Yamaha MU50: Difference between revisions
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| standards = [[General MIDI]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[Yamaha XG]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[TG300B mode]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[C/M mode]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[Disk Orchestra Collection]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | | standards = [[General MIDI]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[Yamaha XG]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[TG300B mode]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[C/M mode]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>[[Disk Orchestra Collection]]<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | ||
| maxpoly = 32<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | | maxpoly = 32<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | ||
| numparts = | | numparts = 16 normal parts<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | ||
| numpresets = 737 (total)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>480 (XG)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>579 (TG300B)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | | numpresets = 737 (total)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>480 (XG)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>579 (TG300B)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | ||
| drumpresets = 22 (total)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>11 (XG)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>10 (TG300B)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> | | drumpresets = 22 (total)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>11 (XG)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /><br>10 (TG300B)<ref name=mu50-om-specs /> |
Revision as of 03:55, 16 September 2024
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(image TODO) | |
W × H × D (mm) | 220 × 44 × 210[1] |
---|---|
Rack units | 1U, half-width |
Weight | 1.3kg[1] |
Type | GM/XG sound module |
Manufacturer | Yamaha |
Release date | 1995[2] |
Standards | General MIDI[1] Yamaha XG[1] TG300B mode[1] C/M mode[1] Disk Orchestra Collection[1] |
Parts | 16 normal parts[1] |
Max polyphony | 32[1] |
Normal presets | 737 (total)[1] 480 (XG)[1] 579 (TG300B)[1] |
Drum presets | 22 (total)[1] 11 (XG)[1] 10 (TG300B)[1] |
Effects | Reverb (12 types)[1] Chorus (10 types)[1] Variation (42 types)[1] |
← Yamaha MU80 | |
Yamaha MU90 → |
The Yamaha MU50 is a Yamaha XG and General MIDI sound module in the Yamaha MU series introduced by Yamaha in 1995.[2] According to Yamaha, this model is "regarded as the standard of XG tone generators";[2] it seems to set the baseline for XG support. It is a cost-reduced version of the Yamaha MU80 from the preceding year, with half as many parts and polyphony, no A/D parts (only unprocessed audio passthrough), and no dedicated distortion effect unit.
The Yamaha MU90 is the successor to the MU80 and the MU50.[3]