125th AES Convention Coverage »  (San Francisco, CA: October 2 - 5)

Home > Synth > Keyboard And MIDI Reviews > Ensoniq > SQ1

Ensoniq SQ1

Summary
Manufacturer URL http://www.ensoniq.com/
Ease of Use 7.3 (15 responses)
Features 7.6 (15 responses)
Expressiveness/Sounds 7.4 (14 responses)
Reliability 7.2 (16 responses)
Customer Support 2.5 (14 responses)
Overall Rating 7.9 (16 responses)
Submit a review for this product!

Page: 1 2 (Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 reviews per page) Showing 11 - 18 of 18 reviews
Advertisement
Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: US $1200
Submitted 05/31/2002 at 12:10pm by will sanders
Email: greenlabs<at>aol dot com

Ease of Use : 8
some presets are great such as the dark grand but others like the basses and concert strings are not.editing is easy.

Features : 7
the effects are ok. it is easily expanded.you can route any and every type of midi through it.the sequencer is ok but needs more than 8 tracks.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 7
some sounds such as the organ section are powerful but the string section is'nt.i would prefer the keys to be weighted to give that feel so you have to be animated in your playing to get that effect that you desire.

Reliability : 8
It is very reliable but it crashed on me 2 times and i lost quite a bit of unreplaceable work. so i try to do dumps very often to prevent it and i also got memory expansion to eliminate memory issues.

Customer Support : 8
there is good support here in n.carolina so i have not had that problem and i hope i dont the sq1 was my first real board and my only board right now and is also the cornerstone sound to my tracks.the sq1 is a classic and paired up with an mpc or a korg or all together with other modules is a dream setup.

Overall Rating : 8
if it were stolen i would shed a tear because i have had it for so long.sometimes i want to sell and get a triton88x to replace but i cant.i would get the triton88x and build around the sq1 which i am currently doing.


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: US $250
Submitted 05/28/2002 at 09:17am by Bruce
Email: blackcamaro at freei<dot>net

Ease of Use : No Opinion
Without a manual this workstation is a nightmare to figure out. Once you look at the manual even just skimming it everything is very simple. As far as the "american" foot pedal you can find a pedal at any music store it is the same as the "Japanese" Casio footpedal.

Features : No Opinion
The keyboard plays fantastic and the pressure senstive keys are great on the piano, drum and bass sounds.

Expressiveness/Sounds : No Opinion
I have been using the SQ1 for Jazz and Funk, but I kow it has no limitation musicly it will take you as far as your creativity will let you go.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
If it were lost or stolen I would get anothor SQ1 or SQ2


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/30/2001 at 08:51pm by Rainer Aschemeier

Ease of Use : 6
You really need to get rid of all you ever knew about other Workstations, if your SQ1 is your first ENSONIQ product. You have to "think behind edges" if you want so. The logic of programming this thing is not very logical! I think, it's typically "american" in it's way to be different than the rest. e.g. the polarity of the foot switch pedal is different than that of the other manufacturer's (e.g. ROLAND, YAMAHA, etc.).

The MIDI - Programming is quite easy to use and if you've made it once, it is really clever and easy to handle. For the sound - programming you should use one of the several software - editors which you get as shareware on different magazine - CD - ROMS or on the internet.

Features : No Opinion

Expressiveness/Sounds : No Opinion
Sound Quality is partly escellent. Especially the organ - sounds are great. Forget Organ Expanders just as VOCE V5 or stuff like that!

The SQ1 tops the most of them. Actually this it has no drawbars, but if you know how to program the sounds right, then you get really really great Hammond-like sounds and even the distortion and simulated rotary speaker are great! This is your chance to get great organ sounds at an absolutely budget price!

The Synth are partly analog - like. Great OBERHEIM - like sounds for good usage e.g. at Songs like "Jump" by VAN HALEN. The
digital sounds are not so tasteful, as they are often very cold and ugly.

The Strings of course does not sound like real strings, but are partly very similar to the "Mellotron" - Sound, which is often heard on some 70's stuff like LED ZEPPELIN or RAINBOW.

The Pianos are generally crap (equally acoustic and e-piano). Maybe that's the reason why the SQ2 had an external Piano - Sample -Section. There was also a model called SQ1+ which had that section, but I don't know how it sounds.

In general the organs are the big advantage of the SQ1. This is really astonishing good for such a low price.

Reliability : 9
This thing is really undestroyable! Physically it has a metal - case, "psychologically" I really never had any problems with my SQ1 in gig situations. The Sequencer is not reliable! For it "freezes" the keyboard when the memory is up and you have to do a hard reset. That's the only problem I ever had with this instrument in 12 years of usage.

Customer Support : 1
I can't speak for the rest of the world, but in Germany it is a catastrophy! If you have a problem with your SQ1 (which is almost never the case) you should think of living for half a year without your instrument because the service is so bad.

Overall Rating : 9
If you play keyboards in rock band this is the gear for you! It has great great great great organ sounds, which you can use with distortion and rotary speaker, it has fat fat fat fat analog synthies, pads and lead sounds and it has Mellotrone - like strings. It's pretty cool and looks good on stage. I think optically it is beautiful. It is a reliable instrument and it is really cheap in our days if you buy it used. You can also get the rack version, the SQ-R, with the same features as SQ1 and SQ2.

The Only Problem: The Sequencer is bad and the Piano - Sounds are very ugly! For that problem I have a KURZWEIL K2000, which has some of the greatest pianos ever. That duo is simply great for doing straight rock stuff with your band. Try it! It makes fun!


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: AUS$ 2500
Submitted 05/05/2001 at 10:38pm by John W Ramsden

Ease of Use : 6
50% preset sounds OK ,reasonable piano samples...lots of scope editing sounds effects , patches etc. Manual may as well have been in hyrogliphycs.

Features : 6
Reasonable polyphony, typical unweighted key action. effects OK but bit resricted , would have been nice to have echo for an option. I am desparate to obtain a full set of sound cards (only bought one when perchased in 1995 and can no longer get them. appart from that I use sequencer regularly for ``Sketching`` .

Expressiveness/Sounds : 7
Presets as said before reasonable facsimile to accoustic instruments ( piano & Strings).Drum kits excellent for rock, jazz etc.

Reliability : 8
Regularly doesn`t boot up but easily cured by turning on and off.
Overall dream to use if you don`t read manual. Just changed 1st battery after 6yrs!

Customer Support : 1
Customer support non existent. Just as well it has been reliable so far!

Overall Rating : 8
Very reliable machine good combo unit


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: US $350
Submitted 07/10/2000 at 05:18am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Manual!? Who needs that? After about 5 hours of playing around I got all of the functions, mind you though, if you are a first time synther it could be a bit hard knowing what all the functions really does. For the sake of editing I could recommend using it, but it's more fun just playing around, beside the manual isn't easy to use - you'll have to read it at least twice, thrice before grasping somewhat.
The presets of the mashine aren't great at all. Some of them (15%) is usable, but the rest... However, there are 20 drumkit presets and that are quite usable. ( I have figured out that older synths have this thing in common with lousy presets...) But who needs 'em anyway? There are great utilities around the net to create great sounds on your 'pooter and then sed them through MIDI to your SQ1.
The sequencer is very reliable and I haven't had any problem with it so far. The only thing that is a bit annoying is that there isn no real option for enlongate the FIRST track you make. I.e if you edit your first track, let's say make it 10 beats long, then you cannot append that track, but have to copy it into a new sequence and then copy it once again.

Features : 7
It's got a 21 polyphony, which may seem unsufficient, but I have seldom encountered any problem with this.
This little bugger has several FX which all are lovely to work with and use. You can create much more than you thought the first time you started the synth up. Once again; play around - put all perimiters to the limit and encounter the marvel as a new great sound flows out your speakers.
The SQ1 has quite low capacity for the inbuilt sequencer, but you can fairly cheaply buy an expansion - which I recommend. Several ROM-cards are to be found around the net, both blank and both with presets on. You really should consider buying one of them - to either store sounds or sequencer data.
There are three MIDI ports on this baby; One In, one out and one through. and you have the possibility to send and recieve SysEx.
The keyboard isn't weighted, but I love the feeling of it. I mainly use my SQ1 keyboard for my other synths as well. You have the possibility to use aftertouch, but only if you connect a pedal...
As I mentioned earlier; the Sequencer is great and you can make either single 8-track patches or combine two up to 16-track patches (double 8-tracks).
The only thing I am upset with (an therefor lowering my judgement by 1 pt) is the display. It's idiotically tiny and a strong spotlight or the sun makes it impossible to read whatever there might be standing and when you edit any text this flashing cursor will appear and prevent you from actual seeing what you are trying to type.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 8
The sounds (presets) on this mashine isn't the best. Some of them are usable, but my advice is to rebuild, rebuild, rebuild. You can create almost anything on it - specially if you have a sampler - which I don't (unfortunately). You might reconsider your choice of synth if you are planning to make rave musick or such, but it's a very reliable, stabile and it's a great all-round type of synth.
Even though it's not weighted it react to velocity and very accurately I might add.

Reliability : 9
This is very stabile, but I wouldn't trust my life on it. It might freak out sometime. I have had one crash when I started it up and it wouldn't operate for 20 minutes and I had some troule with the sound not stopping after I depressed the key - i.e the sound "hanged" but I only had to change soundbank to make it stop and this has only occured twice (the same day). The mashine is viritually a tank otherwise, strong and robust and could withstand most hardships. One word of caution though! the buttons are a bit plastic and sometimes it feels like you're going to break them any minute and if you do.. Well yhey are replaceble, but expensive.
Otherwise if you treat the synth good, dont spill hot sugary coffee over and if you change the internal battery every 4 years there'll be no problem at all!

Customer Support : 1
Customer support!?! I wonder if that word even exist at the Ensoniq support's vocabulary... IF you are lucky and comes through and IF you are lucky to actually speak with the right guy, then I'll wager my salary on their answer will be : "Sorry, but it's out of stock", "Sorry, that's not in production anymore" or "we are unable to help". It's better to go look on the net for resources regarding Ensoniq stuff. Ensoniq used to have a quite-so-good website, but ever since they teamed up with Creative (Creative bought them) there is little or none information what so ever about the Ensoniq synths.

The rat of 1 is just becasue I feel sorry for them! No customary support what so ever - unless, perhaps, if you have a brand new model.

Overall Rating : 8
Even though it's not flawless I love this synth. It's robust, makes beutiful sound, is cheap, lets you do what you want. Ever since I bought it 3 years ago it's my little treasure! OK it could have a bigger and better display, Ok it doesn't have the exact same bass sound as an analog synth, but for an early 90's synth it's VERY good and if it broke down on me or in fact was stolen I'd go looking for a new one immediatly


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/04/2000 at 04:30am by Fabio Calzolari
Email: parduz at altavista<dot>net

Ease of Use : 9
This is one of the best i've found.
When i buy this workstation, in Italy was an invasion of Korg M1 (for same price of the SQ 1).
But if you can distinguish the M1 sounds, with SQ1 you can create some of original all the times, without a "Ensoniq logo" printed in your sound. I think that the editing section is one of the most powerfull you can find (with the wheel you can modulate all params.). This means that is not one of the simplest, but i've never find difficulty making my sounds.
The manual is not great, but it solve your problems (yes, you must read it 3 times before!)

Features : 8
21 notes poliphony (not a lot, but you can work good), some good effects (but if you use the SQ1 in "multichannel" mode you "can" use only CHORUS + REVERB), it accept cards that double the sounds you can have, a good midi implementation, and the sequencer is useful, but with a computer, who cares?

Expressiveness/Sounds : 8
Forgot the realism! But it sounds great. I'm more annoyed from some Korg Wavestation sounds than my old SQ1, if we don't think at drumkits (good, but...)

Reliability : 3
The firmware is the bad thing of this keyboard: store your data systematically, SQ1 reset themselves too much times (1-2 times per years).

Customer Support : 3
I dont know how big is the Ensoniq corporation. In italy it changes support locations and affiliates for each time my SQ1 reset the data...

Overall Rating : 9
I love this keyboard despite the firmware problems. If my SQ1 dead, i'm lost.


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: #250 (UK) used
Submitted 01/20/2000 at 12:12pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Features : 10
OK. Throw away the manual.
The SQ1 is capable of producing the most extroadinary sounds.
The presets are 90% hopeless. use them as a starting block to
edit your own sounds, but make sure you push all the parameters
to the limit, and you'll begin to open up the possibilities of
the machine.
Use these sounds in conjunction with the great 16-track sequencer
to create all sorts of weird little loops.
Now add the FX - but remember to push those parameters to the limit.
You should end up with a sequence of about 45 seconds that sounds
like nothing you've ever heard before.
Sample it.
Start again.
I've used my SQ1 in this way, as a kind of palette/sketchpad for over 10 years, and it never sounds dated , always throws up surprises and is the starting block for virtually all my tunes. Get one for about #250 (UK) and start weirding out!

Expressiveness/Sounds : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion
They never break down - just change the battery once every 5 years.

Customer Support : 1
I spilt beer on my SQ1. It was impossible to get replacement parts.
If you damage your machine, buy a new one. The company are a joke.
But the machines themselves never conk out.

Overall Rating : 10
This is the sound creation machine I advise everyone to own.
Warpout to your hearts content.
But use with a sampler.
Hooray!


Product: Ensoniq SQ1
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/16/1999 at 03:49pm by Keith Snyder
Email: keith at woollymammoth<dot>com

Ease of Use : 3
The presets sound fine. Editing is a pain. The manual is as they all are: Indecipherable until you've read it three times. The LCD has a big blinking cursor that obliterates whatever alphanumerica character you're trying to edit. Lousy design.
I still have to look in the manual every time I want to access a non-ROM-based sound from within a multi. Totally non-intuitive.

Features : 5
The keyboard action is very "synthy," and there is no aftertouch, though the unit does respond to aftertouch from external controllers. The built-in effects are iffy but usable. It will accept cards, but I haven't bothered.
I have not used the on-board sequencer.

Expressiveness/Sounds : 6
No sounds are realistic. It does okay synth stuff. I like it despite this. The onboard effects are okay but not particularly realistic.

Reliability : 3
It is completely unreliable. All the singles within multi patches may randomly reset themselves to 00. The LCD is unreadable in sunlight. Don't count on this unit.

Customer Support : 4
Ensoniq had a service bulletin out on this, so they fixed some grounding problem or other. It made no difference -- things still go wrong.

Overall Rating : 3
If it were stolen, I'd probably get the rack equivalent, the SQ-R, just because I don't want to bother replacing the sounds in my sequences. It would be nice if it worked right.
If you do Sys-Ex dumps at the head of each sequence, the memory randomness won't be a problem.

Page: 1 2 (Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 reviews per page) Showing 11 - 18 of 18 reviews

Email: webmaster@harmony-central.com | © 1995-2007 Harmony Central, Inc. All rights reserved.