Roland JD-800

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JD-800 by Roland
Synthesis type: Sample-based subtractive
Polyphony: 24 voices
Multitimbral: 6
Keyboard: 61 notes
Left hand control: Pitch, modulation
Velocity sensitive: Yes
Aftertouch: Yes
External control: MIDI
Memory: 64 patches, 256 KB RAM card
Onboard effects: Chorus, delay, distortion, EQ, phaser, reverb
Original price: US$2,895

The JD-800 was a digital synthesizer released by Roland in 1991. The synthesizer featured many knobs and sliders for patch editing, a feature which had been absent from most synthesizers released in the preceding years. Recently, synth makers had been reducing the number of physical controls on their products to a data entry wheel and a few knobs to navigate around a small menu. The JD-800 became very popular amongst those who wished to be able to take a 'hands on' approach to patch programming.

In the introduction to the manual, it is stated that with this synthesizer, Roland intend to 'return to the roots of synthesis':

Today, fewer and fewer people actually create their own sounds, and simply play presets or sounds created by programmers.

However, the original purpose of the synthesizer was to "create sound". It's easy to simply select a preset you like, but that sound will always be "someone else's sound". We at Roland asked, "Why don't we return to the roots of synthesis; the enjoyment of creating original sounds?" We considered many different ways in which we could bring back the fun of creating sounds, and the result is the JD-800 before you.

"Creating sounds" may seem like a highly technical process, but it's actually just a matter of moving a slider to make the sound change! This is easy for anyone, and the sounds that you get will always be your very own.

The JD-800 is designed to make it fun to create sounds. So please go ahead and move those sliders! We hope you will make lots of different sounds; original sounds with which to play your original music.

—From the introduction to the JD-800 manual


The synth was expandable by the inclusion of slots for PCM and RAM cards. The former increased the number of waveforms available to the user, the latter increased the number of patches that could be used. Roland produced a number expansion kits for the synth (and other compatible models) comprising a pair of cards - a PCM card containing new samples, and a RAM card containing a bank of new presets.

In 1993, Roland produced the JD-990 (or Super-JD), an expandable rackmountable version of the JD-800. [1] The Super-JD had the following features which were not available on the JD-800:

  1. Expanded wave ROM (6 MB vs. 4 MB)
  2. Ability to use a 8 MB expansion board
  3. 4 additional outputs
  4. True stereo engine
  5. Oscillator sync
  6. Cross-modulation (FXM)
  7. Oscillator structures that allow ring modulation and serial dual filters
  8. Additional LFO waveforms
  9. MIDI CC control of parameters
  10. Tempo-sync delay
  11. Polyphonic portamento
  12. Performance memories
  13. Additional multitimbral slots
  14. One patch can keep full effects in multi mode


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