I’ve also thrown in a joker and recorded my hardware JV-2080 module so you can hear the difference. This was the work horse in probably every studio around the world.Īt the bottom are a couple of audio files and I encourage you (just for fun, it’s not a competition) to comment on this post and tell me which is which - if you can tell them apart. When it was released back in year 2000, it had state of the art built-in effects and it had an amazing sound. The front panel had a memory card reader from which your own samples could be loaded. It could also be fitted with no less than four SRX expansion boards and an additional four SR-JV80 boards. It had twice the number of voices and over 900 presets. The XV-5080 came with all the waveforms from the JV-1080/JV-2080 and a selection of waveforms from the JD-990, the Super JD. If you’re not familiar with the XV-5080 it’s the top-of-the-line rack module from Roland prior to the release of the Integra7. That post might be a good start before you continue. If you’re interested, I did a rather lengthy blog post about the Cloud JV-1080 compared to the original hardware versions of the JV-1080/2080 and the XV-3080/5080. So when the Roland Cloud team this Holiday Season released a VST, AU and AAX version of the XV-5080 my hope was set rather high. That one proved to be a lot more than just a software clone of the original JV-1080. Two years ago, Roland Virtual Sonics added the Cloud version of the Roland JV-1080 as a plugin to their Legendary catalogue.
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