Yamaha MU2000: Difference between revisions
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The MU1000 and MU2000 improve upon the [[Yamaha MU128|MU128]] by adding USB, optical digital audio output,<ref name=innovation-road-mu1000 /> more presets (especially drumkits), doubling the number of insert effect units, and greatly increasing the number of effect types. The MU2000 also adds a SmartMedia card slot and sampling functions, which are not present in the MU1000.<ref name=innovation-road-mu1000 /><ref name=innovation-road-mu2000 /> | The MU1000 and MU2000 improve upon the [[Yamaha MU128|MU128]] by adding USB, optical digital audio output,<ref name=innovation-road-mu1000 /> more presets (especially drumkits), doubling the number of insert effect units, and greatly increasing the number of effect types. The MU2000 also adds a SmartMedia card slot and sampling functions, which are not present in the MU1000.<ref name=innovation-road-mu1000 /><ref name=innovation-road-mu2000 /> | ||
A software upgrade was released which give the devices 'EX' or expanded status, as reflected on the LCD when the device starts up. | A software upgrade was released which give the devices 'EX' or expanded status, as reflected on the LCD when the device starts up. Maybe most significantly, the upgrade adds 19 new insert effects, as well as official [[Roland GS]] support, replacing the [[TG300B mode]] (which was Yamaha's unofficial GS support). Additionally, some digital audio output functions were introduced, allowing for the A/D input to pass directly to the optical output, a mix mode was added for the digital output, a three-stage gain setting was added for the digital output (0, +6, +12) and received MIDI parameters were added and modified to allow for control of the expended digital mixing options. | ||
(TODO: Does the GS rebrand change anything?) | (TODO: Does the GS rebrand change anything?) | ||
Later models which released with the upgrade have GS branding printed in the previously empty space below 'Plug for XG' and 'GS' has supplanted the TG300B text at the bottom right of the display, below 'XG'. | Later models which released with the upgrade have GS branding printed in the previously empty space below 'Plug for XG' and 'GS' has supplanted the TG300B text at the bottom right of the display, below 'XG'. |
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W × H × D (mm) | 219.5 × 91.1 × 229.5[1][2] |
---|---|
Rack units | 2U, half-width |
Weight | 2.0kg[1][2] |
Type | GM/XG sound module |
Manufacturer | Yamaha |
Release date | 1999[3][4] |
Standards | General MIDI 2[1][2] Yamaha XG[1][2] TG300B mode[1][2] (becomes licensed Roland GS with software upgrade) |
Parts | 64 normal parts[1][2] 2 A/D parts[5][6] |
Max polyphony | 128[1][2] |
Normal presets | 1396 (total)[1][2] 1203 (XG)[1][2] 664 (TG300B)[1][2] |
Drum presets | 58 (total)[1][2] 48 (XG)[1][2] 10 (TG300B)[1][2] |
Expansion | 3× PLG[1][2] |
Effects | Reverb (18 types)[1][2] Chorus (20 types)[1][2] Variation (97 types)[1][2] 4× Insertion (97 types)[1][2] Multi EQ (4 types)[1][2] Part EQ[7][8] (1 type) |
← Yamaha MU128 | |
Yamaha MU500 → |
The Yamaha MU1000 and Yamaha MU2000 are Yamaha XG and General MIDI sound modules in the Yamaha MU series introduced by Yamaha in 1999. Unlike previous modules in the series, these were released only in Japan, so there is no official English documentation.
The MU1000 and MU2000 improve upon the MU128 by adding USB, optical digital audio output,[3] more presets (especially drumkits), doubling the number of insert effect units, and greatly increasing the number of effect types. The MU2000 also adds a SmartMedia card slot and sampling functions, which are not present in the MU1000.[3][4]
A software upgrade was released which give the devices 'EX' or expanded status, as reflected on the LCD when the device starts up. Maybe most significantly, the upgrade adds 19 new insert effects, as well as official Roland GS support, replacing the TG300B mode (which was Yamaha's unofficial GS support). Additionally, some digital audio output functions were introduced, allowing for the A/D input to pass directly to the optical output, a mix mode was added for the digital output, a three-stage gain setting was added for the digital output (0, +6, +12) and received MIDI parameters were added and modified to allow for control of the expended digital mixing options. (TODO: Does the GS rebrand change anything?) Later models which released with the upgrade have GS branding printed in the previously empty space below 'Plug for XG' and 'GS' has supplanted the TG300B text at the bottom right of the display, below 'XG'.
The MU2000 is the most powerful model in the MU series. The subsequent MU500 has less features, but is more compact.
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 Yamaha MU1000 取扱説明書, pages 154 and 155.
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 Yamaha MU2000 取扱説明書, pages 186 and 187.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 MU1000 - Display Collection - INNOVATION ROAD - Yamaha Corporation
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 MU2000 - Display Collection - INNOVATION ROAD - Yamaha Corporation
- ↑ Yamaha MU1000 取扱説明書, page 7.
- ↑ Yamaha MU2000 取扱説明書, page 7.
- ↑ Yamaha MU1000 取扱説明書, page 62.
- ↑ Yamaha MU2000 取扱説明書, page 72.
External links
- Yamaha MU1000 取扱説明書 (Japanese: Owner's Manual)
- Yamaha MU2000 取扱説明書 (Japanese: Owner's Manual)
- Yamaha MU1000/MU2000 セットアップガイド (Japanese: Setup Guide)
- Yamaha MU1000/MU2000 リストブック (Japanese: List Book)
- MUサンプリングエディター 取扱説明書 MUサンプリングエディター 取扱説明書 (Japanese: MU Sampling Editor Owner's Manual)