NightFright, on 24 June 2018 - 11:41 PM, said:
I have come to accept the fact that soundfonts trying to imitate classic synths is an endeavor doomed to fail. Personally I have settled with emulation, in this case the
Yamaha S-YXG50 VSTi plugin, loaded through the
VST MIDI Driver and enabled under Win 10 by the
Coolsoft MIDI Mapper. It's not the SC-55, but the Yamaha modules used to be the very next best thing after Roland back in the days, and some argue they were even superior (which they were, especially with native, but however rare XG support).
MusicallyInspired, on 25 June 2018 - 05:16 AM, said:
@NightFright I heard on the VOGONS forums that there's a new 100% authentic Sound Canvas VSTi out now from Roland. Not a SoundFont and only works really with DAWs, but they've apparently finally got their act together and put one out. It's like $150 or something, but it's nice to see something like that exists now officially and that it's far better than the old Virtual Sound Canvas.
@NightFright I agree that really good soundfonts are hard to come by, you will always have some issues, e.g. wrong volume of instruments or the balance between them or other problems.
I cannot really speak for or against the Yamaha devices, as I personally didn't like most recordings I heard of those devices. But it might just be that they weren't fully optimized for it. (And Vocaroo just also butchers the sound quality in that regard).
@MusicallyInspired About that VSTi plugin: If you do not want to buy the proper hardware then it's surely the closest match you can get and also easiest to set up, however, comparing them to the real devices you will notice differences, e.g. that it doesn't fully use the SC-55 sound map, even if selected it may use drum sets from the other models and also everything just sounds "harder", as if the attack portion is set wrongly and also some minor differences are notable with certain instruments as well.
I compared it to 2 things, the Roland SC-55 and the Roland SC-D70 (which uses the 8820 map by default) and the real hardware still sounds better compared to the VSTi plugin - considering the VSTi is essentially also emulated, it's fair enough I guess.. And you can get a proper SC-55 roughly for the same price, however setting it up might prove to be more difficult.