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Korg Kronos - what next?

Posted: Sun Apr 14, 2024 7:36 pm
by aron
I dread the day my Kronos dies. As far as I can tell, there is no replacement as capable as this machine. I have unrealBook dialing up sounds via wireless MIDI and it's FAST. A band I play in, has tons of layering/splits, very fast song transitions and the Kronos handles it like a beast. I use all the program mutes/slider for live use preserving polyphony. It sounds incredible.

But I know it will not last forever. My JP-8000 just died, other keyboards dying too. Capacitors only last so long.

I need those buttons and sliders and the ability to have all the layers and splits. MainStage is slow.

So I ask, what is next?

Re: Korg Kronos - what next?

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2024 3:56 am
by average_male
8-Ball wrote:● Reply hazy, try again
● Ask again later
● Better not tell you now
● Cannot predict now
● Concentrate and ask again

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2024 2:16 pm
by SeedyLee
What's next? Stasis and disappointment.

Korg used to make aspirational, flagship products. Now they make cheap toys. Perhaps that is a transition that was made out of necessity.

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2024 2:46 pm
by Koekepan
Find the products that, in combination, give you what the Kronos would.

The decomposed workstation as pragmatic necessity, rather than explicit, coherent design. It's what we're left with.

I'm still disgusted that Roland never took its AIRA line in that direction.

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2024 2:57 pm
by voip
Get a backup Kronos, or two, even.

.

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2024 6:02 pm
by Sweat
voip wrote:Get a backup Kronos, or two, even.

.
^^^^^ THIS.

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2024 7:39 pm
by Xenophile
Sweat wrote:
voip wrote:Get a backup Kronos, or two, even.

.
^^^^^ THIS.
If you've got thousands of dollars to spare and a road crew to carry it.

Posted: Tue Apr 16, 2024 12:39 am
by Sweat
I don't have thousands of $$ to spare, probably because I play for free. But I do gig heavily and only charge for being my own road crew, and carrying my Kronos. lol.
Like the OP, if you gig regularly, backup gear can be vital. It's insurance. I saved little by little each gig to get an extra K, then two. They are each configured alike. Now it's good that Korg libraries can be shared up to 3 Kronos. I don't bring a backup to local pub gigs, but can be ready for the next show if tragedy strikes.

Posted: Tue Apr 16, 2024 2:07 pm
by fomalhaut
The Nautilus is a stop-gap lower price point solution to still capitalize the platform. But a true Kronos successor is bound to be released, if only due to market pressure from the usual suspects Yamaha, Roland, and whatnot. When, or in which capacity or form, we don't know and cannot predict.

Will it be based on Raspberry's platform like the new Mod/Wavestations? Will it have the Montage's new dual life as a VST and hardware product at the same time for the same price? Or will it have some sort of cloud integration like Roland's ZenCore, gearing towards a subscription?

One thing I'm sure, the amount of $$ to execute the necessary product R&D is staggering for any musical instrument company.

Re: Korg Kronos - what next?

Posted: Wed Apr 17, 2024 1:43 am
by AMR
aron wrote:I dread the day my Kronos dies. As far as I can tell, there is no replacement as capable as this machine. I have unrealBook dialing up sounds via wireless MIDI and it's FAST. A band I play in, has tons of layering/splits, very fast song transitions and the Kronos handles it like a beast. I use all the program mutes/slider for live use preserving polyphony. It sounds incredible.

But I know it will not last forever. My JP-8000 just died, other keyboards dying too. Capacitors only last so long.

I need those buttons and sliders and the ability to have all the layers and splits. MainStage is slow.

So I ask, what is next?
My kronos 88 is on it's 3rd dead power supply and I can't seem to get another one.

An eventual Kronos VST won't replace the fantastic controlling keyboard it is, but will keep its content alive... No reason not to expect such development soon....

Posted: Wed Apr 17, 2024 7:53 am
by kronoSphere
I still believe in a future Korg new and real workstation.
But if not : I will buy a Nautilus to replace my very old Kronos 88 still alive and well !

Posted: Wed Apr 17, 2024 10:24 pm
by aron
Does the Nautilus have the polyphony preserving mode of combinations? Live mode?

OK at least it does have it. Page 767 parameter guide.

Nothing beats the Kronos. This is probably the best keyboard I have ever owned for this type of situation. Unmatched. But you guys know that.

Posted: Fri Apr 19, 2024 1:10 pm
by ITguy54
I always sigh when I see people here still thinking Korg will have a replacement for the Kronos. Don’t get me wrong. There’s nothing wrong with a positive attitude and hope. Inevitably it will turn into the bitter mote of a soul as the harsh reality of Korg’s transformation into a toy musical instrument manufacturer becomes complete. Casio used to inhabit that niche. Now they are trying to make more serious keyboards.

The new Arturia Astrolab is a sign of things to come. When they come out with a “pro version” or updated version with a large display and a sequencer, the paradigm shift away from Korg will be finished. The same thing could happen if Kurzweil updates the K2700 with user sampling. Both keyboards have the potential to become the market replacement for the OASYS/Kronos line.

Posted: Fri Apr 19, 2024 1:13 pm
by ITguy54
Duplicate

Posted: Thu Apr 25, 2024 9:08 pm
by aron
The Astrolab may point to the future, but it's a toy compared to the Kronos.
Only 2 parts, 10 presets, limited effects, 61 keys only etc..

One feature I use all the time is is muting and unmuting of up to 9 parts (layered or split), persevering polyphony when not using parts, FAST changes due to the awesome set lists feature.

No other keyboard (that I know of) can do this quickly and easily.