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All about the Roland Jupiter-series

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Message

Re: Jupiters, Junos, etc.

1999-04-19 by Verschut, Ricardo

-----Original Message-----
From: Chad Gould [mailto:Chad_Gould@...] 



> > Prices vary heaps. A juno 6 or 60 for between $200 and $350 is
reasonable
> > price.
> > The 106 goes for a lot more usually $500 to $750. A Juno 1 about $350 to
> > $400,  and
> > a Juno 2 anything up to $700/$750. The alpha Juno's in my opinion are
> better
> > than all
> > the others. They are just a little harder to program...
> > 
> > bud
> I think your prices may be a bit high on the Juno 2.  In my opinion, the

Euro prices vs. US prices? The Juno 2 goes for $350 here, the Juno 1 for
$250, it really hasn't moved much in the last several years.
Juno 106 goes for $350-$400 now, 60 is around $300 I think.
In Europe its higher...

> Having said all that about Juno's they are all pale in comparison to
> Jupiters.  The Jupiters can be programmed to make Juno sounds too.  I sure

Only those with a self-osc resonant LPF, the MKS-80 does _NOT_ have one for
instance. The Junos (106 and 60 at least) have one of the best piercing
resonances out there I think. There's some cool Juno sounds that are
impossible on the MKS-80 because of this.
The oscillators sound way different too, I think if you are looking to make
DCO bleepy sounds on VCO synths and are picky about your sound you will be
disappointed. 
The Jupiter 6s and MKS-80s envelopes are software-based and are a bit
sluggish compared to at least the 106 in gate mode, I think all the Junos
use hardware envs (at least up to the 106). 

So in short, I would _NOT_ buy a Jupiter solely to get Juno sounds, though I
do think the Jups are better synths overall.
__________
CHAD GOULD

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