JD-XA completely flew below my radar when it originally came out. I blame the JD-Xi for that. But now, seeing it reach EOL and getting sold out on most shops, it piqued my interest somehow… Started researching about it, and eventually managed to buy one of the last remaining units in my country. Put on the overlays and the thing stopped looking all tacky, and became like a respectable looking instrument. It has a Star Wars -esque aesthetic to it with the overlays and the red LEDs going on.

I am totally in love with this thing! Its a bit of a pain to program in depth no doubt, but its basically a Roland’s quirky take on the Analog Four. Many of the same things apply to it than to the A4 - for some people, it sounds funny and doesnt feel intuitive/immediate enough, to those willing to roll up their sleeves and start exploring, there’s an universe of sounds in there to be discovered… A very misunderstood bit of kit.

I am starting a new music project, which uses only the JD-XA for everything. Only the internal sequencer and arps. I already learned how to flick between patterns in a fluent enough fashion (basic DJ stuff really), so I’ll keep it one pattern per “song”. The sequencer remembers BPM for each preset, so I can even vary tempos between tracks.

I originally started making music with a crappier setup than what a single JD-XA can do. I like the idea of coing “back to basics” with it. I could add some knobby controller to it for faster part mixing and that’s all I’ll need

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