by galaxiesmerge » Mon Jan 23, 2012 11:09 am
Hi John,
The DK-Synergy had tracking portamento and I have written some Smalltalk code in Kyma (not a fair comparison) to do this. I am, first and foremost, a *player* in that it is in playing and most specifically in *performance* that music comes alive and breathes. So most of my requests are for things that enhance sound quality and performance. I am willing to spend money in modular increments, in the same way the modular synthesizer companies charge for their stuff. At the minimum, I would be willing to pay around $250 for just the CS80 and GX1 emulations, I would pay $250 for the Arp 2500/2600 emulations, and $250 for the DIode Filter/Jupiter-8 emulations (which emulates the Jupiter-4 and other of their synths). I would pay $1000.00 for all the filter emulations *and* Keyboard intelligence. In fact, for Keyboard intelligence alone, with no filters, I would pay $400.00 right now. I own the Roland-V-Synth GT, the V-Synth XT, and I tried out their new Jupiter-80 synth --- I was very, very disappointed with the Jupiter-80 performance: a performance keyboard that caters to the sound-designer and player (that's me) should focus on making ease of use (Solaris), synthesis (Solaris) and playability (Yamaha CS80 in its heyday) --- The SOLARIS can be what the CS80 was in its day, if it integrates more in the way of performance and keyboard-intelligence ---- in fact, you are welcome and free to trademark the phrase "Keyboard-Intelligence" for your product line (if you do a Google Search, you will see that your site is the first to pop up and to have that term and also, I was I believe, the first to use it, though a near neighbor on a forum used the term once to describe the failure of the Jupiter-80). So feel free to use that term for an update package.
I think that the SOLARIS will find its way to the top by offering what it does offer and by innovating in an area that is just a wide gaping market hole that eventually will converge --- I bought the V-Synth GT because of the AP, for one feature alone, even though I owned the XT already. The AP helps a lot in some certain areas, but, Roland has hardly exploited the idea. My suggestion to you is that SOLARIS offers a wealth of sound-generating options and controls for *synthesis* but what about thinking of sculpting *responses* and *behaviors*. This means, for example, having a table that couples "impact-transients" with "velocity" values. So, for example, while you hit the key harder, you actually generate *two* control values: (1) The velocity as usual; and, (2) A simulated "impact" transient. The impact transient then becomes the modulator for things that can be percussive and non-pitched or even pitched noise types as in "Drum" synthesis or synthesis of percussive sounds. This is what I mean by keyboard intelligence --- there are a whole host of ways of making the SOLARIS feel like one is playing a Stradivarius and not a stock keyboard --- the Stradivarius is an analogy for expressibility and tonal nuancing, which is where things are given life in my view.
Also, another function for the keyboard can be "sample-and-hold" of chord velocities in tight groups --- for example, if someone plays chords with the left hand, but, plays key pressure solos with the right hand, then split the keyboard so that pressure is is only acted upon by the what the right hand does and not what the left hand is doing (that way the chords don't get modulated needlessly by the soloing lead lines). You can do this by keyboard splits or zoning where the channel pressure is accorded, or, by using a sample-and-hold algorithm for when notes are clustered (which they are when you do chords) and ignoring pressure from clustered notes (being held).
Another aspect can be that you select inter-note delays: for example, when hitting a chord, instead of the notes sound together, they "strum" and by having the delays ripple left-to-right and right-to-left, you get alternative strums.
I could go on and on about keyboard-intelligence for SOLARIS but I think I will stop here
In any case, I am willing to pay and if you need help with the feature list of keyboard intelligence functionality, I am here to help. Perhaps once the requirements are done, then a better idea of cost to the customer can be assessed. Most of the coding for keyboard intelligence has to do with note-transition tables and zoning as well as derived tables for impact simulation as well as some basic musical-knowledge (i.e. that closely held notes = a chord). I oversimplify but am very keen on being as supportive as possible to the SOLARIS and for my needs, and also, to the needs I perceive my colleagues that are *realtime* players (as opposed to pattern-based sequencer jockeys --- though nothing wrong with that because you program all this keyboard intelligence in off-line, and that is what I have done). One keyboard that permits this flexibility in programming is really a keyboard synth combo which is the Haken Continnuum fingerboard and the Kyma system. However, that requires personal engineering skills and custom programming.
Can you imagine the WOW factor if SOLARIS were to have, not only what every Synth manufacturer that puts computers in boxes has, but, something that none of them cater too? You do it already with the user-interface and workflows, but how about it for the "performance" and behavior flows? This means that we are no longer in the realm of pushing around data (which is what happens with sampling and menu-driven or any soft synth or hard synth interface) but we enter the realm of "feeling" and "touch", of "character" to the player and of the notion of what it means for an instrument to be an instrument (which clearly, the SOLARIS is fulfilling with its multi-screen soft-dedicated knobs) and aliasing free behavior.
I am excited about the SOLARIS, having had the time to hear the Arturia Origin, I was again so very disappointed --- they overstate facts and the system has all kinds of aliasing (they claim it is alias free, not true).
I am continuing work on the new Album and my studio space is ready for SOLARIS when it arrives, and, I am quite happy to pay deposits for next iteration features.
Any reactions are really welcome

Hi John,
The DK-Synergy had tracking portamento and I have written some Smalltalk code in Kyma (not a fair comparison) to do this. I am, first and foremost, a *player* in that it is in playing and most specifically in *performance* that music comes alive and breathes. So most of my requests are for things that enhance sound quality and performance. I am willing to spend money in modular increments, in the same way the modular synthesizer companies charge for their stuff. At the minimum, I would be willing to pay around $250 for just the CS80 and GX1 emulations, I would pay $250 for the Arp 2500/2600 emulations, and $250 for the DIode Filter/Jupiter-8 emulations (which emulates the Jupiter-4 and other of their synths). I would pay $1000.00 for all the filter emulations *and* Keyboard intelligence. In fact, for Keyboard intelligence alone, with no filters, I would pay $400.00 right now. I own the Roland-V-Synth GT, the V-Synth XT, and I tried out their new Jupiter-80 synth --- I was very, very disappointed with the Jupiter-80 performance: a performance keyboard that caters to the sound-designer and player (that's me) should focus on making ease of use (Solaris), synthesis (Solaris) and playability (Yamaha CS80 in its heyday) --- The SOLARIS can be what the CS80 was in its day, if it integrates more in the way of performance and keyboard-intelligence ---- in fact, you are welcome and free to trademark the phrase "Keyboard-Intelligence" for your product line (if you do a Google Search, you will see that your site is the first to pop up and to have that term and also, I was I believe, the first to use it, though a near neighbor on a forum used the term once to describe the failure of the Jupiter-80). So feel free to use that term for an update package.
I think that the SOLARIS will find its way to the top by offering what it does offer and by innovating in an area that is just a wide gaping market hole that eventually will converge --- I bought the V-Synth GT because of the AP, for one feature alone, even though I owned the XT already. The AP helps a lot in some certain areas, but, Roland has hardly exploited the idea. My suggestion to you is that SOLARIS offers a wealth of sound-generating options and controls for *synthesis* but what about thinking of sculpting *responses* and *behaviors*. This means, for example, having a table that couples "impact-transients" with "velocity" values. So, for example, while you hit the key harder, you actually generate *two* control values: (1) The velocity as usual; and, (2) A simulated "impact" transient. The impact transient then becomes the modulator for things that can be percussive and non-pitched or even pitched noise types as in "Drum" synthesis or synthesis of percussive sounds. This is what I mean by keyboard intelligence --- there are a whole host of ways of making the SOLARIS feel like one is playing a Stradivarius and not a stock keyboard --- the Stradivarius is an analogy for expressibility and tonal nuancing, which is where things are given life in my view.
Also, another function for the keyboard can be "sample-and-hold" of chord velocities in tight groups --- for example, if someone plays chords with the left hand, but, plays key pressure solos with the right hand, then split the keyboard so that pressure is is only acted upon by the what the right hand does and not what the left hand is doing (that way the chords don't get modulated needlessly by the soloing lead lines). You can do this by keyboard splits or zoning where the channel pressure is accorded, or, by using a sample-and-hold algorithm for when notes are clustered (which they are when you do chords) and ignoring pressure from clustered notes (being held).
Another aspect can be that you select inter-note delays: for example, when hitting a chord, instead of the notes sound together, they "strum" and by having the delays ripple left-to-right and right-to-left, you get alternative strums.
I could go on and on about keyboard-intelligence for SOLARIS but I think I will stop here :)
In any case, I am willing to pay and if you need help with the feature list of keyboard intelligence functionality, I am here to help. Perhaps once the requirements are done, then a better idea of cost to the customer can be assessed. Most of the coding for keyboard intelligence has to do with note-transition tables and zoning as well as derived tables for impact simulation as well as some basic musical-knowledge (i.e. that closely held notes = a chord). I oversimplify but am very keen on being as supportive as possible to the SOLARIS and for my needs, and also, to the needs I perceive my colleagues that are *realtime* players (as opposed to pattern-based sequencer jockeys --- though nothing wrong with that because you program all this keyboard intelligence in off-line, and that is what I have done). One keyboard that permits this flexibility in programming is really a keyboard synth combo which is the Haken Continnuum fingerboard and the Kyma system. However, that requires personal engineering skills and custom programming.
Can you imagine the WOW factor if SOLARIS were to have, not only what every Synth manufacturer that puts computers in boxes has, but, something that none of them cater too? You do it already with the user-interface and workflows, but how about it for the "performance" and behavior flows? This means that we are no longer in the realm of pushing around data (which is what happens with sampling and menu-driven or any soft synth or hard synth interface) but we enter the realm of "feeling" and "touch", of "character" to the player and of the notion of what it means for an instrument to be an instrument (which clearly, the SOLARIS is fulfilling with its multi-screen soft-dedicated knobs) and aliasing free behavior.
I am excited about the SOLARIS, having had the time to hear the Arturia Origin, I was again so very disappointed --- they overstate facts and the system has all kinds of aliasing (they claim it is alias free, not true).
I am continuing work on the new Album and my studio space is ready for SOLARIS when it arrives, and, I am quite happy to pay deposits for next iteration features.
Any reactions are really welcome :)