Your Cart
Cheap Ernie Ball Guitar Strings Cart is empty
 

Best Price for drums and guitars at Instruments2go
 
Search
Advanced search

Product Groups Product Groups
Yamaha Digital Pianos
Roland Digital Pianos
Korg Digital Pianos
---------
Yamaha Keyboards
Korg Keyboards
Roland Keyboards
--------
Fender Guitars
BC Rich Guitars
Yamaha Guitars
Guitar Effects Pedals
Guitars
Guitar Amplification
----------
Drums
Roland V Drums
Remo Drum Skins Heads
Mapex Drum Pedals Stools
-------
Roland Synths
Korg Synths
Yamaha Synths
Nord Pro Keyboards
-----------
Accessories
Amplification
Recording
Brass and Woodwind
Music Books
Second-User Instruments
SALE Section
Gift Ideas


Shop by Brand Shop by Brand
Yamaha
Roland
Fender
Remo
Marshall
Ernie Ball
Stagg
Nord
Korg
BCK
Carlsbro
BC Rich

Other manufacturers...


Your cart Your cart
Cheap Ernie Ball Guitar Strings Cart is empty
 

View cart
Wish list
Orders history

Special Special
Gift certificates


Authentication Authentication
Username

Password

Log in 
Register 
Recover password

If Javascript is disabled in your browser click here




Help Help
Contact us
Privacy statement
Terms & Conditions
Freedownloads
Beware
aboutus
helppages
tyros2videos



Roland Synths

Roland Synths

and Workstations Brand New and Awesome....Fantom G6 Fantom G7 Fantom G8... So flexible, huge new screen that makes editing and finding what you want a doddle call in for a demo and see if you can win a Fantom G6 FREE !
The first electric musical synthesizer was invented in 1876 by Elisha Gray [1], who was also an independent inventor of the telephone. The "Musical Telegraph" was a chance by-product of his telephone technology.
Gray accidentally discovered that he could control sound from a self vibrating electromagnetic circuit and in doing so invented a basic single note oscillator. The Musical Telegraph used steel reeds whose oscillations were created and transmitted, over a telephone line, by electromagnets. Gray also built a simple loudspeaker device in later models consisting of a vibrating diaphragm in a magnetic field to make the oscillator audible.
On 18th April 1972, Kakehashi established the Roland Corporation. Kakehashi chose the name for phonetic reasons: he wanted two syllables with soft consonants, and Roland satisfied his criteria nicely.
The first Roland synth, the monophonic SH1000. Roland's first synthesizer was Japan's first synthesizer, predating the Korg 700 by a handful of weeks. It was a strange instrument, offering 10 preset tones to which you could add vibrato, growl and portamento. Alternatively, you could select any combination of eight waveform/footage options ranging from a 32' sawtooth to a 2' square wave, plus noise, and shape sounds using the envelope generator, some preset envelope shapes, a self-oscillating resonant filter, and modulation. History of Roland Synths

Roland Synths

Sound Modules
4 Products
Synthesizers
11 Products
Expansion cards for Roland workstations
14 Products
 

Special Offers / New Releases

Roland Fantom G8 Workstation
Roland Fantom G8 Workstation
See details

RRP: £2599.00
Our price: £2032.42
save 22%
Roland Fantom G6 Workstation
Roland Fantom G6 Workstation
See details

RRP: £1799.00
Our price: £1584.01
save 12%
Roland Juno G Synthesizer
Roland Juno G Synthesizer
See details

RRP: £849.00
Our price: £663.92
save 22%
Available For Backorder
Delivery Time: 5-7 days approx
Roland SH-201
Roland SH-201
See details

RRP: £429.00
Our price: £350.06
save 18%
Available For Backorder
Delivery Time: 5-7 days approx
Roland Fantom G7 Workstation
Roland Fantom G7 Workstation
See details

RRP: £2113.00
Our price: £1782.82
save 16%
Available For Backorder
Delivery Time: 5-7 days approx
Roland Fantom XR
Roland Fantom XR
See details

RRP: £1049.00
Our price: £855.98
save 18%
Available For Backorder
Delivery Time: 5-7 days approx
Roland ARX02 Expansion card
Roland ARX02 Expansion card
See details

RRP: £319.00
Our price: £281.99
save 12%
   
 
 
 

Roland Synths - page