Manufactured by | Roland |
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Dates | June 2006โMarch 2010 |
Price | US$699 |
Technical specifications | |
Polyphony | 10 voices |
Timbrality | 2-part Multitimbral (upper/lower) |
Oscillator | 2 sawtooth, square, pulse, triangle, sine, noise, feedback, supersaw |
LFO | 2 triangle, sine, sawtooth, square, trapezoidal, sample & hold, random |
Synthesis type | Virtual analog subtractive |
Filter | 1 |
Attenuator | 1 |
Aftertouch | No |
Velocity sensitive | Yes |
Memory | 32 preset/32 user |
Effects | Reverb, modulation delay, overdrive |
Input/output | |
Keyboard | {{{keyboard}}} |
External control | USB, MIDI |
The Roland SH-201 is an analog modeling synthesizer introduced in 2006 by the Roland Corporation. The SH-201 is equipped with two analogue modeling oscillators (four when in Dual or Split mode), a multi-mode filter, ring modulator, and it allows routing an external audio signal into its own dedicated filter. The input signal can be altered as one wave stream but not as a layered track. Real-time controls feature Roland's infrared D-Beam controller. The synthesizer also acts as a USB audio interface for digital audio workstation recording.
The modeling and layout of filters, envelopes, oscillator types, and mix options are similar to the JP-8000. Notable differences are that the SH-201 offers more polyphony, oscillator choices, LFO routings and comes with computer software for more in-depth sound editing, patch librarian storage and DAW integration. The name SH-201 is derived from Roland's classic SH line of analog synthesizers, all of which were designed to be portable and simple to program, while the number 201 was chosen to reference the popular SH-101 which was also cased in plastic.
The SH-201 was discontinued in 2010. At the NAMM 2010 show Roland introduced its follower, the SH-01 GAIA.