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#170483 - 01/11/00 01:25 AM
Re: Samples
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Member
Registered: 11/26/99
Posts: 76
Loc: Germany
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Hello Jick,
the PSR 9000 has many multisamples. At first I mention drums - drums are the strength of the PSR 9000 and as I know almost all Cymbals and Hi-Hats consist of at least two stereo samples. Further Live! Vocal - it consists of three different samples (Uuuh, Paaa, Dao), Sweet Flute (as you wrote), Live! Nylon Guitar, Live! E-Guitar, Funk Guitar, Crunch Guitar, Sweet Trombone, Growl Sax, Cool! EPiano and many others.
I could not answer your second question, because I have not sampled till now. When I experience it, I will let you know.
Marek
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#170487 - 01/12/00 01:09 AM
Re: Samples
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Member
Registered: 12/03/99
Posts: 732
Loc: Phoenix, AZ USA
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Jick, I do not own a Korg keyboard, so I will let someone who does correct me on this: Korg i30 (and other i-series keyboards) utilize their AI2 sound engine, which comes with a significant number of basic waveshapes, which are then combined and massaged through a full set of synth tools to produce the sounds. You can not import sound samples, but you have the same flexibility in an arranger keyboard as in their other synthesizers (not Trinity or Triton, though). I listened to i-series keyboards at the music store and find that their sounds are good for the techno and hip-hop stuff, but not as good as some of the other keyboards in reproducing acoustic instrument sounds, although they do come pretty close. For many people performing non-original repertoires in front of the audience the acoustic sounds are pretty important, that is why there is not too many i30 users posting in this forum. However, depending on what you want to do, i30 might fit the bill for you; besides, it has a beautiful touch screen and very efficient operator interface (in my opinion). Also, many of the styles are excellent.
Regards, Alex
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Regards, Alex
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