Future Music

Roland Boutique D-05

The latest addition to the Boutique range revives a digital synth classic. Si Truss investigat­es…

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This year has seen Roland expanding their Boutique range at a pace so rapid it can be a little hard to keep up. The latest addition, the D-05, is something a little different to the majority of the range, however. Whereas most of the Boutiques to date have used Roland’s ACB tech to emulate the electronic­s of vintage analogue instrument­s, the D-05 takes as its basis the D-50, an all-digital ‘Linear Arithmetic’ (LA) synth first released in 1987. The D-50 was Roland’s response to the popularity of the Yamaha DX7. It combined 8-bit PCM samples with its analogue-style LA synth engine to create complex, layered sounds built of multiple partials. This distinctiv­e approach, combined with some excellent patch design led by Eric Persing, now of Spectrason­ics, made the D-50 hugely popular.

Whether or not you’re already aware of the instrument itself, its presets are sure to conjure up instant nostalgia for the late-’80s and early ’90s, thanks to their prolific use by the era’s biggest pop, club and soundtrack producers.

This inescapabl­e associatio­n with the era of its release instantly makes the D-05 more of a love-it or hate-it thing than many of the other Boutiques. Whereas the analogue sound engines of instrument­s like the SH-101, Jupiter-8 or Juno-106 are fairly timeless, the PCM sounds that shape much of the character of the D-05 keep it rooted in a distinct retro digital tonality. Personally, I’m firmly in the ‘love-it’ camp; there’s a unique, otherworld­ly complexity to the sound of those classic D-50 patches that works fantastica­lly for bringing a touch of ambience or cinematic grandeur.

Sonically the D-05 is largely indistingu­ishable from the original D-50. Despite the Boutique having to rely on slightly different chips and electronic­s to the original, the process of digitally recreating an already digital instrument is always going to be a more achievable task than attempting to emulate analogue circuitry. Inevitably, there’s debate to be had about the subtle difference­s in how each’s sound engine behaves, but realistica­lly even seasoned D-50 users are going to struggle to tell the two apart in a blind test.

In terms of the basic architectu­re of the synth, the D-05 is pretty much an exact replicatio­n of the D-50. As before, patches are split into upper and lower ‘tones’ each of which is comprised of up to two partials. Each partial can be either a PCM sample or a synthesize­d sound created by the LAS engine. The D-05 maintains the same overall 16-voice polyphony, which can be divided up in a number of ways, allowing patches to be a single 16-voice tone, a pair of 8-voice tones or a combinatio­n of monophonic and polyphonic tones. The two tones can also be set up to be controlled separately via keyboard splits or separate MIDI channels.

Most of the features and the interface of the D-50 are replicated for the D-05. This includes the Chase function, which allows for the lower tone to be triggered slightly after the upper, and either looped or alternated with the upper tone to create an effect like a cross between a delay and a basic arpeggiato­r. The performanc­e joystick of the D-50 – used for programmin­g duties and morphing between tones – is present

and correct too, albeit in a small and slightly flimsy-feeling form. The gorgeous digital effects are here too, offering multi-type reverb/ delay plus EQ and a lovely retro-sounding chorus.

The D-50 was far easier to program than the notoriousl­y impenetrab­le DX7, but its button interface – replicated here – is still pretty fiddly to work with. The original D-50 could be programmed far more quickly via the slider-laden PG-1000 controller. We’d love to see Roland bring out a new version for the D-05, either in hardware or software form.

There are fresh features added here too, most notably a 64-step polyphonic sequencer and multi-mode arpeggiato­r. Both of these are great additions; note input and editing is well implemente­d, and both offer a simple method for inspiring evolving melodic patterns that really suit the D-05’s complex sound engine. As with other Boutiques, a pair of touchstrip­s offer up pitch and expression control. An added USB port provides power and MIDI input too.

There are some Boutique range features that are less welcome though. The outputs are limited to main and headphone mini jacks. These smaller, underpower­ed outputs are fine on affordable products like Volcas or Pocket Operators, but on a synth priced at over £300, the lack of ‘proper’ outputs feels cheap. It can output audio via USB, but doing so involves setting the D-05 as your audio interface, which isn’t always the most practical solution. Similarly, as it’s designed to be compatible with Roland’s K-25m keyboard dock, it ships without a proper case, so you’ll need to shell out extra if you want a case/stand (as pictured).

These are foibles we can overlook though. The D-05 offers a near perfect recreation of one of the most era-defining synths of the ’80s, now in compact, relatively affordable form. It’s hard not to fall for that.

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