If you’ve browsed Yamaha Reface at on-line retailers, you’ll know that Reface DX and Reface CS are currently on sale. The DX and CS are the two Katzenhammer kids which share the same internal design, using a Yamaha-proprietary SSP-2 processor as the central compute engine.
The Reface DX price is startling: $250 USD (MAP). Wow! That’s the price of a mid-range guitar pedal. Makes me wonder if the DX and CS are being closed out or if Mark 2 models are in the works. The venerable SSP-2 is supplanted by the SSP-3 and perhaps the inventory of SSP-2 is depleted.
The Reface CP and Reface YC MAP prices remain the same. I suspect that sales of these models remain solid as there always seems to be a need for good EP and organ sounds.
That DX price is a clearance price. When Reface was released, I vowed to buy at blow-out pricing. Yep, I put a Reface DX on order.
A few Reface DX programming links
First off, I’m amazed at the number of contributed DX patches at Yamaha’s Soundmondo sharing site. There are literally thousands of Reface DX patches. The Soundmondo tagging idea is good, but too many punters over-tagged their submissions. I’m looking for “orchestral” sounds and there are many tagged patches that are not remotely “orchestral”. A search system is only as good as the quality of its tagging.
If that’s not enough patches for you, try the Reface DX Legacy Project. Martin Tarenskeen maintains this vast library of Reface DX patches converted from old FM machines. I can’t vouch for the quality of the conversions (yet), but I’ll be heading there for old 4-op DX21 patches. I had a DX21 back in the day, and know the factory sound set quite well. I still have the original cassette tape with DX21 patches on it!
I also plan to do a little FM programming. This series of articles by Manny Fernandez is excellent:
- Manny’s Modulation Manifesto: Intro to FM Synthesis
- Solo Brass Voices
- Ensemble Brass Voices
- Synth Pads
- Bass Sounds
- Lead Sounds
- Wrapping Up — Advanced Tips, Tricks and FM Quirks
Learn from the best in the field — that would be Manny. His articles have links to his example patches in the Soundmondo library.
You’ll need a Reface DX algorithms and envelope cheat-sheet (PDF), too.
Reface DX is old enough to be a grown up by now. So, there’s plenty of on-line support if you choose to jump into the Reface DX pool.
Yamaha SEQTRAK FM
I was curious to see how SEQTRAK FM stacks up against Reface DX. My conclusion — it’s the same FM engine:
- 4-op, 12 algorithms, polyphony 8
- Same algorithms and parameters
- SEQTRAK includes many Reface DX patches
Looking beyond FM, SEQTRAK does AWM2, sampling and sequencing, and offers more effects. I’m more of a player than a button-pusher, so Reface DX is better for my personal needs.
Reflecting on the SEQTRAK FM and AWM2, I would expect to find a Yamaha proprietary SWX09 at its heart. The SWX09 core executes the Renesas SH architecture, same as SSP. Plus, SWX09 has an integrated AWM2 tone generation engine.
Copyright © 2024 Paul J. Drongowski