appears to be the same.
I don't think a "proper SC" is defined by MT-32 mode however, a Roland SC-50 is a GS Sound Canvas just fine without the MT-32 map. The MT-32 map is just that, nothing to do with GS or Sound Canvases, although people associate one with the other. In fact, a MT-32 map debuted in the MV-30, prior to GM and GS even existing, albeit, the MV-30 was almost like a prototype for what would become the SC-55.
Roland arranger keyboards CAN be expensive, they can also be extremely cheap when people who don't know what they have sell them. I had a chance to get a cheap VA-7 and VA-76, I didn't, I regret it.
I think the VA line all feature touch screens as well, which is cool for a Sound Canvas!
It appears that for the VA-7/76, the wave ROM has been expanded from 64MB to 96MB (32MB compressed to 48MB), so that's potentially quite a big increase for new samples. However, it's unclear from looking at the service notes whether the new 16MB is from the VariPhrase section, which has 16MB (compressed) of patterns, or whether there's 16MB new *on top of* the VariPhrase section. I am inclined to think that the wave ROM may be effectively unchanged from the SC-8850 (32MB plus 16MB of VariPhrase = 48MB compressed) and the new patches use existing waveforms, however I haven't listened to demos.
Given that the DAC is unchanged from the relatively undesirable SC-8850 one (AK4324, the 8820 and SC-D70 used the somewhat nicer PCM1716, and to my ears they have some sort of compression on the output that isn't a bad thing, unlike say XV-5050), it's possible to conclude that the VA keyboards may not be that desirable, beyond some additional patches, and even those may use the existing 64MB 8850 wave ROM.
So, the most desirable SC that still has the SC maps and MT-32 mode still remains a cross between the SC-8820/D70 (best sound for the final iteration, and digital 48kHz sound only for the D70, but both less wave ROM), the SC-8850/VA keyboards (most sounds, best GUI/screens) and the SC-88Pro (best overall sound quality of the SC line).
If you don't mind an expanded wave ROM at the expense of MT-32 sounds, the G-70 is probably the final logical conclusion of the SC-8850, still uses the same DAC, similarly specced, now with 96MB (compressed) wave ROM instead of the 32MB on the 8850. Still has a touch screen, now apparently with 3D effects(!).
The E-50/60 have some upgraded parts (AK4382 DAC now, no idea how it compares to 4324 but I imagine it's still an average DAC) and a greatly upgraded wave ROM beyond that, 512MB (unclear whether compressed or not, I would presume uncompressed, the service manual was inconclusive). However they only have 64-note polyphony. Still have the "3D effects" touch screen.
In terms of arranger keyboards, I think that about covers it!