Roland JX-3P
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Roland JX-3P by Roland | |||
Synthesis type: | Analog subtractive | ||
---|---|---|---|
Polyphony: | 6 voices | ||
Oscillators: | 2 DCOs per voice | ||
Multitimbral: | 1 | ||
VCF: | 1 resonant lowpass, 1 highpass | ||
VCA: | 1 ADSR | ||
LFO: | 1 sine/square/sh/noise | ||
Velocity sensitive: | No | ||
Aftertouch: | No | ||
External control: | MIDI | ||
Memory: | 32 presets/32 user patches | ||
Onboard effects: | chorus | ||
Produced: | 1983-1985 | ||
Original price: | US$1395 |
The Roland JX-3P emerged in 1983 as the first MIDI-capable synth produced by Roland. Its architecture is more advanced than the Juno series synths produced around the same time. Both machines use the same interval-timer DCO technology and use the Roland IR3109 lowpass filter. It is a polyphonic, 61 key synthesizer with sawtooth, 50 and 10% pulse waveforms, and a noise generator. It performs as a nice inexpensive vintage synth that produces some great sounds, especially strings and brass. It has 32 factory programs and user memory for 32 programs, and a 128-step, six-part built-in sequencer that can be triggered by sync voltage from external devices such as the Roland TR-808 drum machine. Instead of analog sliders and knobs, the JX-3P used a series of buttons and a single data slider for selecting parameters. For users who wanted better real-time sound control, Roland sold a separate unit that plugs into the synth called the PG-200, also made by Roland. The JX-3P was also produced as a rackmount unit called the MKS-30.
- Roland JX-3P demo sounds (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- some of what it is capable of
- Problems listening to the file? See media help.
- Roland JX-3P demo sounds (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- Some random sounds played on Roland JX-3P
- Problems listening to the file? See media help.