Yamaha RX-17 Samples Drum Kit
P2P | Jun 19, 2014 | 3.79 MB
Samples from YAMAHA Rx17 – Digital Rhythm Programmer (1984)
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Samples from YAMAHA Rx17 – Digital Rhythm Programmer (1984)
TX81Z Programmer and it is a software program that creates a computer-based interface for editing Yamaha’s TX81Z synthesizer module, and it makes editing the sounds and parameters a lot easier than doing it from the front panel. It also has a simple sysex librarian built-in, so you can keep all your patches in one place and organize them. The program is shareware, which means you can try it out for 30 days and if you’re not completely satisfied with it, you can just delete it off your hard drive with no further obligation. If you like it and want to use it you simply pay a small registration fee of $20 to me and I will email you a registration code which is good for all future releases of the program.
Yamaha PSR 3000 – NKI is a library of sounds of the most powerful workstation Yamaha PSR 3000. Here the best are included all presets from hardware model. Yamaha PSR 3000 it is one their most popular workstations. The given library allows to have sounds of this instrument at you on a computer.
Here it is! The only complete collection of Drum Machines on CD ROM! Mapped to General MIDI with an Audio CD version on the same CD. Every crucial drum machine since the early 70’s is mapped out and ready to use and swap out. You get 39 classic Drum Machines, all of the Roland classics, Sequential, Korg, Simmons, Yamaha, Alesis, E-MU, Oberheim, Linn and AKAI machines. These drums kick, shout and breath life into every project!
The Wersi Drum Composer CX5 is an early digital drum machine with a punchy, aggressive sound that was clearly intended to poach on Simmons’s territory. Physically, it’s a monolithic slab of grey metal and plastic livened up by dozens of LEDs and a cool, Ensoniq-style vacuum fluorescent display; sonically, its low-bit-depth samples make for gritty, compressed loops that can add a really hefty foundation to a track. (It’s no relation to the Yamaha CX5 music computer, by the way; that’s a totally different monolithic slab of grey mid-80s metal and plastic!) Released back in 1985 and intended for use either as a standalone drum machine or as a “brain” for a set of Wersi drum pads – they really were hoping to cannibalise some SDS sales! – the CX5 is surprisingly sophisticated in terms of programming and pattern creation and has a very useful spread of samples: both classic kit pieces and a couple of notable surprises, in the form of the ‘Hey!’ and ‘Aha’ hits (take a listen to the demo…). The early digital sound lends a lot of weight to the kick and tom pieces, while hi hats and cymbals have a nice fizz and crackle to them. There are snare rolls, some pretty awesome claps, and a handful of neat percussion pieces thrown in too, which are great for adding a Latin element to your loops.
Darth Vader styling, shiny FM tones and tines! • 8 classic piano and EP patches recreated in meticulous detail, using multiple velocity layers and over 830Mb of compressed samples • Combine, balance and detune any two Patches in an authentic recreation of a genuine DX Program slot • Full Tines patch in all its glory… go on, you know you want to ???? • We think there are sounds in this thing that will pleasantly surprise even hardened DX-skeptics If you were alive in the 1980s, you were probably exposed to unhealthy amounts of Yamaha DX7 at an early age. In fact, even now, scientists tell us that people who live in cities rather than the countryside are never at any time more than 2 meters away from a DX7.