Roland Juno-G

Roland Juno-G is a music workstation/synth introduced in 2006 by Roland Corporation. It is based on the Fantom-X series, having a vintage design that resembles the first Juno synthesizers, such as the Juno-106. The Juno-G's main competitors in the approximate price range, with similar features, when first released, were the Korg Triton Le/TR and Yamaha MO6 workstation synthesizers.

Roland Juno-G
ManufacturerRoland
Dates2006 - 2012
Price1,000EUR / US$1,000
Technical specifications
Polyphony128 voices[1]
Timbrality16
LFO2
Synthesis typesample-based Subtractive
Filter1
Attenuator1
Aftertouch expressionNo
Velocity expressionYes
Storage memory4 MB + DIMM slot
Effects78
Input/output
External controlUSB, MIDI

Despite the similar name and later introduction, the Juno-G was not set to replace the popular Juno-D synthesizer: for they both ran concurrently. Apart from the Juno name, the G and the D have little similarities, the D having its roots in Roland's RS PCM machines. The Juno-G was discontinued in 2010, when Roland introduced its successor, the Juno-Gi.

Features

The Juno-G has the same sound engine as the Fantom-X series: 128-voice polyphony, 768 patches and 256 GM2 patches within the 64 MB of wave memory, with 16 MIDI plus 4 stereo audio tracks for recording and mixing.

It was Windows and Mac compatible, connecting through USB for MIDI and data transfer. However, no MacOS driver software is available for Catalina. Conventional MIDI In and Out sockets are also provided, although there is no MIDI Thru socket. Up to 2 GB CompactFlash and Secure Digital memory cards are accepted using a standard PC card adapter. A single SRX expansion board slot and a PC133 RAM slot is also available for DIMMs up to 512mb. The Juno-G also utilizes a D-Beam controller.

Version 2 of the keyboard's operating system is available as a free download, which allows user-sampling, waveform editing, and sample triggering.[2]

gollark: Nope.
gollark: Anyway, then it displays the nice options menu of all the stuff you're allowed to do, and runs whatever you select.
gollark: ... what?
gollark: Anyway! The next bit of code checks that the OmniDisk's UUID (this is not the disk ID, this is added as part of the signed code when the disk is written) is in the list downloaded from the internet, and verifies the allowed permissions and stuff.
gollark: GAAAAAH SO STUPID AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

References

  1. "Roland Juno G". Sound On Sound. November 2006. Archived from the original on 23 March 2015.
  2. http://www.rolandus.com/products/juno-g/

Further reading

  • "Test Tones: Roland Juno-G". Future Music (U.S. ed.). January 2007. pp. 84–6. ISSN 1553-6777. OCLC 57054243.
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