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Roland Juno-106

Roland Juno-106
Roland-Juno-106.jpg
Manufacturer Roland
Dates 1984–1988
Price US$1095
UK£799
JP¥139,000
Technical specifications
Polyphony 6 voices
Timbrality Monotimbral
Oscillator 1 DCO per voice
(pulse, saw, square and noise)
LFO triangle with delay and rate
Synthesis type Analog subtractive
Filter Analog 24dB/oct resonant
low-pass, non-resonant high-pass
Attenuator ADSR envelope generator
Aftertouch expression No
Velocity expression No
Storage memory 128 patches
Effects Chorus
Input/output
Keyboard 61 keys
External control MIDI

The Roland Juno-106 is an analog polyphonic synthesizer released by Roland Corporation in February 1984. It features digitally controlled oscillators (DCOs) for tuning stability and digital envelope generation along with analog filters and signal path.

The Roland Juno-106 is relatively simple in terms of its synthesis architecture. Nevertheless, the Juno-106 is still quite popular among musicians and producers due to the fast sound creation workflow of the hands-on interface and its ability to produce rich basses, pads, PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) sounds and other distinct and desirable analog tones.

The central tone-generating component of the instrument is a set of 6 digitally controlled oscillators capable of producing sawtooth and square/pulse waveforms. The Juno is well known for its -24 dB/octave analog lowpass filter with adjustable resonance, which has been said to provide the Juno 106 with its distinctive rich sound, when combined with the tone of the MC5534 wave generation modules.

The instrument's VCA can be switched between simple note gating or envelope-controlled loudness with a switch. The same envelope can also modulate the filter's cutoff frequency, in normal or inverted polarity. The filter cutoff can also track the keyboard to allow high harmonics to be heard on higher-pitched notes.

The Juno-106 features an onboard analog stereo chorus effect, which is a fairly distinctive aspect of the instrument's sound. The Juno-106's chorus is based on a set of bucket brigade delay (BBD) lines similar to other Roland products of the time including guitar pedals. The Juno-106 also contains 128 internal memory slots for patch storage as well as surprisingly complete MIDI implementation - a rarity for any synthesizers of the time, let alone analogue ones. Compared to the 60 and 6 juno models the editing controls (sliders and buttons) on the synthesizer are capable of transmitting and receiving MIDI SysEx commands, allowing complete control and more advanced MIDI based modulation of the instrument via a sequencer or computer.

Furthermore, this synthesizer features polyphonic portamento, also rather rare for a 1984 analog instrument (Kawai SX-210 -1982- and SX-240 -1983- had already portamento).

The Juno-106 was the third in the Juno series of analog synthesizers. Its predecessors, the Roland Juno-6 and Roland Juno-60, were somewhat different in appearance than their later sibling, but shared most of the internal components and features in common with the exception of a tradeoff between a simple up/down arpeggiator on the earlier models and a portamento feature on the Juno-106. The Juno-106 also featured MIDI connectivity, rather than the proprietary Roland Digital Control Bus (DCB) found on the Juno-60, along with much higher patch storage (128 spaces vs 54 on the Juno 60 and none on the Juno 6).


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