I think you're confusing two different functions.zerocrossing wrote:I agree. I've owned a couple of Roland guitar synth products and my actual biggest complaint was their crappy ROM sounds. Imagine what it could be if they actually put a decent synthesizer engine in there, not some sample based garbage (note: I'm a fan of other Roland ROMplers) , but actual synthesis... even if it were as mediocre as the modern GAIA engine... but something that's not based on their PCM stuff that's been their go-to since the 90s.jgallows wrote:Impressive but he's playing it like a novelty. "Oh hey, check out me playing piano on the guitar." I guess it turns heads but it would be better if they stuck with the synthesizer element.
That's also my problem with 90% of the sounds in my GR-30. They're mostly organ, flutes, some kalimba type noises and the scarce synthesizer noise here and there. The preset synthesizer sounds it does have are fairly boring.
I've had extensive time with (but have not owned) all the early guitar synthesizer rigs from Roland. Everything from the GR-500 to the GR-700. They were great because they were limited to fairly synthy type noises and manipulating those noises was a lot more straight forward (a couple of knobs and sliders never hurt anyone). Coupled with some Taurus pedals I could get some pretty nice sounds going.
It would be great if someone built a nice modern and analog sounding box for a 13 pin guitar.And yeah, I've tried to use the MIDI out to control other instruments and then the Roland GR stuff really sucks.
MIDI is MIDI, so if it can't control an external synth to your satisfaction, how do you expect it to control an internal synth? (And why would you expect a fully functional VA synth in a pedal, where it's going to be, at best, tedious to program?)
But a lot of these boxes also have an effect function that acts like a synth, and because they're 6 effects in parallel, working on 6 individual string outputs, they can do things regular effects can't. Don't confuses these two modes, the second one is audio only and never gets interpreted to MIDI note events.
Older analog guitar synths were more like this, that's why they only had a couple of knobs. Really they're just a wave shaper and an envelope following filter. There's no classic ADSR envelope as you'd expect in a synth, as they use the guitar string's amplitude envelope only.
But yeah, if you don't like the crappy ROMpler samples, don't use them. They're just thrown in there so Joe Guitarist who doesn't own any synths or samples has something to play with.


