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Roland corporation
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Image:Roland Keyboard.jpg thumb|280px|Roland EXR-3 Keyboard
'''Roland Corporation''' {{tyo|7944}} is a
Japan Japanese manufacturer of
electronic musical instruments, electronic equipment and
software. It was founded by
Ikutaro Kakehashi in
Osaka, Osaka Osaka on
April 18,
1972 with 33 million yen in capital. Today Roland has factories in
Japan, the
United States,
Italy, and
Taiwan. As of
March 31,
2005, it employed 2233 employees [http://www.roland.com/about/en/corporate-data.html]. That is over 200% rise from 729 employees in
2003.
Roland uses a number of additional
brand names for their products:
*
BOSS (guitar effects pedals, effects units, rhythm machines, recording equipment)
*
Edirol (Desktop Media Production or 'DTMP')
*
Rodgers Instruments (electronic and combination pipe organs)
*
Roland DG Roland Digital Group (Roland DG).
Roland company
slogans:
* Inspire the enjoyment of creativity
* Be the ''best'' rather than the ''biggest''
* We Design the Future
Structured/Adaptive Synthesis
Before
1986 attempts to reproduce the sound of the piano in digital instruments were based on sample based synthesis. This was done by Kurzweil in
1984 with its K250. It was expensive and not as sophisticated as today's digital piano sounds. Just two years after Roland introduced its Structured/Adaptive Synthesis.
SAS divided the keyboard into more than 30 zones where pitch, brightness, individual formant structures and string enharmonicities vary. It was unlike the pre-existing sample-replay systems. Roland engineers sampled and analyzed instruments' timbre with various pitches and velocities. They designed an algorithm that reproduced the necessary harmonics. It made possible to reproduce the sound of a grand piano better than with the other techniques available then.
The polyphony was 16, which was considered acceptable at the time.
Roland discontinued the original SAS in 1990 when Advanced SA was introduced. In 1996 a 64-voice stereo implementation was developed.
Roland's name
It may seem strange for a Japanese company to have a Western name, but Roland was founded with export in mind. Ikutaro Kakehashi heard that the name of his previous company,
Ace Tone Ace Electronic Industries Inc., was often mangled in pronunciation, sometimes unpleasantly; so he looked for a good-sounding name which would be pronounced roughly the same in all of his major export markets. He found the name Roland in a telephone directory.
Ironically, the name is difficult to pronounce correctly in Kakehashi's native
Japanese language Japanese, which
Japanese phonology#Consonants does not distinguish the 'L' and 'R' sounds as in English.
Roland was ''not'', as is often claimed, named after the French epic poem ''
La Chanson de Roland''.
Timeline of noteworthy products
*
1973 -
Roland SH-1000: Claimed by Roland to be
Japan's first commercial keyboard synthesizer.
*
1973 -
Roland RE-201: The renowned 'Space Echo' machine, one of the most popular
tape delay-based echo machines ever produced.
*
1973 - Roland SH-3A: Monophonic synthesizer.
*
1975 -
Roland System-100: Roland's first attempt at a modular synthesizer.
*
1976 -
Roland System-700: Roland's first professional-quality modular synthesizer.
*
1977 -
Roland MC-8 Microcomposer: A ground breaking digital
sequencer. The first product in the musical instrument industry to utilize a
microprocessor.
*
1977 -
Roland GR-500: The world's first commercial guitar synthesiser.
*
1978 -
Roland CR-78: One of the world's first user programmable
drum machine.
*
1978 -
Roland Jupiter-4: Roland's first self-contained polyphonic synthesizer.
*
1981 -
Roland Jupiter-8: This synthesizer put Roland in the forefront of professional synthesizers. A hugely successful 8-voice programmable analog synthesizer.
*
1981 -
Roland TR-808: Among the first and most popular programmable
drum machines; its distinctive analog sounds, such as its cowbell sound, have become pop music cliches, heard on countless recordings.
*
1982 -
Roland Juno-60: Roland's first synthesizer with digitally-controlled analog oscillators.
*
1982 -
Roland TB-303: Defined the "
Acid House acid" sound for
house music.
*
1983 -
Roland JX-3P: First Roland
synthesizer to support
MIDI.
*
1983 -
Roland Jupiter-6: Second Roland
synthesizer to support
MIDI.
*
1983 -
Roland SH-101:
Monophonic synthesizer designed to be worn hung around the neck with a strap, with an optional modulation attachment that protruded like the neck of a
guitar.
*
1984 -
Roland TR-909: An extremely popular drum machine during the early 1990s, the sounds of which (particularly the
kick drum) are still essential components of modern
electronic dance music. The first Roland drum machine to use analog sound synthesis combined with digital sample playback.
*
1984 -
Roland Juno-106: A widely used
synthesizer with digitally-controlled oscillators. Same synth engine as the
Roland Juno-60 but with the addition of
MIDI and the ability to transmit button and slider information through SysEx.
*
1986 -
Roland JX-10: This was one of Roland's last true analog synths.
*
1986 -
Roland RD-1000: Roland's first digital piano to feature Roland SA Synthesis technology [http://www.roland.com/about/en/development-history.html].
*
1987 -
Roland D-50: One of the most popular digital synthesizers; Roland's first all-digital synthesizer implementing their "
Linear Arithmetic" synthesis (a form of
sample-based synthesis combined with
subtractive synthesis). The D-50's descendants include the D-10 and D-20 synthesizers.
*
1987 -
Roland MT-32: Also using "Linear Arithmetic" synthesis, it was supported by many
IBM_PC_compatible PC computer games games in the late
1980s and early
1990s as a high-quality music option, until support shifted to
General MIDI sound cards.
*
1988 -
Roland E-20: Roland's first entry into the auto-accompaniment keyboard market, going head to head with
Yamaha Corporation Yamaha and
Casio. The E-20's descendants include the E-70, E-86, G-800, G-1000 and the current VA-7.
*
1989 -
Roland Octapad: A set of visually distinctive electronic drum triggers.
*
1990 -
Roland HP-3700: Roland digital piano [http://www.roland.com/about/en/development-history.html].
*
1991 -
Roland SC-55 Roland SC-55 Sound Canvas: The world's first
General MIDI synthesizer.
*
1991 -
Roland JD-800: Digital synthesizer with analog style knobs and switches.
*
1996 -
Roland MC-303 The first non-keyboard drum machine, sample based synthesizer and sequencer combination bearing the now generic term "
Groovebox".
*
1996 -
Roland XP-80: 64 voice music workstation.
*
1997 -
Roland JP-8000: Roland's first "
virtual analog" synthesizer.
*
1997 -
Roland V-Drums: Digital drums incorporating 'silent' mesh drum heads that realistically reproduce both the natural feel and sound of an acoustic drum.
*
1998 -
Roland MC-505: Successor to the MC-303 with a more powerful synthesizer and sequencer.
*
2002 -
Roland MC-909: Successor to the MC Groovebox series featuring a full 16 track sequencer and built-in sampling.
References
* Sound On Sound Magazine - The History of Roland (five parts) - [http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/nov04/articles/roland.htm]
* Roland Piano Sound Sources [http://www.novelmusic.com/roland/Technical/default.htm]
External links
-
Roland Main Site
-
Roland Japan Web site
-
Roland US Web site
-
Roland UK Web Site
-
BOSS
-
Roland DG
-
Edirol
-
Rodgers Instruments
Category:Guitar manufacturers
Category:Percussion instrument manufacturers
Category:Synthesizer manufacturers
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