In the old days that’s what they did – the G-303, G-808, G-202 and G-505 were all built as controllers for Roland’s early guitar synths, the GR-300 and GR-700, but doubled as regular guitars, too, with 1/4" outputs and mag pickups that could be blended with the synth. They were manufactured by Fujigen (I believe), who also made Greco, but branded as Roland. They had the synth pickup built-in, and the whole system relied on a proprietary 24-pin connection between the guitar and synth unit. For a long time the GR-300, despite being fully analog, had better latency and overall responsiveness than anything Roland/Boss produced afterwards, although perhaps this new unit is better. I had a VG-99 for a while and the best controller for it was an Ibanez with a 13-pin piezo system – it tracked really well, but my GK-equipped guitars never did as well as the old stuff with the GR-300 in that department.
The GR-300, while limited in comparison to a modern synth set-up, has always (to my ears) sounded amazing. The filter is excellent and the whole thing just sounds massive. I tried a Boss SY-300 a few years back, but was never able to get rid of a kind of high frequency harshness to the sound that didn’t work for me. I’m very curious about the GM-800, though. Looking forward to seeing/hearing more about it on this forum!
PS – If anyone’s curious about Roland’s guitar synth history, check out this site, it’s a treasure trove of info: http://www.gr300.com
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