YouTuber Alex Ball gets his hands on Tony Banks’ old Roland JD-800 synth and finds that it still contains his Genesis tour patches from the ‘90s

 Roland JD-800
Roland JD-800

It’s one thing to be able to say that you’ve got your hands on a Roland JD-800 synth that was once owned and played by Genesis keyboard player Tony Banks, but when it’s got his original patches in it - the ones he played on tour throughout the ‘90s - then the flexing potential is even greater.

Happily, YouTuber Alex Ball isn’t keeping this thing all to himself. In fact, he’s made a video that features him demoing said sounds.

Some of them - those that were used in Invisible Touch, Domino and Mama, for example - are conveniently named so that Ball can immediately tell which songs they correspond to. In other cases (Home By The Sea) he had to consult live performance videos and work it out himself.

The real Genesis deep divers among you will be pleased to know that Ball also breaks down the sounds, showing you how they were programmed.

Released in 1991, the JD-800 was a monster digital synth that offered analogue-style hands-on control. Roland released a plugin emulation a couple of years ago, but we’d still like to see a hardware reboot, too.

This is actually the second of Ball’s Genesis-themed videos. The first, released last week, shows him rifling through a collection of E-MU floppy disks that feature data created by Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford,

Highlights here include a selection of Collins’ famous gated drum sounds, a disk of his song data and the kick and snare sounds from Mike + The Mechanics' All I Need Is A Miracle.