Am I being totally odd with this thought? I would really like an analog workstation that is built with the current Korg analog offerings. Give me the Kronos Keybeds with the same specs in the synth and RH styles. I have an X61 and love the keybed, a minilogue and Karp. Now if they took the Minilogue, Karo, Wavestate, Opsix and throw in a couple of their smaller boxes and tie it all together. I could be very very happy. Setlists, smooth sound transitions,velocity, release velocity, poly after touch or at least after touch, plenty of Bank, patch, and sound saving options, a simple sequencer and step sequencer, the display of a Kronos and some of the little displays used on the current individual synths to supplement things would be great in my little dream world. It's all existing technology so the development issues would be with integration between the units. Am I totally out to lunch with this idea?
Let me
Edit this by adding I don’t think everything aI mentioned is analog so maybe this is the wrong forum for this. I should have said hybrid analog digital. Am I wrong the Minilogue, and Karp are analogue but are Opsix and Wavestate? Seems to me the Wavestate is probably digital. I know nothing about the Opsix so maybe it is also. Sorry for the confusion. I just thought it would be cool to have them all in one box with straight forward controls.
Analog Workstation
Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
I like the idea and you all have tried to get me started with midi. I have been a bit overwhelmed by it. Getting the Kronos was so incredible that I could tweak multiple engines and get them to work in the box. I got spoiled and lazy about learning midi. I really should buckle down and dig in. I guess the up side is each device will have all of its own controls and when a company throws them in a box they tend to share a lot of controls.
It's quite easy to get a very basic, but effective MIDI setup going, using nothing more than a bunch of MIDI DIN cables. Choose which is the master keyboard e.g. Kronos, and then connect its MIDI out to the next keyboard's MIDI In. Then connect that keyboard's MIDI Thru to the next keyboard's MIDI In, and continue like that MIDI Thru to Midi In to the end of the chain. The Kronos will send MIDI to all of the other keyboards / sound modules, whilst each individual keyboard can also be played to sound notes in addition to those triggered by the Kronos. Connected this way, there should be no MIDI delay, because the MIDI Ins are normally directly connected by a simple buffer amplifier to the MIDI Thru.
A more sophisticated setup can be acheived using one or more of a variety of MIDI patchbay type modules, but try the simple one first and get ready to be impressed.
.
A more sophisticated setup can be acheived using one or more of a variety of MIDI patchbay type modules, but try the simple one first and get ready to be impressed.
.