No, this is misstated. I use Reason 2.0 and it is not an arranger program by any stretch. It is an awesome soft-synth/soft-sampler package and sequencer program that is very much like having an analog/digital synth studio with virtual patch cords, effects, and mixers. There's no need for any external hardware: Reason can produce CD-quality finished music or MP3 files. It's one of the most visually-interesting music programs ever made and seems especially good at producing techno dance music, but it is not an arranger at all and has no chord recognition/accompaniment in the sense that an arranger keyboard does. The best part is that Reason does not require an excessive amount of RAM and CPU to run so even less-than-the-latest Mac or PC laptops can run it (I run it on a Win98/333Mhz/128MB laptop trouble-free and have heard of people using far less). You can try it out for free here:
http://www.propellerheads.se/index.php3 Some people are using the new Midiman Oxygen 8 USB keyboard controller with Reason:
http://www.reasonstation.net/tools/oxygen8/ But if you really want to see a cool keyboard controller for Reason, check the Novation ReMOTE out:
http://messe.harmony-central.com/Musikme...77&image2.y=126 Novation announced prematurely at Winter NAMM 2001 that it was developing a special keyboard with built-in speakers for Reason called the ReMOTE. However, production problems have slowed release and latest rumors are that the Novation ReMOTE keyboard will be available in the first quarter of 2003, maybe.
However, the is no reason (pun intended) why you simply couldn't use an arranger keyboard as a midi controller for a laptop loaded with Reason, especially if it had built-in speakers and a stereo return or input so that you could take the audio from your laptop into the keyboard's sound system. If you want to lock yourself away in a remote cabin with a powerful music production studio, this might be the way to go.