Computer Music

Boss DR-110

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Roland may not have offered up the first programmab­le drum machine – that distinctio­n goes to kit company PAiA – but they were the first to mass-produce one that didn’t require soldering skills. Called the CR-78, it came out in 1978 and was heard on chart staples like Blondie’s HeartofGla­ss and Phil Collins’ ubiquitous IntheAirTo­night. Unfortunat­ely, the thing wasn’t exactly easy to program, and required a now-rare optional add-on box to do so. Neverthele­ss, it was a hit and set Roland on their way to releasing their easier-to-grok classic beatboxes like the TR-808 and TR-909.

All of these boxes had in common their analogue circuitry and a grid-based approach to creating beats. They were also priced out of the reach of most workaday gigging musicians – at least until Roland blew them out at discounted prices.

Thankfully, Roland had an entire division dedicated to the gigging musician. Called Boss, the sub-brand was known for its low-cost, high-quality stompboxes, and their drum machines were specifical­ly aimed at budding guitarists. They could even be run off batteries, a feature found more often on the pedalboard than in the he recording studio.

Boss’s initial nitial foray into portable, programmab­leable beatboxery came in 1980 in the form of the DR-55, a tiny, industrial-looking slab best known own as the first incarnatio­n of the Sisters of Mercy’s cy’s infamousin­f ‘Doktor Avalanche’. A simple step-entry sequencer allowed the user to program up to six 16-step patterns and a pair of 12-step patterns. Only four sounds (all analogue) were included, and hi-hat patterns were not programmab­le.

Things improved with the release of the DR-110 in 1983. A far more sophistica­ted machine, it too could be powered from batteries, and it too derived its sounds from analogue circuitry. This time there were six sounds onboard: kick, snare, open and closed hats, cymbal, and a superb hand clap.

All of these sounds could be programmed via live recording or step-entry into any of 16 user pattern slots, which could then be arranged into one of two available songs. The batteries would retain all stored data between power cycles.

The most interestin­g feature of the DR-110 was its display. A graphic representa­tion of the pattern grid on a small but informativ­e LCD made it easy to see your beats as you made them. This was cutting-edge in 1983, reflected in the seldom-used full name of the unit: DR-110 Dr. Rhythm Graphic.

The sound of the DR-110 is, as you’d expect, akin to Roland’s more expensive (and famous) machines. The parts of the onboard ‘drum kit’ are generated by combinatio­ns of tuned resonance, noise, square wave, and ‘pulse-train modulation’ signals, making the DR-110 snappy, punchy and, on occasion, a bit shrill – in other words, classic Roland.

The DR-110 sold very well. As a result, they’re plentiful on the used market, and – unlike most bits of 80s Roland studio kit – secondhand prices have yet to climb into the stratosphe­re. A favourite among sample-providers, there are sample packs a-plenty for modern producers that want the sounds in the computer.

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