Mac OS 9 Lives
Digital Audio Workstation & MIDI => Digital Audio Workstations & MIDI Applications => Cubase/Nuendo by Steinberg => Topic started by: kharm on February 24, 2020, 03:23:47 AM
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Hi all,
I have just (rather excitedly) connected the iPad Roland Sound Canvas app to my VST 32 system via my TASCAM US-428 interface, a very cheap midi-USB interface, & 'camera connection kit' (female USB to lightning adapter).
It works marvellously. But OMS doesn't have an instrument map for the SC-8820 (which appears to be the best bank of sounds in the Sound Canvas app).
Is there somewhere I can just get this? I found a text file with the patch names but it's not the same format as the other instrument patch name documents for OMS and I don't want to manually edit a text file of this!
Thanks,
K
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So I found the OMS drivers for the SC-8820 (both serial and USB available).
https://www.roland.com/global/support/archives/archive_downloads_n-s/
I installed both, but the installers don't seem to install the 'factory names' for the device.
Am I missing something?
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For reference, in case anyone in the future is interested, here is the information I have on this issue.
Opcode Systems became defunct in 1998 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opcode_Systems)
The Roland SC-8820 sound module was released in 1999 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_SC-8850)
This perhaps explains why I can't find OMS Factory Names for the SC-8820, they would have to have been manually created by someone. Though it does seem strange that OMS installers exist without including a factory names document.
I did find this page (http://www.andrelouis.com/qws/dlinst.htm) where the SC-8820 instrument names are in a text based document, but it's not the same format as an OMS Factory Names document. You can also find manuals for the SC-8820 which list the instrument names, but it's probably harder to extract the text from those pdfs.
If I have time I might create an OMS factory names document for the SC-8820, but otherwise I can still use the iPad Sound Canvas app in another mode and have compatible factory names in OMS/Cubase (eg. the SC-88Pro). If I create one I'll share it here of course.
As I write it occurs to me that I could search further for SC-8850 factory names (I understand the two models have essentially the same sound bank) and this yields forum post here (http://macos9lives.com/smforum/index.php?topic=2813.0) with a tantalising web archived page link ... with a broken link to factory names for the sc-8850! :-[
Oh, and I realise it might be borderline offensive on these boards to add an IPAD as a stand-in for a classic era hardware module but I'm just after a workable solution with no noticeable latency (my G4 quicksilver can't manage that on it's own) :-)
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Just an observation…
In the time you've spent looking for a filled-out Names doc, you could have typed it in… how many times? Really? At least that many.
ALL of the existing Names docs for post-1998 synths and modules etc. were first typed in manually by somebody then shared on the Internet.
I, and everybody I know who dabbles in 30-year old MIDI has had to manually type a few Names docs here and there.
It goes with the turf.
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;D ;D
It’s over 1600 patches so I was hoping to avoid it, but yeah you’re right. Lesson learned (maybe!) 8)