I picked up an XL-7 yesterday, so I thought I'd share some impressions as a newbie. I have some familiarity with E-mu boxes - the Morpheus, UltraProteus, and the Audity2k (which I actually reviewed for Recording magazine), and we've bought a pile of Proteus 2k's for a commercial project here. My project studio is currently built around Korg (two OasysPCI cards), Nord (two MicroModulars) and Max/MSP for the control stuff. This seems to be an early XL-7 - it came with OS 1.01, but I flashed in 1.31 without problems. I also popped in the World Expedition sound ROM (Techno ROM on order). There's surprisingly little actual hardware in there (quite a change from the experience of popping the hood on my Roland Super-JX) and I guess that Xilinx chip does everything... I've played around with one or two groove-boxes (including the Korg Electribes) and found them quite fun and accessible but generally underpowered and too restrictive in terms of the musical and timbral constraints imposed, so didn't pay them much attention. From another angle, I'm trying to fill in holes in my live rig: the OasysPCI cards do gorgeous physical and analog modelling plus sample playback, multi-FX, mixdown and digital I/O, and the MicroModulars do tricky self-evolving hardcore synthesis, and I was looking to use the Audity 2000 for high-polyphony rhythmic texturing. The problem with the Audity is, of course, the user interface, so when I came across the XL/MP boxes my interest was piqued. I wasn't really in the market for a TB-style techno beat-box, but the XL-7 isn't one; it's a complete Audity-style synth engine with a big front panel, half-decent pattern sequencer and a decent attempt at a control surface. Compared to the Audity, it seems to be fairly complete, with some minor architectural alterations. (On the downside, this means it has the same shortcomings compared to the Morpheus: no random sample ROM looping, which I actually liked, and the filters are two-dimensional only. I don't know how E-mu can refer to the scheme as "Z-plane filtering" when the Z plane was the one they took out.) There's no XL-7 equivalent to "deep edit", which is a bit of a shame. The front panel is very nicely laid out, and does make massive improvements on the Audity editing interface: page navigation is better, and layer switching has dedicated controls, although I would have liked dedicated layer mutes. The manual is so-so, seems a little rushed, and has some typos which suggest it was a cut-and-paste job from the Audity/Proteus version. The note pads are nicely usable and send a pretty full range of note velocities (and poly aftertouch, which I actually have a use for, having implemented routing support for it for use with the Buchla Thunder). I was worried about getting pads as godawful as those on the LaunchPad, but luckily they aren't. Pad transpose does the right thing: notes can be held while the transposition range is shifted. I'm not keen on the touchstrip - it doesn't have relative-origin bend - but I'm spoiled by the Thunder and the Prophecy. I've worked through most of the machine with only the occasional flick through the manual. I've not done much with the pattern sequencer, but really like the grid editing - not a bad design job given the display constraints. (I'm comparing it with the R-8 which has a nice "microscope" visual mode; I don't know yet what the XL-7 equivalent is, if any.) I'm wary of trying to do much with recording or editing controllers, and I need to investigate the quantize/groove stuff. No obvious problems interfacing to external boxes: the only minor buglet I found was that front panel control changes (i.e. local-on MidiA to MidiP) mark as preset as dirty, but remote MIDI edits don't (nor do the latter disengage the latch LED's on the knobs). Overall, I'm impressed, and can't wait to get back into hardcore Audity synthesis now I have a decent user interface for it; I'm also going to take it out on stage next month if I can fit it into the live rack... Hope this is of interest to any prospective buyers, and sorry for the ramble... -- nick rothwell -- composition, systems, performance -- http://www.cassiel.com upcoming gig at cybersonica, london, june 5th -- http://www.cybersonica.org
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XL-7 first impressions
2002-05-19 by Nick Rothwell
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