roland tr-08 and sh-01a
- KVRian
- 513 posts since 22 Sep, 2015
(figures pulled out of my arse)
I imagine it goes something like selling 100,000 digital clones per year for £350 which have a profit margin of £200 each, vs selling 10,000 analogue remakes for £1500 which have a profit margin of £300 each
I imagine it goes something like selling 100,000 digital clones per year for £350 which have a profit margin of £200 each, vs selling 10,000 analogue remakes for £1500 which have a profit margin of £300 each
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Stupid American Pig Stupid American Pig https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=4753
- KVRAF
- 7065 posts since 25 Nov, 2002 from not sure
Well I think that part of the reason that there is no 1:1 clone of a TR-808 is that Roland actually bought defect chips for the sound generation circuits as they had a special sizzle that the in spec chips did not. I believe that is mentioned in the KVR interview of Ikutaro Kakehashi. I personally dont mind the digital recreations, and think they sound good enough with the exception of the 808 cymbals and hi hats. IMHO the 606 is spot on and the 909 sounds pretty solid as well(but I never really liked the 909 sound)AnX wrote:I dunno why they dont recreate the originals and add modern features. Full analogue with midi etc etc.
I have no doubt they would sell very well.
All these tiny digital units are a massive fail imo.
The form factor though. SOOO tiny. I get frustrated editing my JP-08. I do want the SE01 and SH01 though...
- KVRAF
- 8083 posts since 9 Jan, 2003 from Saint Louis MO
So I have an SH-01A now, Despite what I said about it when I poked at it briefly back at KnobCon 
I have big sausage fingers and I can use the little sliders just fine. But then I'm used to Eurorack.
The sliders feel surprisingly precise and I didn't have any trouble fine-tuning the filter frequency to match it to the VCO, for instance. I'm not a big fan of the wheel/mod slider pad things, but I'm playing it from a MIDI keyboard anyway.
I never had the original SH-101, but it's amusing me to compare SH-01A and LuSH-101. Obviously the latter has a lot more features, but when matching patches, to me the SH-01A sounds just a little bit more raw. If I were to listen to A/B examples I doubt I could figure out which is which except in a few cases. In fact even while I was playing them I often got confused.
So the question is, why would I bother with the hardware if I already own the software, and the hardware is also virtual analog? And the answer is, uh...
I approach hardware differently. I wind up using it in ways I don't use the software. Some of that is just the simplicity of it demands more of me, and some is the physical interface.
On the hardware, right now I'm fascinated with making the filter self-resonate and having it fight with the VCO just a little, and letting that all ring out polyphonically. In LuSH-101 I usually go for FM, sync, and all the other stuff that isn't strictly SH-101 territory.
Anyway, I traded my 0-Coast for it (and a fair cash difference) and I'm pretty pleased with the trade.
I have big sausage fingers and I can use the little sliders just fine. But then I'm used to Eurorack.
I never had the original SH-101, but it's amusing me to compare SH-01A and LuSH-101. Obviously the latter has a lot more features, but when matching patches, to me the SH-01A sounds just a little bit more raw. If I were to listen to A/B examples I doubt I could figure out which is which except in a few cases. In fact even while I was playing them I often got confused.
So the question is, why would I bother with the hardware if I already own the software, and the hardware is also virtual analog? And the answer is, uh...
On the hardware, right now I'm fascinated with making the filter self-resonate and having it fight with the VCO just a little, and letting that all ring out polyphonically. In LuSH-101 I usually go for FM, sync, and all the other stuff that isn't strictly SH-101 territory.
Anyway, I traded my 0-Coast for it (and a fair cash difference) and I'm pretty pleased with the trade.
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Stupid American Pig Stupid American Pig https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=4753
- KVRAF
- 7065 posts since 25 Nov, 2002 from not sure
Nice. I too have luSH-101 and the sh-01a. I have Roland cloud as well. I figured the Roland cloud and sh-01a would be about the same. I don’t find that to be the case at all. Filters sound very different. It was difficult to do a 1:1 patch comparison as the ui controls are slightly different but I definitely noticed the filters were different. I’m not sure which I like better. LuSh-101 is great but more sh101 like than a clone to me.foosnark wrote:So I have an SH-01A now, Despite what I said about it when I poked at it briefly back at KnobCon
I have big sausage fingers and I can use the little sliders just fine. But then I'm used to Eurorack.The sliders feel surprisingly precise and I didn't have any trouble fine-tuning the filter frequency to match it to the VCO, for instance. I'm not a big fan of the wheel/mod slider pad things, but I'm playing it from a MIDI keyboard anyway.
I never had the original SH-101, but it's amusing me to compare SH-01A and LuSH-101. Obviously the latter has a lot more features, but when matching patches, to me the SH-01A sounds just a little bit more raw. If I were to listen to A/B examples I doubt I could figure out which is which except in a few cases. In fact even while I was playing them I often got confused.
So the question is, why would I bother with the hardware if I already own the software, and the hardware is also virtual analog? And the answer is, uh...![]()
![]()
I approach hardware differently. I wind up using it in ways I don't use the software. Some of that is just the simplicity of it demands more of me, and some is the physical interface.
On the hardware, right now I'm fascinated with making the filter self-resonate and having it fight with the VCO just a little, and letting that all ring out polyphonically. In LuSH-101 I usually go for FM, sync, and all the other stuff that isn't strictly SH-101 territory.
Anyway, I traded my 0-Coast for it (and a fair cash difference) and I'm pretty pleased with the trade.
- KVRian
- 696 posts since 6 Nov, 2011 from The Netherlands
Great! Do you still have it?foosnark wrote: Sun Feb 18, 2018 3:07 am So I have an SH-01A now, Despite what I said about it when I poked at it briefly back at KnobCon
I have big sausage fingers and I can use the little sliders just fine. But then I'm used to Eurorack.The sliders feel surprisingly precise and I didn't have any trouble fine-tuning the filter frequency to match it to the VCO, for instance. I'm not a big fan of the wheel/mod slider pad things, but I'm playing it from a MIDI keyboard anyway.
I never had the original SH-101, but it's amusing me to compare SH-01A and LuSH-101. Obviously the latter has a lot more features, but when matching patches, to me the SH-01A sounds just a little bit more raw. If I were to listen to A/B examples I doubt I could figure out which is which except in a few cases. In fact even while I was playing them I often got confused.
So the question is, why would I bother with the hardware if I already own the software, and the hardware is also virtual analog? And the answer is, uh...![]()
![]()
I approach hardware differently. I wind up using it in ways I don't use the software. Some of that is just the simplicity of it demands more of me, and some is the physical interface.
On the hardware, right now I'm fascinated with making the filter self-resonate and having it fight with the VCO just a little, and letting that all ring out polyphonically. In LuSH-101 I usually go for FM, sync, and all the other stuff that isn't strictly SH-101 territory.
Anyway, I traded my 0-Coast for it (and a fair cash difference) and I'm pretty pleased with the trade.
At the start of this year I decided to finally purchase one. I love the real SH-101 - but they are not cheap at the moment - and love TAL-Bassline as well and yes, also LuSH-101. I got a good deal at a Dutch music shop so I finally pulled the trigger and purchased the SH-01A.
Here are 5 things I love about it:
While crafting some sounds for it I've written a review - perhaps a bit late - but I believe this unit is still selling well for Roland.
The fact that it's remained in production and available for purchase after eight years - and longer than the OG - suggests its continued popularity.
Anyway, here's the review: https://solidtrax.nl/roland-sh-01a-review/
Analog Phantasies - 177 Custom Sounds for TAL-Pha
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Analog Wonders - 100 Behringer Pro-800 presets
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- KVRAF
- 8083 posts since 9 Jan, 2003 from Saint Louis MO
Nope, I moved on from it too after a while. I don't recall what I switched to next from there. But I learned from it, then applied what I learned to LuSH-101. But that's not one of my commonly used synths anymore either -- my approach has changed a bit in the last 7 years
- KVRAF
- 20911 posts since 22 Nov, 2000 from Southern California
Hard to get excited about the SH-01a after that new Donner has just come out. Worth getting for the dual envelopes alone. Anyway, necro thread, I doubt anyone on KVR still cares.
- GRRRRRRR!
- 17889 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
I care E, I care. I'd been trying to resist for months but I finally pulled the trigger on the Donner Essentials L1 today, plus its keyboard. There are a few great vids on YouTube, like the one below. I know I will play with it for a week and then totally forget about it but it's such a cool thing, I just have to have one. And for less than Au$500 delivered, less than US$320, it is absurdly cheap.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron