Roland sound canvas sc-55mkii
![roland sound canvas sc-55mkii roland sound canvas sc-55mkii](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/81lkCIN6NDL.jpg)
Roland sound canvas sc 55mkii update#
(I've ordered a mixer and will update on this issue when I get it). The 8850 does the same thing, for the record, but the volume dial for the input signal is on the back, separate from the one in the front.
![roland sound canvas sc-55mkii roland sound canvas sc-55mkii](https://4.bp.blogspot.com/_rScBRKlTdoE/TUHIvA5kh0I/AAAAAAACA_c/HbE5pwc121Q/w1200-h630-p-k-no-nu/GarageSale_06432_1296142143.jpg)
The SC-55 doesn't have an active pass-through, and it makes my chain quieter apart from the SC-55. The only downside is that it can be rather noisy, and with my setup at the moment, I have to route all my other synths to it in a really large and unwieldy chain. I could make a post about it somewhere else and link it here or something, but it's such a niche interest I doubt anyone would really care. I'm not here to compare this thing against the U-220 (same synth engine), SC-8850 (same series) or MT-32 (same target audience) - It'd be way too long of a review otherwise, and it's not integral to the quality of this module. Even some PC-98 and Sharp X68000 games make use of it (as well as MT-32 if you have it, but the MT-32 is worse in every way except being compatible with itself). It's also ideal for retro DOS gaming, a lot of games make use of the SC-55 to provide its soundtrack.
Roland sound canvas sc 55mkii windows#
I could just use the Microsoft GS synth that comes with every Windows installation, but it lacks the chorus and reverb, some of the samples are wrong (taken from the SC88), some of the multisamples just are absent resulting in really odd sounding patches, and in every scenario apart from MIDI timing the SC-55 just wins. I personally got it for writing proper, MIDI music. It's meant to be a preset box at its core, one that has two standards attached to it. However, the sounds are so usable out of the box, that you'd be hard pressed to list that as a big negative. You don't have a lot of flexibility with the sounds, can't really modify the filter or envelopes like you can on later synths in this series, and even on earlier synths (like the U220, which has the same synth engine) which had editable patches. You may be able to get a more hi-fi 90s sound with a JV or a JD or something like that, but this review isn't about those. It's the sound of 90s karaoke music, video games (SNES, Playstation, PC-Engine CD, MS-DOS games, to name a few), budget bands/album releases, and so on. If you want a 90s sound, though, this is probably your absolute best bet. The SC-55 has a ton of cheesy, 90s sounds that honestly aren't usable today at all - you only have a reverb and a chorus for effects, you only have about 400 patches total (128 General MIDI patches, around 180 variants, and a set of 128 patches meant for MT-32 compatibility, a predecessor of sorts filling the same niche), and again, you can't go ham with layering as you have 28 voices of polyphony at most, which is more around 14 notes since a lot of patches use 2 voices. Note before I start: I have the Mk2 variant, but it's mostly the same at its core apart from having 28 voices of polyphony instead of 24. SC-55 are powered by a 9V power supply, and a CR2032 battery can be installed to allow settings on the unit to be retained when the power is disconnected, however unless the device is being used in an onstage scenario, this battery is almost entirely redundant, and the synth functions completely without one. For modern use, and compositional use, the mkII is the variant to acquire. Generally, the mkI units are only better for certain games that took advantage of some of the firmware's quirks. There are many different ROM revisions of the original SC-55, and an SC-55 mkII unit that expands the polyphony from 28 voices to 32, and changed around a few of the onboard tones. You get a stereo phono output, as well as a stereo phono input that allows you to mix in an external signal, be it your DOS sound card, or even another synthesizer! The SC-55 is one of the friendly options when you want to hit the ground running on desktop music, without the need for advanced configuration, although such things do exist if you find yourself wanting some more special adjustments. This device holds a lot of value with gamers of a past age, as many famous games including DOOM and Duke Nukem 3D supported music playback with a Sound Canvas, many also composed with one. It provides the user with a wealth of good, if not great sounds for MIDI playback and the instruments and environment provided in this little 1u half-rack box are perfect for all your GM and general playback needs. The SC-55 is a MIDI module aimed at karaoke and computer music playback.