

But I think has like four pan flutes and ten ocarinas!!! It's got one soprano/alto/tenor sax, no baritone, one flute, one organ and it's a "rock lead organ", one clavinet, etc. Instead of a few good pianos there is one.just one.yes, the one piano sounds great but it's got reverb on it, so get a natural sound I pull the reverb out and now it doesn't sounds like a piano anymore :/ the reverb is part of the sound, not just an effect! I love the 20, so I was super hyped to get the 55, which I did today.I hate it, I'm taking it back. Just this week I bought the roland gr-20 in anticipation of getting the gr-55 later in the week, long story, but.the gr-20 was super cheap from a friend and I'm new to guitar synth.

I haven't heard many reports on using the TriplePlay with a USB to 5 pin converter, that might be very good as well but that conversion can introduce issues with tracking and glitches. If you want a converter to drive soft synths (no 5 pin midi), from all I've heard the Fishman TriplePlay is the way to go. Also keep in mind the quality of the entire guitar to midi experience is affected by the response of the synth module (some work better than others, guitar to midi can output a lot of information that some modules can't handle well). I have had the best results however with a Brian Moore iGuitar with a RMC system. In that case, many of the Roland 13 pin synths are exceptional, such as the GR-55 and even the GR-1.Īll the 13 pin Roland synths were driven with various guitars with Ghost Graphtech systems installed. I have been able to get most of what I need directly from the Roland sound generators in their synths, and those respond FAR better than the Roland midi out in the same units. I tried for years to get good results from the Roland GI-20, and finally gave up as it simply glitched too much. The Roland GR-55 is fairly good as well, it has a lot of adjustments that helps you tweak the response to individual guitars, but as in all Roland 13 pin converters, the midi is sometimes difficult to deal with.
Guitar to midi converter free#
The GM-70 is perhaps the slowest in response of all out there, but if you don't need the speed, it seems to track bending well and is relatively free from glitching. After being in guitar synthesis for decades, the best I've used overall is the old Roland GM-70 system with a matching Roland guitar.

If you mean guitar to 5 pin midi, that has always been a tough task and I haven't used many products that do it well.
