Future Music

Roland TB-03 Bass Line

The latest Roland classic to get the Boutique treatment is the TB-303. Bruce Aisher gets his Acid on with the all-digital TB-03

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It offers the quirkiness of the 303’s sequencer as well as a Step Recording Mode

Roland’s latest Boutique box is a silver unit laden with the small knobs and miniature button keyboard recognisab­le to any Acid House aficionado – those of the TB-303 Bass Line. The new TB-03 is Roland’s second shot at a 303-style box. The TB-3 Touch Bassline (part of the Aira range) revived the single oscillator synth plus sequencer combo idea, but with a very different approach to design and functional­ity. It drew criticism for being too much of a departure, especially as the marketing hyped it as being a faithful recreation of the original – at least in sonic terms.

But what requiremen­ts does a true inheritor of the 303 crown have to fulfil? In terms of synthesis the original TB-303 is incredibly simple. It offers a single oscillator switchable between sawtooth and square waves. This is then routed through a 24dB/ octave four-stage diode ladder filter – not an 18dB/octave filter as sometimes gets mentioned. The filter has controls for filter cutoff and resonance. The filter does not extend into the realms of self-oscillatio­n, but does offer a very pronounced peak. This comes into its own when combined with the simple two-stage attack/decay envelope generator. In reality the attack is fixed, so only the decay gets its own knob. Pushing up the envelope mod and adjusting the decay time facilitate­s the classic 303 filter squelches. This isn’t quite the full story, as the signal also passes through a VCA stage linked to the Accent control that raises the sound level when required. There’s little else in terms of amplitude refinement – notes are generally on or off, so it is the filter that provides the main contouring here. That’s not much for something that fetches over £2k secondhand – this could be one of the most expensive secondhand synths on a cost per knob basis.

However, this isn’t the full story. The 303 also plays host to a patternbas­ed sequencer that controls the pitch of the internal synth. But, as well as automating note sequences, it also allows you to specify accents and pitch slides. The addition of these are where the recognisab­le sound of the 303 in full flow comes together.

The TB-03 takes the original 303 as its starting point and makes a few functional and sonic additions. One of the ‘features’ of the TB-303 was its quirky sequencer’s programmin­g system. This facilitate­d entering note pitches separately to note lengths and rests – a big contributo­r to the ‘press some buttons and see what happens’ approach to pattern creation. The new box offers this as well as a Step Recording Mode that allows you to enter notes, rests, accents and slides (tied notes) while stepping through

each note in the sequence. The Value knob (linked to a stepped continuous encoder) allows you to move back and forwards in the sequence. However, despite maintainin­g the Tap Writing mode of the original (for entering real-time note timings) there is no real-time recording mode. Given that the TB-03 can be mounted in the Roland K-25m Keyboard Unit, or receive notes via MIDI, this seems a missed opportunit­y. Also, although it’s understand­able that the TB-03 stays close to the TB-303 interface, this means many of its convoluted key presses remain. Roland could have gone further with the display. Adding a menu button and a few others combined with an alphanumer­ic display wouldn’t have broken the bank. Digital devices are easily updated to add new features but with a fixed interface they have to resort to adding unlabelled key combinatio­ns.

In its latest iteration the Bass Line also adds built-in Overdrive and Delay/Reverb effects. While both are useful, it is the distortion element here (with three different selectable flavours) that is perhaps the most immediatel­y alluring. There are countless classic 303 tracks where what you hear is a heavily driven version of the Bass Line sound, so having this directly to hand is a nice addition – even if some will prefer the sound of their own specific nasty guitar pedal. The CV/Gate outputs from before are joined by a Trigger In that facilitate­s external analogue control over the sequencer (making it a nice pairing with TR-09’s Trigger Output). Full size MIDI in/out as well USB MIDI and audio in/out are also included. So if you find the internal sequencer frustratin­g you can control it directly from your DAW (or capture sequences for further arrangemen­t). A further benefit of the external DAW approach is parameter automation, which is not supported by TB-03’s internal pattern/track sequencer. Taking this into account begs the question as to why studio-bound musicians wouldn’t just use a plug-in such as AudioReali­sm’s Bass Line 3?

There are currently a number of alternativ­es to the TB-03, many of which employ ‘real’ analogue circuitry. If you must have analogue, then the TB-03 isn’t for you. But for everyone else looking for that classic tone it is well worth checking out.

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 ??  ?? ANALOGUE TRICKS Trigger In allows analogue clock pulses to control sequencer stepping and CV/Gate lets the internal sequencer engine play notes on external analogue gear.
AROUND BACK The original only had a DIN Sync input. The TB-03 loses this, though...
ANALOGUE TRICKS Trigger In allows analogue clock pulses to control sequencer stepping and CV/Gate lets the internal sequencer engine play notes on external analogue gear. AROUND BACK The original only had a DIN Sync input. The TB-03 loses this, though...

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