I had been trying to get a MicroArranger, and always just been too late. "Oh no, we just sold the last one in stock, but can we interest you in a PA5X/Genos/other ridiculous non-option?" I've heard this a lot.
Why I wanted a MicroArranger: modest size, capable of handling new style creation on-board, capable of driving external synths, capable of structuring songs as sets of chords that can be slapped together very quickly, modest price.
Is there any real equivalent in the market today? The EK series doesn't seem to have the onboard style creation option, nor does the i3 (yeah, yeah, software blahblahblah tell it to the marines), the humble PA300 seems to be unobtainium, and even if it were costs a grand.
Am I missing some secret sauce in the EK series, or does the i3 have it, just hidden? Or should I be looking at a NDLR or something else entirely?
Logical replacement for MicroArranger
Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
I guess that it will be a NDLR, because the MicroArranger has vanished into a big void of mystery, hunted by large, unsympathetic men with vaguely unidentifiable accents who wield baseball bats and leather straps. Casio seem to have dropped their roughly comparable lines, much to my dismay, and so the NDLR stands alone and proud on a cliff, the wild winds tugging at its coat.
Seriously, in terms of sequencing a backdrop which stays in key across complex changes, with adaptable textures and structures, on the fly? The field is narrow, expensive and frustrating.
Seriously, in terms of sequencing a backdrop which stays in key across complex changes, with adaptable textures and structures, on the fly? The field is narrow, expensive and frustrating.