I finally put my hands on the kronos
Posted: Sat Feb 26, 2011 8:11 pm
I finally could test the Kronos today.
Review follows tomorrow.
Anybody else involved in the North-Italian tour?
Highlights:
* sound definition IS oasys-like.
Let's forget the motif.
Impressive.
* best EP emulation I ever heard. Very, very, very good.
The plus is: it's pair or better than cp-1, but you have the full palette of effect modeling and programming.
Kronos wins hands down.
* ws-like pads 90% of WS.
* analogue emulations very good, jury still out about their modularity
* HD-1 is "mature". Meaning: it's at the end of the road, its boobs are sagging. Can't be improved.
* the LCD is unsatisfying. They crammed too much definition into a too little screen..
not very detailed at touch, controls are very small and will need a pen. Difficult to read. Too many pictures, too little info. Can't ever imagine playing pads on it.
Bottom line:
a) if Korg releases an SV-2 based on the Kronos' piano & EP emulations under 2000, Clavia is dead. DEAD!
b) the rompler as a concept is dead. physical modeling is too advanced.
Brass and winds are ashamed by comparison to pluked strings (the fretless are huge) or EPs.
c) the Kronos is "incomplete". It's a transition machine.
sampled brass and strings, choirs, whatever seem to belong to a DIFFERENT synth.
If you split (piano/brass) the keyboard, it's like your playing a cp5 on the keft hand and an M3 on the right. The ears just revolt.
d) until they develop a decent orchestral physical modeling, korg will live a dichotomy.
Marginal comment:
build quality is not good.
visually it doesn't look 3/4000 euros, and functionally it's not-so-tough metal... and the part most exposed to live and transportation damages, the side panels, is... rigid and fragile plastic?!? Come on, THAT's the part that should have been wood or soft plastic or steel.
Further "news" from Korg personnel:
* no chance of a rack. never. the concept is DEAD.
* Sv-2 could be in the making, with Kronos' ep, hammond and piano engines.
Also a "pure synth" could be in the making (a few light keys, only VA synth engines, no hd, no sequencer, just a performance polysix+ms20+etc etc)
"in the making" meaning: AFTER the kronos has been throughly MILKED. NAMM 2012?
I can wait.
My final decision:
a) no final decision, I'll wait for the reference guide because I need testing the conflicting information about the Kronos' modularity [I am afraid I believe Danatkorg (=no modularity), not Mirabella (modularity)]
b) if SV-2 is released tomorrow for 2000 eur, I'll immediately buy one.
See ya tomorrow
Review follows tomorrow.
Anybody else involved in the North-Italian tour?
Highlights:
* sound definition IS oasys-like.
Let's forget the motif.
Impressive.
* best EP emulation I ever heard. Very, very, very good.
The plus is: it's pair or better than cp-1, but you have the full palette of effect modeling and programming.
Kronos wins hands down.
* ws-like pads 90% of WS.
* analogue emulations very good, jury still out about their modularity
* HD-1 is "mature". Meaning: it's at the end of the road, its boobs are sagging. Can't be improved.
* the LCD is unsatisfying. They crammed too much definition into a too little screen..
not very detailed at touch, controls are very small and will need a pen. Difficult to read. Too many pictures, too little info. Can't ever imagine playing pads on it.
Bottom line:
a) if Korg releases an SV-2 based on the Kronos' piano & EP emulations under 2000, Clavia is dead. DEAD!
b) the rompler as a concept is dead. physical modeling is too advanced.
Brass and winds are ashamed by comparison to pluked strings (the fretless are huge) or EPs.
c) the Kronos is "incomplete". It's a transition machine.
sampled brass and strings, choirs, whatever seem to belong to a DIFFERENT synth.
If you split (piano/brass) the keyboard, it's like your playing a cp5 on the keft hand and an M3 on the right. The ears just revolt.
d) until they develop a decent orchestral physical modeling, korg will live a dichotomy.
Marginal comment:
build quality is not good.
visually it doesn't look 3/4000 euros, and functionally it's not-so-tough metal... and the part most exposed to live and transportation damages, the side panels, is... rigid and fragile plastic?!? Come on, THAT's the part that should have been wood or soft plastic or steel.
Further "news" from Korg personnel:
* no chance of a rack. never. the concept is DEAD.
* Sv-2 could be in the making, with Kronos' ep, hammond and piano engines.
Also a "pure synth" could be in the making (a few light keys, only VA synth engines, no hd, no sequencer, just a performance polysix+ms20+etc etc)
"in the making" meaning: AFTER the kronos has been throughly MILKED. NAMM 2012?
I can wait.
My final decision:
a) no final decision, I'll wait for the reference guide because I need testing the conflicting information about the Kronos' modularity [I am afraid I believe Danatkorg (=no modularity), not Mirabella (modularity)]
b) if SV-2 is released tomorrow for 2000 eur, I'll immediately buy one.
See ya tomorrow