Edirol Virtual Sound Canvas Vst 4

12/3/2017
Edirol Virtual Sound Canvas Vst 4 5,0/5 7344reviews
Roland Edirol Virtual Sound Canvas Dxi V3.23

I've been using the Roland VSC (virtual sound canvas) for years for the majority of my midi playback needs in both Band In A Box and Sibelius. In Sibelius, I've. Roland lists the VSC standalone as not compatible w/ Win 7 x32, but the VST version is shown as compatible w/ Win7 x32. This seems to be.

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Yes, it works with any midi input. I use a small software called loopMIDI to rout all midi playback to an input which I use in my DAW (Sonar) with the Sound Canvas. I have the old Edirol Virtual Sound Canvas and the newer Editrol HyperCanvas, but none of them comes remotely close to the the new Roland Sound Canvas VA in terms of balance, accuracy and authenticity. It took Roland a long time to make a proper software of sound canvas but it finally happened. I'm still testing it, and found a few bugs here and there, but I'm sure Roland will iron them out in time.

Does this thing read SysEx messages and SysEx files properly? I've seen a lot of VST plugins which have no idea how to read such things either making existing MIDIs useless or rendering an entire patch library useless as examples. Don't believe the latter applies to the SoundCanvas, can't remember as I got shot of mine years back and have no plans to use this plugin, I'm just curious and more info is always better. Also, what the heck is a DAW?

People keep saying that and I'm starting to think my terminology must be out of date or something. Probably is, given I don't use a single VST* and I still rely on software from two decades ago to get things done. * Technically this is not true as I use Virtual CZ to make programming my Casio easier. This does understand SysEx messages fairly well, but has no feature to make the keyboard dump its patch bank which is mildly irritating as I have to switch back to CZLIB to do this. It is, however, the only VST I ever use and even then I rarely use it, never use it to its full extent and do not have anything beyond its own dedicated host to load it in. Credit where credit is due then, finally it seems people are starting to get on the ball with this.

It's only taken, what? TOO DAMN LONG! That's how long. Well done Roland, Casio beat you to it again, but well done for getting there. Ah, so that's what DAW stands for.

Not sure I'd class my setup as that so I won't start using the term - I will stick to my clunky 'Sequencing Rig' as it better suits the complete shambles I have set up - but at least I'll know what people mean when they say it in future. I don't know if it's improved since, but I could never get into this Reason and Fruit Loops stuff, it was never very good at controlling any of my hardware and suffered terrible latency issues - not to mention issues with SysEx as I mentioned previously. This was all a long time ago though, I don't plan on changing this as Cakewalk 9 supports my stuff pretty much out of the box and is from the correct era, so logically it would be the best option for me. DX7_EP wrote:Whoa, this is definitely some sweet news, and I will no doubt be giving this a try!

I may not be needing that SC-8850 anymore.:U From what I hear and compare with youtube, neither do I! Besides, the Sound Canvas defined the General Midi standard more so than any other company. I've been using the crappy Microsoft GS Midi or Edirol Hyper Canvas for years to compose drums and bass tracks before recording real guitar on top. Polaryzacja Anteny Kierunkowej Wifi Antenna. The irony is, I didn't know it was based on the Sound Canvas hardware before I got into Dosbox and Vogons, thankfully I did and discovered it just last month.

I always thought the Microsoft GS Midi IS what General Midi sounds like and the VST plugins are just samples that use the midi notes to improve the basic crappy midi sound. To my amazement, knowledge of the truth, and Sound Canvas VA VSTi came just in time.

Synchronicity I tell you.

The original sound module in Roland's hardware Sound Canvas series was the SC-55, released in 1991 and sporting a broad palette of sample-based instrumental tones aiming to cover as much sonic ground as possible. Back then, MIDI was still a relatively new development, and the SC-55 was the first unit to adhere to the new General MIDI (GM) standard. GM was a big deal at the time, as it meant a GM-compatible MIDI file could play back on any GM-compatible synth and automatically trigger appropriate timbres - your trumpet would always be a trumpet, for example, even if its exact sound varied from synth to synth. The SC-55 was also the first unit to support Roland's own General Standard - GS for short - which was an extension of the original GM spec, defining more instruments and controllers. As you might expect, the Sound Canvas series was popular. However, in the grand scheme of Roland instruments, its tones weren't particularly special - certainly paling in comparison to those of the later JV/XV series. Nevertheless, Sound Canvas sounds were pretty ubiquitous for a period in the 1990s and featured heavily in many a videogame soundtrack.

To this day, those primitive GM sounds remain popular in some circles - particularly in Japan - perhaps for reasons of nostalgia. Second coming Sound Canvas for iOS was released in early 2015 and now a similar offering is available to Mac and PC users in the form of Sound Canvas VA (VST/AU). It boasts all the classic Sound Canvas timbres for just about any acoustic instrument you're likely to want, plus 64 insert effects, and global reverb, chorus and EQ - all with pretty basic editing functionality by today's standards. As well as the SC-55 sound map, Sound Canvas VA includes maps for the CM-64, SC-88, SC-8820 and top-of-the-line SC-88 Pro, for flawless playback of MIDI files made for those modules. In an attempt to bring the Sound Canvas platform into the modern world, many of Sound Canvas VA's parameters are available for host automation.

However, we're perplexed by some of the needlessly restrictive design choices, several of which clearly come from the original hardware. For example, the plugin is 16-part multitimbral and uses up to 64 notes of polyphony, but it doesn't support multiple outputs in the host DAW.

'The layout of the pages is poorly conceived, requiring more clicks to access certain features than should be necessary.' In other words, you can use multiple MIDI tracks assigned to the 16 parts, but the sounds they make can only come out of a shared output in your DAW's mixer. To mix the parts separately, you have to use multiple instances - and with Roland warning that each instance can take around 15 seconds to load, you can expect your project load times to be extended by an additional minute for every four Sound Canvas VAs used. The list of 64 insert effects includes a selection of EQs, distortions, modulation effects, reverbs, pitchshifters, lo-fi effects and processors that are really just chains of some of the other effects in the list. Happily, some of them are surprisingly good, especially the choruses. It's just a shame you only get one insert effect per instance, switched on or off for each of the 16 parts.

The separate chorus, reverb and delay effects, however, are on auxiliary busses, with a send control for each part. Obviously, the global EQ isn't hugely useful, unless Sound Canvas VA is only generating a single timbre.

Old-school We might forgive SC VA's interface for looking a bit dated, given the background of the product, but it also has some serious navigational issues. One annoyance relates to the way parameters are tweaked via the big orange display panel; you can't click and drag to set level, pan, key shift, delay, or chorus and reverb levels - you have to click the number and enter a value (between 0 and 127) with the keyboard. Even then, you can't simply click away from the text field, or your adjustment is lost; rather, you have to tap the return/enter key to confirm the new value.

Admittedly, there are mouse-friendly controls inside the deeper editing pages, but that in some ways adds to the frustration. The layout of the pages is poorly conceived, requiring more clicks to access certain features than should be necessary - we can't fathom why Roland didn't just use a simple set of tabs, at the very least. Blank Canvas Ultimately, Sound Canvas VA isn't a plugin that's likely to appeal to most contemporary producers. Even if you're interested in the Sound Canvas instrument tones for their nostalgic value, you're likely to feel frustration at some of the design choices made here.

Honestly, it feels like a low-effort attempt from Roland to virtualise one of its classic hardware synths, and we seriously hope this isn't the extent of its capabilities in this area.