Roland U-220: Difference between revisions

From DTM Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(whoops forgot something)
m (added expansion slots to the infobox and fixed a formatting error)
Line 13: Line 13:
| numpresets = 64 <ref name=u220-om-about />
| numpresets = 64 <ref name=u220-om-about />
| drumpresets = 4 <ref name=u220-om-about />
| drumpresets = 4 <ref name=u220-om-about />
| expansion = 2x [[SN-U110]]
| effects = Reverb (8 types, with delay), Chorus (5 types) <ref name=u220-om-effects>Roland U-220 Owner's Manual, page 54-56.</ref>
| effects = Reverb (8 types, with delay), Chorus (5 types) <ref name=u220-om-effects>Roland U-220 Owner's Manual, page 54-56.</ref>
}}
}}
Line 29: Line 30:


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Roland U-110]
* [[Roland U-110]]
* [[Roland U-20]]
* [[Roland U-20]]
* [[SN-110 Library cards]]
* [[SN-110 Library cards]]


[[Category:Roland U-series devices]]
[[Category:Roland U-series devices]]

Revision as of 23:45, 1 October 2024

Roland U-220
(No photo yet. Please contribute one!)
W × H × D (mm) 482(W) × 358(D) × 45(H) mm[1]
Rack units 1U
Weight 4.4kg, 9lbs 11oz [1]
Type Fully-editable ROMpler sound module
Manufacturer Roland
Release date 1989[2]
Parts 6 + 1 rhythm[3]
Max polyphony 30[3]
Normal presets 64 [3]
Drum presets 4 [3]
Expansion 2x SN-U110
Effects Reverb (8 types, with delay), Chorus (5 types) [4]

The Roland U-220 is a rackmount version of the Roland U-20 ROMpler keyboard, released in 1989. It is a revised version of the Roland U-110, with the same engine and Tones (samples) built into its ROM. However, it features two of the SN-U110 expansion cards also built into its ROM (SN-U110-08 Synthesiser and SN-U110-09 Guitar and Keyboards)[5], with only two expansion slots instead of the U-110's four. It features a less noisy DAC[6] than the U-110, and twice the front panel keys to aid in menu navigation.

Each patch features six Parts which can be assigned to any MIDI channel, with each having a Timbre, and a Rhythm Part which can be assigned any of four Rhythm Sets. Timbres consist of a Tone (sample), an ADSR volume envelope, a dedicated LFO for vibrato, level, panning, and other settings. Tones can be internal or from either installed expansion card.

The unit is notable for being one of the first Roland PCM-based units<ref name=llamamusic-u20-info>, with one of its primary draws being the realism of its sounds for the time. However, nowadays the unit is rather limited, featuring no filter, ROM-only samples, and only two effects.

References

External links

See also