- Roland does not offer a supporting Windows 10 driver for this Roland DG legacy CAMM-1 Cutter 249.61 KB Windows 2000, Windows XP.
- Explore 36 listings for Roland xp 30 keyboard for sale at best prices. The cheapest offer starts at Tk 75,000.
If you are using the XP-30 while connected to a computer, make settings as appropriate for the connection method, the type of computer, and the settings of the driver (p. Turn off the XP-30’s power before changing the position of the COMPUTER switch. Song Does Not Playback Correctly.
JV-XP Editor – Standalone, VST and AU Editor for Roland JV1080, JV2080, JV1010, XP30, XP50, XP60 and XP80 series synthesizers
Multitimbral Midi Editor for Roland JV1080, JV2080, JV1010, XP30, XP50, XP60 and XP80 synthesizers. Complete control of all your synthesizer in Patch Mode or Performance Mode (15 Patch parts, Rhythm part, Effects, Part Common, Performance Common, Scale Tune and several System settings) from a single instance.
Any feedback will be welcome.
BIG thanks to jjgorman for his great effort to port this editor to OSX!!
Librarian
Load and save patches and rhythms from the synth's banks and from files in .syx format, and create new soundbanks with drag&drop of patches between banks.
Data Storage
Save the synth status (all data from Patch Mode, Performance Mode and Scale Tune) in a single .syx file.
DAW Automation
Every parameter of the sound engine of every part is ready to be automated using the hosted version.
Total Recall
JV-XP Editor lets you edit all the Patch, Performance, Rhythm, Part and several System parameters (up to 13657 parameters!) and save the latest edit status within the application. This means that you can easily recall the latest status of the previous edit simply by opening JV-XP Editor.
Parameter Locking
Lock any section of the synthesizer sound engine. For instance, lock Tone 1 Wave section and Amplitude Envelope. When loading or receiving a new patch, the locked sections will not change. Do you like the effect settings of a Part, or the filter section? Lock them and test any patch with those settings.
Roland Xp 30 For Sale
Patch Randomizer
JV-XP Editor provides a Patch Randomizer with several functions to control the process. It can be used together with Parameter Locking section to select which groups of parameters will be randomized.
…and many more features like the Joystick Modulator (choose up to four parameters from any part and modulate them in a vectorial style), copy & paste Tones and Patches, multi-tone editing, scalable GUI, quick access buttons to change the effects source of a Performance, 11 skins to choose…
Roland Xp 30 Review
Fixes v1.0.12 (27/10/2020)
- Fixed a bug that didn’t restore the correct values for Pan and Volume settings on Performance Parts.
- Fixed a bug causing the name of the performance not being saved. Thanks to gate4free for pointing out both bugs.
Fixes v1.0.11 (20/03/2020)
- Added a lot of Rhythym sets from expansion cards that were missing. Thanks to user Jungle for pointing out.
- Fixed Piano Expansion card patch list and typo. Thanks to Jungle again.
- Fixed a bug that could result in the background not drawing.
Fixes v1.0.10 (9/11/2018)
- Fixed a bug that, when selecting a value bigger than 174 for parameter “Wave Select”, the output was always the default wave 001 AC Piano1 A.
- Changed the way “STATUS” works. Previously, an Identity Request Message was used, but it was only recognized by a few members of the JV-XP family. Now a new Parameter Request is used to be compatible with all models. To know if the synth is ONLINE, you have to click over STATUS (it’s not auto-updated as before).
- Added a menu to change the UI zoom scale.
Fixes v1.0.9 (16/04/2018)
- Fixed a bug causing the wave of the selected Tone from the selected Patch not being loaded properly.
Fixes v1.0.8 (01/04/2018)
- Patch copy was broken.
- Added missing “Load Patch” and “Save Patch As” options in Part buttons.
Fixes v1.0.7 (24/03/2018)
- Fixed a issue that could produce data loss when switching between Performance mode and Patch mode if the Part selected was other than Part 1.
XP-30 | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Roland Corporation |
Dates | 1999 – 2002 |
Price | £999 GBP €1499 EUR |
Technical specifications | |
Polyphony | 64 voices |
Timbrality | 16-part |
Oscillator | 4 per voice[1] |
LFO | 2 MIDI syncable LFOs |
Synthesis type | Sample-based synthesis |
Filter | TVF (low pass, band, high pass, peak pass) |
Attenuator | P-EG, F-EG, A-EG[2] |
Aftertouch expression | Yes, channel |
Velocity expression | Yes |
Storage memory | 1406 patches |
Effects | 40 effect types Reverb (8 types) Chorus |
Input/output | |
Keyboard | 61 keys |
Left-hand control | Pitch bend with modulation |
External control | MIDI In,out and thru, pedal sustain / switch |
The Roland XP-30 is a 61-key, 64-voice expandable synthesizer. Released in 1999, it was produced until 2002. Based on the acclaimed mid-90s JV sound engine built around a 32-bit RISC processor, it is considered to be the best value-for-money of all of the Roland JV and XP series synthesizers.
Features and architecture[edit]
Designed for live performance, the XP-30 is relatively small and lightweight but with full-sized keys and a large set of sounds (2078 when fully expanded). The keyboard is semi-weighted, with a metal weight glued under each key in order to improve key press dynamics. The XP-30 also includes a powerful arpeggiator with multiple patterns that can be timed by an external MIDI clock (such as a sequencer or drum machine) and nine built-in drum kits. The XP-30 provides expansion capability in the form of two physical slots for adding cards from Roland's SR-JV80 expansion card series.
Some other hardware features include:
- There are 4 sliders on the XP-30 which control envelope settings, tone volumes, and 4 user-assignable parameters.
- To Host connection for hooking the device up to a computer. This is mainly used as an alternative for a MIDI interface.
- 40-character, 2-line backlit LCD display.
- Large dial for selecting sounds.
- I/O Connections: Output (L/Mono, R), Phones, MIDI (In, Out, Thru), Computer interface (Mac/PC1/PC2), Control pedal, Hold pedal.
Sound banks[edit]
The XP-30 comes with 640 patches in its preset banks plus 766 additional patches available through three integrated SR-JV80 sound expansion ROM sets: Session (SR-JV80-09), Orchestral (SR-JV80-02) and Techno Collection (SR-JV80-11). This provided a total of 1,406 patches for the XP-30, as configured from the factory. Since the XP-30 has two additional SR-JV80 card ports, the XP-30 can be further expanded by the user with the patches and wave forms from any of the compatible cards from the SR-JV80 series.
The sound banks are organized as follows:
- Presets A, B, C, E: Roland's own patches, many of which were created by renowned sound programmer and founder of Spectrasonics Eric Persing. All of these banks include 128 patches and 32 performances. ('Performance' here means patch combinations, in a structure similar to what Korg and other companies may refer to as Program or Combi modes.)
- Preset D is a General MIDI set.
- Expansion banks A, B, C each provide 256 patches that use the same ROM data from the Session, Techno and Orchestral cards, only integrated into the motherboard circuitry as opposed to being discrete expansion cards.
- Expansion Banks D and E are reserved for two SR-JV80 series cards. The number of available patches and wave forms varies among cards in this series.
- User bank includes 128 patch and 32 performance banks where users can store patches created from scratch or edited from the factory presets.
- 26 factory rhythm sets
A Smart Media card slot on the back of the XP-30 allowed for significantly increasing user memory capacity, although that added memory space is not instantly accessible as with older Roland-proprietary RAM/ROM cards. The user must manually load a .SVD format file from card to the user memory bank first, then recall the data stored on the memory card. This can be done from the XP-30 front panel but direct and instant access to card data is not possible as it was with, for example the proprietary RAM and ROM cards that could be used with the JV-1080, JD-990 and other earlier Roland synthesizers. Despite the comparably large memory capacity (e.g., a 4MB card can store 59 .SVD files, or essentially a 128-patch bank), the XP-30 was compatible only with 5-volt Smart Media cards, which were produced in far lower volume--and lower capacities--than the longer-lived 3.3-volt (or often referred to as '3V') card format. The XP-30 supports only the 5-volt variety of Smart Media.
XP series[edit]
Roland's XP family of synthesizers began with the release of the XP-10 in 1994. This was followed by the XP-50 in 1995. These were later joined by the XP-80 and XP-60 in 1996 and finally the XP-30 in 1999.
Roland Xp 30 Manual
References[edit]
Roland Xp 30
- ^Corporation, Roland. 'Roland - XP-30 | 64-Voice Synthesizer'. Roland. Retrieved 2018-08-31.
- ^SynthArk, Designed by www.1234.info / Modified. 'XP-30'. www.synthark.org. Retrieved 2018-08-31.