Yamaha • YS200 / B200

Yamaha YS200 Image

Yamaha YS200

The YS200 is a 4-operator digital FM synthesizer in a rather funky looking keyboard design released in 1988. It featured an 8-track on-board sequencer with many advanced edit functions and up to 8 song capacity. It has a 61-note velocity/aftertouch sensitive keyboard, can hold up to 300 patches, two LFO's, vibrato, and more. It tends to produce very deep dance/techno basses, eighties digital synth sounds, and new age sounds.It uses the same synthesis as the TX81Z, which means it has 8 waveforms to choose from rather than just sinewaves, which gives it a wide range of possible sounds.

The complexity of FM synthesis is somewhat relieved by the "Easy Edit" controls for basic editing operations, but this can also be limiting since not all parameters are accessible. Full editing of the patches requires a MIDI based patch editor, such as YSEditor, which is available for free but only for the Atari ST. Fortunately, it works on Atari ST emulators for the PC. It's worth the trouble because it allows you to load up your YS with original patches from the TX81Z and some of Yamaha's other classic 4-operator DX synths, making the YS a good way to get your hands on classic patches from several keyboards all in one box.

Yamaha B200 Image

Yamaha EOS B200

The Yamaha B200 is essentially a YS200 with speakers and a more subdued appearance. The B200 uses rather powerful 2 x 20W speakers and also has a stereo line-in (for amplification only). The pitch and mod wheels on this version form two halves of a sphere, which looks modern but ends up being a bit awkward. In Japan, the B200 was called the "EOS B200".


VISITOR COMMENTS

Comments page 1 of 2
Click here to add a comment
RawBC
Posted 146 days ago
I feel like the YS200 gets panned for it's looks, and that's where folks walk away. I dig it, big volume knob and all. Aside from the looks, it is a great FM synth that is very well built. The after touch is nice! Sure, programming is a bit different to get used to, but it does make sense. Once you get the hang of it, you can generate some great sounds. My YS is one of those synths that I turn on and I am gone for 2 hours. It feels good to play and hear it. 4 years ago, I was looking for a new (to me) synth, and I stumbled upon the YS on Craig's List. I made a visit to try it and walked away with it that day. I couldn't have been happier, and the seller knew it had a great new home. I guess that's how it goes sometimes. If you see one, try it before you pan it, you may be surprised and it may be your flavor. It's just a great, solid, under-appreciated synth. I think I am going to fire up the YS right now and take it for a ride around the block.
Marcel ALexandre
Posted 257 days ago
Oh...(sight)Those were good times... I can proudly say I had them both and YES FM PROGRAMMING IS A PAIN IN THE NECK at the beginning...But this little beast turn out to be extremely twekable and surprisingly easy.Got my YS200 brand new out of the box as a Christmas present from my Dad back in 88 and loaded in the top of my MC450 organ so could use 3 keyboardas plus bass , AWSOME!!!
Must tell es , can be a bit acward and intimidating at the beginning but later on , about 2 hours or so became my best friend , had friends with ROLAND and KAWAI...HAHAHAHA!!!! They could NEVER get the phat sounds this Allien look like keboard could give.Sadly my YS200 had a horrible faith a few years ago and haven´t find another one.WON´T EVEN THINK ABOUT IT , IF I FIND ONE WILL GET IT FOR SURE EVEN AT RETAIL PRICE , IT IS TOTALL WORTH EVERY PENNY.
raza
Posted 341 days ago
Ok, i just got the ys200, yes i might be quite late but for a jungle bush man from okene-nigeria. i am happy to say the deep soulfull sounds of this machine has brought joy to the good people of my land on church days. vintage is great
dPgn
Posted 436 days ago
My mother bought me one when I was a kid, I think it was 1989 so I was 10 or 11. My mother had a DX11 which I used to create patches, as there were no editing capabilities in YS200. Indeed, DX11 and YS100/YS200 are essentially the same synth, targeted for different audiences. DX11 looks professional and allows editing, YS200 looks ugly, but has a built-in sequencer, and YS100 just looks ugly...
 

infoRatings


Specifications




Resources