Originally posted by Nedim:
And Diki, no, G70s DrumKit edit is no superior to a PA series, maybe to
the old I series but not to PA.
I believe you misread me. I stated that there is very LITTLE drumkit editing on a Roland (and no way to store a User Kit).
The things I find completely superior in Roland's is their Style and SMF header editing tools (Makeup Tools), and their Cover Tools section, which allows for a one button complete re-orchestration of a style.
Makeup Tools is by far the easiest thing I have ever seen for taking a style that doesn't sound very good, and tweaking it until it does. Patch, effects, pan, volume, dynamics (this one is the deal clincher), EQ, sound editing (basic though it is!), all of these can be addressed through the same page for every different sound the style uses. Then, for the style drum kit, there is an easy to use page where the style's drum sounds can be substituted, effects adjusted individually, EQ adjusted individually, and, most importantly for multi-velocity sample drum sounds, the velocity can adjusted (and makeup volume applied) so that the velocity x-over points hit correctly (assuming your style had any dynamics in the first place
).
Basically, everything you need, in one place, to turn a POS into a usable style. Same tools exist for all the Parts in an SMF, too...
Pretty good, eh? Maybe not revolutionary, but ultra convenient and well laid out. But the icing on the cake is the interaction with the Cover Tools.
Cover Tools takes a style, and automatically replaces all the sounds (or just the bass or drums) with sounds from specific genres. Up to 29 of them... Change a Jazz style to a Latin style with one button. Change a rock style to a techno style, one button. Change a Latin style to a disco style. One button... You get the picture. ALL the sounds changed, presto! Now, of course, this isn't always going to give great results. But often, you find intriguing possibilities, especially with the drums.
But here's the kicker. You take your new, exciting sounding style that might have a few clunker sounds, and bring it back to the Makeup Tools editor, correct what needs correcting, leave cool sounding stuff alone, and in a FRACTION of the time any other arranger takes, you have a fresh, exciting style to work with...
Voice editing is cool, and don't get me wrong, I'd LOVE to see something more comprehensive on Roland's. But things like this make the greater impact to my sound and style choice, and hence my overall show, than a few edited lead sounds...