Roland Octapad is a range of MIDI electronic drum percussion controllers produced by the Roland Corporation.[1]
Roland Pad-8
editThe first model, introduced in 1985, was the Pad-8. Originally to be called MPC-8 (MIDI Percussion Controller 8), but was renamed Pad-8 to avoid legal implications with MPC Electronics.[2] It was an influential device at that time, allowing drummers and percussionists the opportunity to trigger virtually any MIDI sound source without the need of a full electronic drum set.
Features
editThe Pad 8 Consists of eight individual pads (divided in two rows of four pads) and six external pad trigger ports. The controlled had no internal sound source and limited memory for four user patches. A unique initialization procedure, when powered on, would load a "patch preset" and configure the Pad-8 to work with either the Roland's TR-909 or TR-707/TR-727.[3]
The Pad 8 could only transmit on a single MIDI channel (channel 10 on power up), however each of the 14 pads is assigned a different MIDI-Note number. Both MIDI channel and note numbers could be edited to suite the device being controlled over MIDI.
There is one parameter adjustable for each pad: MIDI Note. The remaining five parameters adjustable are global: MIDI Channel; Pad Sensitivity; Volume Curve; Minimum Velocity; and the Gate Time.
- Hard Corps
- Michael Shrieve/ David Beal
- Stephen Morris (New Order)
- John Molo (Bruce Hornsby & The Range)
- Norman Hassas (UB40)
- Eric Clapton
- Phil Collins (Genesis, Mike & Mechanics, Howard Jones, and Solo project)
- Danny Carey (Tool)
Roland Pad-80
editThe second model, introduced in 1989, was the Pad-80 Octapad II. Again the Pad-80 was an eight pad MIDI controller that allowed for various types of MIDI sound sources.[5] Improvements in this second model included the ability to play up to three notes per pad,[6] and velocity switching, which allowed the user to stack or alternate between the assigned notes depending on how hard the pads were struck. This feature became useful for creating more realistic sounding drum parts, and in addition allowed drummers to play melodic instruments with greater ease. These new features were groundbreaking at the time, and are still utilized in Roland's electronic percussion today.
The memory was increased, allowing up to 64 different patches internally and another 64 patches to be stored on a Roland M-256E memory card.[5] Further improvements to the MIDI specification included the control of modulation, pitch bend and aftertouch using a foot pedal, along with full System Exclusive (SysEx) capability.[5] The Pad-80 had a patch chain function that allowed a series of 32 patches to be arranged in any sequence, eight of these chains could be stored in memory.[5]
Roland SPD-8 (1990), SPD-11 (1993), and SPD-20 (1998)
editAfter the Pad-80, Roland continued to release SPD-8 with on-board sounds, as a standalone instrument in 1990, SPD-11 in 1993, which not only had more sounds but also built-in effects processing, and SPD-20 in 1998, which had more on-board sounds.[7] These SPD Series products apart from the SPD-20 and 20x had not been named "Octapad" on the product panel.
Octapad SPD-30 (2010)
editRoland continued the line in 2010[8][9] with the Octapad SPD-30 which includes on-board sounds and effects. Version 2 was released as a firmware update in 2012.[10]
Octapad SPD-20x (2015) and SPD-20 Pro (2020)
editRoland released the SPD-20x in 2015[11] and the SPD-20 Pro in 2020[12] with more on-board sounds and an additional external trigger socket.[13]
References
edit- ^ ROLAND PERCUSSION HISTORY, Roland Corporation
- ^ a b Graham, Alex (2019). Electronic Drumfax. self-published. p. 101. ISBN 978-1701024229.
- ^ Page 8 and 9. Roland Pad-8 Owners Manual. Version 2. Roland Corporation: Osaka, Japan.
- ^ Collins, Phil (June 1986). "Roland Newslink: No Drumkit Required". International Musician. 12 (7): 75.
- ^ a b c d Page 8, Roland Pad-80 operation manual
- ^ "Octapad II". Sound On Sound. October 1988. pp. 10–11. ISSN 0951-6816. OCLC 925234032.
- ^ Page 3, Roland SPD-30 owner's manual
- ^ "Roland Octapad SPD30".
- ^ "NAMM 2010: Roland unveils Octapad SPD-30 digital percussion pad". 14 January 2010.
- ^ "OCTAPAD SPD-30 Version 2". VDrums Forum. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ Roland Octapad SPD 20X - Overview, retrieved 2022-06-24
- ^ "Roland Octapad SPD-20 Pro". Sound On Sound. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ "SPD-20 VS SPD-20X VS SPD-20 PRO". Roland India. Retrieved 2022-06-24.