![]() ![]() Plus I already have a couple of very good wind controllers. It’s not really marketed as a gigging or recording instrument. the apparent lack of any breath or bite control, the batteries. If it stays over $1000, I’ll probably keep playing my EWI until I either get bored with it or the price drops on the AE-30 … or I can pick up one used.Īfter learning more about the Yamaha YDS-150, I don’t think it’s for me – the limited number of (not very good) sounds, the limited octave range. If the street price ends up being under $1000, I’ll probably pull the trigger. The $1500 announced price tag of the AE-30 is too steep for me. I’ve played my AE-10 at jams to good effect - mostly the distortion lead guitar sound. I liked the price of the EWI of $500 compared to the $800 I paid for the AE-10. I LOVE the rechargeable battery in the EWI as opposed to the batteries in the AE-10. Easy-to-use work management software for SMBs. Build with SwiftUI, cross macOS and iOS. I like the saxophone key fingering in the AE-10 more than the contacts on the EWI and the EWI’s lack of the upper left hand palm keys. Yet another Pomodoro Technique timer which under development. an option for you to sound off the alarm in the middle of your meditation. I like the breath and bite control and mouthpiece of the AE-10 more than the EWI. A Zen-like intuitive meditation timer that comes with configurable audio cues. I like most of the sounds in the EWI more than the ones in the AE-10. I like the look of the Aerophones, including the AE-30, more than the look of the EWI Solo which looks like a too long and too thick clarinet. I posted this comment on Sax On The Web: I have the white AE-10, before they came out with the graphite. Roland expects the Aerophone Pro to be available in January 2021, priced at about $1,500 USD. It can also be used as a Bluetooth MIDI controller. A built-in speaker, battery operation and headphone jack lets you use the instrument standalone. They say that their new controller options enable idiomatic performance techniques on a range of instrument sounds.Īerophone Pro also features Roland’s ZEN-Core Synthesis System, the sound engine that powers their FANTOM and JUPITER-X synthesizers. The Aerophone Pro features enhanced soprano, alto, and tenor saxes, new trumpet sounds and world instruments, like a new duduk. It’s designed to be a flagship model, with a polished aluminum exterior in high-touch areas and more expressive breath and bite sensors. The Aerophone Pro is the latest instrument in the company’s Aerophone line, originally introduced in 2016. ![]() Roland has introduced the Aerophone Pro, a new digital wind instrument that brings the capabilities of Roland’s SuperNATURAL and ZEN-Core sound engines to wind players. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |