MS-DOS wrote:i am sure that the box unfolds itself after some use but the problem is i found no actual depth to it. there is no learning curve really. its simple.
I think the depth in all the elctribes comes not from their individual parts and features, but in the way they can work together. If you look at the electribe as a simple sequencer that plays some basic synths through minimal effects, then it definitely starts to feel like there's nothing but limitations getting in the way.
It's not one of those things where you spend some time creating a cool sound first, then record yourself playing it, and finally add some effects to polish it up. With a workflow/mindset like that, it's boring as hell, I agree.
BUT, when you instead focus on creating grooves and not synth sounds you neccesarily "play", then things get more interesting. Maybe a crazy BPM LFO modulation on a particular OSC's Edit knob sounds killer with the high hat pattern you programmed. Or perhaps it's manually tweaking the filter cutoff when set to the MS20 bandpass mode, and then you accidentally switch the motion recording to step mode instead of smooth and you end up with something totally different than you planned, but sounds way better than you expected.
The depth in the electribes comes from these sort of interactions and how they compliment not only each other, but other happy accidents in the same pattern. Things like that take time to learn and understand to the point where you're not just hoping for accidents, and I think very few people have had it long enough to really explore it with that much depth.
To me it's more about creating cool sounding musical phrases. Via a combination of real time playing/tweaking, and using the built in effects and modulations in interesting ways you might not have tried with a regular synth. And by regular synth I mean something where you can create sounds that are cool regardless of the tempo or notes you play, versus something like the electribe that relies on the interaction of pattern specific grooves to really shine. That's what seperates groove boxes from other devices IMO.
Not trying to disagree with you, some of the limitations you list are things that frustrate me too. Heck, I could add quite a few more. Just that it takes time to really learn the nuances of these critical interactions to get the most out of ANY of the electribes IMO. Some people just don't have the patience, and fair play to them, groovebox work flows aren't for everyone. But at the same time I think there's a lot more depth to the electribe than a lot of people have taken the time to really explore or understand.
The original EMX was the same way IMO. It took a few months before people really started understanding just how much depth was there, and I think with the tools Korg have included in the new electribe, it might even take longer as there's just so many more possibilities now.
Then again, just my $0.02. I get frustrated with it too sometimes FWIW.