Share whatever you want here about synthesizers. Photos of your studio, music you make, patches, favourite synths, your questions about equipment

  • TrivialBetaStateOPM
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    1 year ago

    That feeling of turning the instrument on and playing without a computer is liberating to me. My yamaha has both connections. I use the USB to connect it to my laptop and use the midi-out to connect it to a Roland JD-08 which lacks a keybed. I also connect my Korg Air (which I want to sell) to the midi-in to my yamaha when I want to play piano with a fully-weighted keybed. Another thought that went through my mind is that for the same price (or a bit less) than the Juno, I could get the expensive arturia (or NI) 88-keyboard with aftertouch. I am not sure how important that would be. I still like the idea of the Juno better since it gives me both the fully wieghted keys and the Roland synth.

    • fuser@quex.ccM
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      1 year ago

      I did some testing with the Juno vs a Nektar Impact LX25+ controller – by the way SurgeXT is amazing thank you for the reference. When SurgeXT starts, it disables audio by default. Using the Juno directly to the PC it was noisy as soon as I enabled the audio input. It might be coming from my wireless mouse, because it got louder as I moved it - anyway regardless, when I switched the USB cable from the Juno to the LX25, the noise wasn’t there. I had to restart SurgeXT when switching the instrument (I am using JACK on Ubuntu) - I didn’t have to restart Jack though - but there is definitely noise coming from the Juno that is nonexistent on the Nektar with exactly the same hardware and software setup. The noise is on the audio circuit from the Juno because I can turn down the volume or unplug the audio out cable and I don’t hear any noise while playing MIDI. Also, and I don’t know if this is my imagination or not, but the latency felt worse on the Juno. Maybe that’s something to do with the weighted keys, but I had a lot more fun playing stuff on SurgeXT through the Nektar - so maybe stay away from the Juno for a MIDI controller - it’s great as a live synth, but I prefer the little 25 key controller for MIDI - after looking at the Arturia I’m kinda tempted to buy a bigger controller now :)

      • TrivialBetaStateOPM
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        1 year ago

        I am happy to hear you are enjoying SurgeXT. It is very powerful but sometimes it feels a bit overwhelming to me. I find Vital a lot easier to work with, although I know that most music creators regard SurgeXT much higher than Vital.

        Believe it or not, I don’t use Jack in my last installation (MX Linux). In the past, I had serious issues of latency without an RT kernel and Jack but after my last installation, I installed Ardour and have no latency issues without any changes from Alsa/Pulse. Not sure how this works but it does. I guess I will try pipewire after the next big update (MX follows Debian) which appears to be very promising but Paul (of Ardour) has said that he doesn’t plan to change his code for pipewire yet.

        PS. I’ve added you as a mod here. Apologies, perhaps I should have asked first. If you don’t want to be, let me know

        • fuser@quex.ccM
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          1 year ago

          Hi again - I’m pretty hooked on SurgeXT so far :) I haven’t messed around with MIDI for a few years - I usually just plonk around a bit on the Juno piano - (I was a guitarist in what feels like a past life these days). The free software synths have sure come a long way since Yoshimi! I’m finding SurgeXT kinda amazing because it’s just so much better than I was expecting from a software synth. I got hold of this little Nektar controller a couple of years back but I’ve never really done anything with it, so thanks again for the inspiration - it’s really great coupled with SurgeXT - I’m blown away by the sounds in SurgeXT - the presets are really cool and there are so many of them.

          I actually appreciate the chance to mod because I just set up a Lemmy instance, so having a chance to mod on a reasonably large server is welcome experience.

          So yeah, in summary, I think the Juno probably isn’t a great bet for MIDI, although to be fair, there’s no audio line on the Nektar, so of course it’s quiet - the Juno is quiet too if I turn down the volume or unplug the audio - not really a deal breaker for playing MIDI into a software synth but would be unusable trying to send MIDI from the PC to the Juno - of course it’s fine if I use the midisport for the USB connection and conventional MIDI cables to the MIDI ports on the Juno, but that’s not ideal. I was more surprised by the fact that the Nektar controller seemed to have less latency - I didn’t expect that - I thought MIDI signals would be sent about the same speed but it didn’t feel that way. Playing live MIDI to the PC on the Juno has a tiny bit of latency between key press and sound but I didn’t get that sensation on the Nektar at all.

          Now that I’ve outed myself as a guitarist it should be abundantly obvious that I don’t know much about synths - but I sure do like playing with them. :)

          • TrivialBetaStateOPM
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            1 year ago

            I am happy you can mod the place. It may get more crowded as Lemmy gets popular after reddit messed up with the API. I have always been a piano player for fun. The last few years I discovered my passion for synths. Perhaps it’s a mid life thing!

            • fuser@quex.ccM
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              1 year ago

              Yeah, I hardly ever pick up a guitar these days so the Juno is practically all I play. I figure as long as I’m making some noise with a tempo it counts as music. I’m probably a little older than you because my own midlife crisis is hopefully behind me at this point. One of the few positive aspects of that phase was that I talked the local dive bar owner into letting me play there once a week - it was fun while it lasted, but I guess I grew out of it. I haven’t done much for the last few years but I gotta tell you that the SurgeXT / midi experience has piqued my interest and I’ve busted out Bitwig.

    • fuser@quex.ccM
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      1 year ago

      Yes, for me it’s important that it’s immediately accessible for playing - there’s nothing worse than having to fiddle around with a PC in order to play - if it’s a hassle to get into the playing mode then I find my motivation to play decreases - and it’s hard to keep stuff connected permanently through a PC unless you want to leave all the gear powered up all the time. To play the Juno I just hit the power switches on the instrument, mixer and speakers and I’m playing - even thought that only takes 30 seconds, I’ve thought about buying a power sequencer so I could do it with one button instantaneously :)

      My experience with the USB noise from the JUNO USB probably isn’t representative. I did some searching and there are a couple of references to noisy USB for Roland Junos over the years, but not enough to make me think that it’s a widespread issue. They talk about grounding. Also I see that one of the people having problems is using an ASUS machine - so am I - and based on other issues (non audio) I don’t think I’ll be buying another ASUS board anytime soon.

      https://forums.rolandclan.com/viewtopic.php?t=21006

      https://www.forums.rolandclan.com/viewtopic.php?t=47753

      firmware change might fix it: https://support.roland.com/hc/en-us/articles/207928066-Juno-DS61-Juno-DS76-Juno-DS88-USB-Driver-Mode

      If I have a chance, I’ll try some experimentation to see if I can isolate the noise and let you know what I can figure out. I haven’t played the Arturia, but It sounds like an option as well, especially driving that jd08 or the Yamaha - that looks like a pretty nice unit - you already have great sounds - - the Juno is a great all-in-one tool - but it sounds like having 88 weighted keys is your main requirement. I like the Juno but I don’t drive anything with it because it does everything I need.

      I also use Ardour on Linux - have been trying Bitwig because of the hype but it’s not free software and Ardour is so much easier to use. Bitwig has good drum sounds/utiltiy but there are cheaper ways to achieve that I could not get the Juno to integrate seamlessly with Ardour (or Bitwig) via the DAW menu on the Juno, for what it’s worth but I don’t see that as very important and I’m used to nothing working with Linux anyway. SurgeXT looks very interesting as well, thanks. I just listened to the demo and it sounds pretty great, so I’ll probably give that a shot as well.