Roland MC-202 was introduced in the 1983. Its development was inspired with the legendary monophonic synthesizer SH-101 (design, interface) and no less famous bass synthesizer TB-303 (sequencer). The abbreviation "MC" stands for MicroComposer, at that...
Dave Smith and Tom Oberheim joined their concepts to create a loud name on the market. OB-6 is a fusion of familiar yet innovative details which were acclaimed by DSI and Oberheim fans. A 49-key 6-voice analog instrument made the legendary synthmakers...
The first of the PLUG-OUT synthesizers by Roland. PLUG-OUT technology allows the user to load into the synthesizer sound engines to choose from. In addition to the basic one, which comes bundled with the preconfigured components, Roland Promars, SH-101...
Studio 440 is a further development of the idea first implemented in Prophet 2000. The wide possibilities allow Studio 440 to remain a relevant instrument today, with only a few limitations: a small amount of built-in memory (512 KB) and low resolution...
The Roland JV-35 is a digital synthesizer released by Roland Corporation in 1994. It was the successor to the Roland JV-30 and was part of the JV series of synthesizers. It featured a 61-key velocity sensitive keyboard, 16-voice polyphony, and a variety...