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Roland Juno-106

Synthesizer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Roland Juno-106 is a synthesizer released by Roland Corporation in February 1984.

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Features

The Juno-106 is a polyphonic synthesizer with six voices. It is an analog synthesizer but with digitally controlled oscillators and chorus effects.[1][2] Whereas its predecessor, the Juno-60, has 56 patches, the Juno-106 has 128. It introduced Roland's performance lever for pitch bends and modulation, which became a standard feature of Roland instruments.[1] It also adds MIDI and was one of the first analog synthesizers to allow users to sequence parameter changes.[1]

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Impact

Artists who have used the Juno-106 include Jacob Mann, Vince Clarke, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Chvrches, Leftfield,[3] William Orbit,[4][5] Paul Frick from Tangerine Dream, Underworld, Reel 2 Real, Jam & Spoon, and Vangelis.[6]

The Juno-106 was Roland's bestselling synthesizer until the release of the Roland D-50 later in the decade.[7] It remains one of the bestselling synthesizers.[1] In 1985, Roland released two versions with built-in speakers: the Juno-106S and the HS60 Synth Plus.[1]

The synth's popularity continues to the present day, especially with EDM and artists such as Tame Impala,[8] Daft Punk,[9] Calvin Harris,[10] Armin van Buuren,[11] Mark Ronson,[12] and Caribou[13] among many others.

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Hardware re-issues and recreations

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The Roland MKS-7 Super Quartet, a multi-timbral synth module with dedicated sections for each part, used the same 80017 filter chip as the Juno-106 for the bass section.[14]

In 2015, Roland released the JU-06 sound module, a digital recreation of the Juno-106 using Roland's digital Analog Circuit Behaviour (ACB) technology. It is battery powered, has 4-voices and 23 parameters controlled from the front panel.[15] It cost $299 at the time of the release.[16]

in 2016, Behringer released the Deepmind-12, an analog synthesizer inspired by the Juno-106 which features 12 voices.[17] It was priced at $999 at the time of release.[18] In 2020, developer Momo Müller released an unofficial PC MIDI editor with the interface of June-106, called the Deepmind - Juno-106 Editor.[19]

In 2019, Roland released the JU-06A, which is a digitally based synthesizer combining the JUNO-60 and JUNO-106. It has the continuous high-pass filter of the 106, the envelope-controllable pulse-width-modulation of the 60, and the filter of both switchable from the front panel.[15] It cost $399 at the time of the release.[20]

Roland released the Juno-X in 2022, a modern synth featuring digital emulations of the Juno-60 and Juno-106 as well as an additional Juno-X model that features a supersaw waveform, velocity sensitivity and an Alpha-Juno style pitch envelope control.[21][22] The Juno X's control panel design directly references the controls of the Juno-106 while the sound engine follows on from the Jupiter-X and Jupiter-Xm modern digital synths.[22]

Software emulations

In 2017, Roland released some software synthesizers in the cloud, including Cloud Juno-106. The cloud subscription cost $240/yr at the time.[23]

In June 2020, Roland released Zenology plugins for Roland synths, which includes a Juno-106 emulator.[24][25]

In 2020, Cherry Audio released the DCO-106 plugin, a juiced up version of the Juno-106 which was priced at $39 USD in 2020.[26][27]

References

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