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  2. Roland Jazz Chorus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Jazz_Chorus

    The Jazz Chorus is one of the most famous and successful combo amplifiers from its period and its earliest users included Albert King, Andy Summers (), Chuck Hammer (), Larry Coryell, Robert Smith (of The Cure, although he used the rarer 160 Watt JC-160 with 4 x 10" speakers), Billy Duffy (The Cult, Theatre of Hate), Roger Hodgson of Supertramp, Joe Strummer, John Sebastian of The Lovin ...

  3. Boss Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boss_Corporation

    It is a division of the Roland Corporation, a Japanese manufacturer that specializes in musical equipment and accessories. For many years Boss has manufactured a wide range of products related to effects processing for guitars, including "compact" and "twin" effects pedals, multi-effect pedals, electronic tuners and pedal boards .

  4. Roland MT-32 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_MT-32

    To target computer users, Roland released a number of CM (Computer Music) modules. They came without an LCD display and had most buttons removed. Most of these CM modules aside from the CM-32P and CM-300 are compatible with the MT-32 but feature 33 additional sound effect samples which many games took advantage of.

  5. Roland Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Corporation

    Roland Systems Group is a line of professional commercial audio and video products. Amdek was incorporated in 1981 "as a manufacturer of computerized music peripherals and as a distributor of assembled electronic music instrument parts."

  6. List of sound chips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sound_chips

    Namco-produced Famicom games [52] Nintendo: VSU-VUE 1995 6 Virtual Boy portable console Silicon-gate CMOS chip Ricoh: Ricoh 2C33 1986 1 Famicom Disk System: Sharp Corporation: Sharp LR35902: 1989 1 Game Boy, Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance: In Game Boy Advance, it's used for Game Boy/Game Boy Color mode and supports software-mixed PCM as a ...

  7. Roland GS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_GS

    Roland GS, or just GS, sometimes expanded as General Standard [1] [2] or General Sound, [1] is a MIDI specification. It requires that all GS-compatible equipment must meet a certain set of features and it documents interpretations of some MIDI commands and bytes sequences, thus defining instrument tones, controllers for sound effects, etc.

  8. Roland Sound Canvas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Sound_Canvas

    The Roland Sound Canvas (Japanese: ローランド・サウンド・キャンバス, Hepburn: Rōrando Saundo Kyanbasu) lineup is a series of General MIDI (GM) based pulse-code modulation (PCM) sound modules and sound cards, primarily intended for computer music usage, created by Japanese manufacturer Roland Corporation.

  9. MPU-401 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPU-401

    Still later, Roland would get rid of the breakout box completely and put all connectors on the back of the interface card itself. Products released in this manner: Roland MPU-IMC, the rare 'Micro Channel' version of the card. Roland MPU-401AT Roland MPU-PC98II Roland MPU-IPC-T card. MPU-APL: for the Apple II. Single-card combination of the MIF ...