With the JN-80, Behringer presents a successful reproduction of the classic analog synthesizer Roland Juno-60 from 1982. Anyone who appreciates the structure and straightforward sound of old Roland Juno synthesizers will find exactly that in the JN-80. Apart from the programmer section, the layout of the control panel differs from the historical original only in details.
The simplicity of the classic subtractive signal path of the Juno synths is also responsible for their great popularity, as most settings can be used to produce "musical" results directly. Surfaces, pads, brass, basses and much more are part of the typical sound repertoire of the historic Juno series.
The reissue JN-80 scores with a significantly larger preset memory (400 instead of 56 memory locations), increased polyphony (8 instead of 6 voices), poly, duo and
The 400 presets, which can be overwritten at will, are joined by Panel Mode; as soon as this is activated, the sound corresponds to the current controller settings. Thanks to the full MIDI implementation, the JN-80 can be automated by any DAW or master sequencer.

A voice of the JN-80 consists of an oscillator that generates the sawtooth and/or square waveforms with PWM, a sub-oscillator and the noise generator. This is followed by a resonance-free high-pass filter, which can be used to tame the bass range; the excellent-sounding 24dB

Behringer JN-80