Controller - tx1 IN - tx1 THRU - tx2 in. Then you set 1 to receive odd notes and the other to receive even. It's not -quite- double the polyphony though. More like 1.5x because of the way the older machines work.
Nice work man - and this synth can be found for a couple hundred still! At 3:14 I wanted you to break into “Heat of the Moment” by Asia right before “push it” haha
Would you be able to send me the snapperbass sound for the tx81x? I tried to click the link you’ve posted on ebay but it seems live it doesnt exist anymore?
I had an YS100 for like three decades and programmed the "sh.." out of that thing. I can tell where the limits are. It doesn't get any better than this as far as high quality second generation 4-operator FM sounds (with 8 waveforms per operator) are concerned. For more complex stuff or higher quality you need to upgrade to a 6-operator SY77/TG77 or SY99 (or maybe an FS1R...but that's a different story).
@@mooncat2972 The two units are both at 0 pitch shift. The chorus effect likely comes from programming within the multi. Hardware synths often had a feature where you could tell one to play odd numbered notes and the other to play even numbered notes. This was a way to gain polyphony, especially on thickly stacked perfs.
Hold the "STORE / EG COPY" button pressed down while navigating with the DATA ENTRY buttons ("DEC/-1/no/off" and "INC/+1/yes/on") to the RAM slot number where you want to save your patch into. When you've reached that slot number, release the "STORE / EG COPY" button and then confirm your choice with the "INC/+1/yes/on" DATA ENTRY button.
How are the two TX81Z's connected if I may ask? I can't seem to find it in the manual. Is it to double polyphony? Thank you.
Controller - tx1 IN - tx1 THRU - tx2 in. Then you set 1 to receive odd notes and the other to receive even. It's not -quite- double the polyphony though. More like 1.5x because of the way the older machines work.
Are you selling the patches at any other web? I just checked ebay link but isn´t working any more. Thanks in advance.
I don't sell them but greytsounds on eBay carries them as sysex files.
Great patches and performance !!!
loads of good patches on this one
Sounds really good
Nice work man - and this synth can be found for a couple hundred still! At 3:14 I wanted you to break into “Heat of the Moment” by Asia right before “push it” haha
Thanks! Yes, the Yamaha 4ops are generally undervalued.
Would you be able to send me the snapperbass sound for the tx81x? I tried to click the link you’ve posted on ebay but it seems live it doesnt exist anymore?
Very nice sounds..👍🏻
Loved the 'thumbs up' for Asythelium. It's still probably one of my personal top 5 favorites !
I had an YS100 for like three decades and programmed the "sh.." out of that thing. I can tell where the limits are. It doesn't get any better than this as far as high quality second generation 4-operator FM sounds (with 8 waveforms per operator) are concerned. For more complex stuff or higher quality you need to upgrade to a 6-operator SY77/TG77 or SY99 (or maybe an FS1R...but that's a different story).
I agree and they programmed these so hard you really need the 2 units stacked!
Sick!!
Hello, it's a shame that 2 tx81z are used in the same time because we can not know how exactly the purchased patches sounded...
It doesn't change the sound in this case, it just gives you more polyphony.
@@12opsynths thank you for answear
@@12opsynths Surely they are finely detuned to give 'chorus' effect.
@@mooncat2972 The two units are both at 0 pitch shift. The chorus effect likely comes from programming within the multi. Hardware synths often had a feature where you could tell one to play odd numbered notes and the other to play even numbered notes. This was a way to gain polyphony, especially on thickly stacked perfs.
@@12opsynths Yeah, which is lovely when you drive slightly different, not only detuned, voices on each.
Most excellent my friend, fantastic sounds! How can you save an edited sound? 🎹 🎶 😎
Hold the "STORE / EG COPY" button pressed down while navigating with the DATA ENTRY buttons ("DEC/-1/no/off" and "INC/+1/yes/on") to the RAM slot number where you want to save your patch into. When you've reached that slot number, release the "STORE / EG COPY" button and then confirm your choice with the "INC/+1/yes/on" DATA ENTRY button.