by Robert Finley
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| While I was sequencing the Chopin concerto and playing the sequence back with the JV1080 alone, I noticed that when the piano was playing with the orchestra, some notes of the orchestra suddenly dropped out indicating a lack of polyphony. This ruined the harmony and effect I was trying to create. |
| The Roland JV1080 has 64 voice polyphony. This does not mean that 64 notes from different instruments can sound at the same time. Some instrumental patches require more than one voice. For example the GM pizzicato strings patch requires one voice but the acoustic piano requires two voices. This means that in theory, 64 different notes played by pizzicato strings could sound simultaneously, but only 32 on the acoustic piano. Anything more than the maximum number of voices will cause drop-outs in notes. |
| Using the sustaining pedal for the piano (controller 64) combines notes played at different times and this increases the number of voices used at a time, so that when the number of combined voices exceeds 64 this too will cause drop outs. |