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Roland VP-330
Analog vocoder and string synthesizer from Roland Corporation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Roland VP-330 is a paraphonic ten-band[2] vocoder and string machine manufactured by Roland Corporation from 1979 to 1980.[1] While there are several string machines and vocoders, a single device combining the two is rare, despite the advantage of paraphonic vocoding, and the VP-330's synthetic choir sounds are unique. Despite the VP-330's electronic string and choir sounds being less realistic than those of the tape-based Mellotron, touring musicians used it as a lighter and more robust alternative.[3]
The Roland SVC-350 is a similar vocoder in rack-mount form designed to accept external inputs.[4]
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Architecture
In addition to vocoding and generating string sounds, the VP-330 can also play four different choir sounds, each of which uses four bandpass filters, shared from the same pool of seven total.[2] Like Roland's other string machines of the era, such as the RS-202, it features a BBD-based ensemble effect that thickens the strings, and optionally the choirs and vocoder.
Notable users
- 10cc[1]
- Laurie Anderson (on O Superman)[1][5]
- BT[6]
- Michael Boddicker (on Michael Jackson's P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing))[1]
- A Certain Ratio[1]
- Vince Clarke[1]
- Phil Collins
- John Foxx[1]
- Greg Hawkes[7] (of The Cars)
- Tony Mansfield
- Mike Oldfield[1]
- Queen
- Isao Tomita[1][8]
- Underworld[9]
- Vangelis[1] (including on the Chariots of Fire and Blade Runner[10] soundtracks)
- Yellow Magic Orchestra[11]
- Minoru Mukaiya from Casiopea
- Koz (on Levitating)
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Legacy
In 2016, Roland made a digital recreation of the VP-330, named the VP-03, as part of their Boutique range. In 2019, Behringer released their own VP-330 clone, the VC340.
References
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