APPLICATIONSCREATION MUSICAL ★ ESQ1 Data Dump and Editor ★

Esq1 Data Dump And Editor (Amstrad Action)Applications Creation Musical
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Silicon Sounds

Midi software and an Ensoniq synthesizer are all you need to form the ultimate one-man band. Richard Monteiro puts theory to practise.

Ensoniq's synthesizer is probably the most user-friendly of its kind It has a relatively large LED display: accessing functions and voice programming is simple - unlike the Roland D50 or Yamaha DX7 (software reviewed last issue). Software allowing you to store sound data is obviously useful But is an editor necessary?

Sound sense

Before going any further, have you got an ESQ1 synthesizer? No. Then you've got the wrong software A Midi interface is also .required. Silicon supply such a box with Midi-in and Midi-out ports at £49.95 (reviewed AA 26). Unless your machine is a 6128 or 664 then a disk drive (DDI-1) is essential Available from Amstrad (0277 228888) at around £150.

Silicon Systems are offering you the chance to upgrade the measly 8k of sequencer-ram (capable of storing 2.400 notes) inside your ESQ1 synth. For £49 95 you can give the machine a total of 32k (10.000 notes).

The ESQ1 can hold 40 sounds in memory at once Each sound or patch is referred to as a program. The Data Dump allows you to send programs to and from computer Thankfully a whole bank (40 sounds) may be sent or received in one go. Only internal banks can be saved. A bank takes up 9k of disk space: a touch under 20 banks can be stored on one side of the disk. That's a staggering 1.600 individual sounds per disk.

Editing occurs in real time - as you alter the makeup of one of the synth's sounds (from the CPC keyboard) the ESQ1 gets updated immediately. Sounds can be edited directly from the ESQ1 using its pushbuttons. it seems the only advantage of editing via the Amstrad is the large screen display. All the sound information is shown at once whereas the ESQ1's comparatively tiny display holds the parameter being altered If you aren't keyed up on the various sound parameters that can be altered (and what affect they have) then don't look in the manual. It assumes you know what you're doing.

Apart from Silicon's offering there is no Midi software that is ESQ1 specific The main reason being the simplicity with which sounds can be edited direct from the synthesizer Still. Silicon's package makes editing even simpler and allows you to store sounds on disk.

Richard Monteiro , AA

★ PUBLISHER: Silicon Systems
★ YEAR: 1987
★ CONFIG: 64K (all CPCs)
★ LANGUAGE:
★ LiCENCE: COMMERCIALE
★ AUTHOR(S): ???
★ PRICE: £74.95 (disk)

★ AMSTRAD CPC ★ DOWNLOAD ★

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Lien(s):
» Applications » MIDI Recorder (CPC Amstrad International)
» Hardware » Audio - Interface Miditrack Performer
» Applications » 8 and 12 Track MIDI Sequencers
» Hardware » Interface MIDI (CPC Infos)
» Applications » Multi - Track Step Time Midi Sequencer
» Hardware » MIDI Projects
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L'Amstrad CPC est une machine 8 bits à base d'un Z80 à 4MHz. Le premier de la gamme fut le CPC 464 en 1984, équipé d'un lecteur de cassettes intégré il se plaçait en concurrent  du Commodore C64 beaucoup plus compliqué à utiliser et plus cher. Ce fut un réel succès et sorti cette même années le CPC 664 équipé d'un lecteur de disquettes trois pouces intégré. Sa vie fut de courte durée puisqu'en 1985 il fut remplacé par le CPC 6128 qui était plus compact, plus soigné et surtout qui avait 128Ko de RAM au lieu de 64Ko.