Perhaps it was the way she looked in sleek blue metallic... the soft white of her keys... the sweetness of her voice... the way her LCD longed to be touched... perhaps it was the way she lit up when tuned on... what ever it was, I was hooked and this was going to be a lasting relationship.
We started out slow and easy, exploring her over 950 voices and 400 styles and then we decided to make music. That is when the trouble began. I guess I should have recognized that the shudder she gave when I laid "Songs of the 30s, 40s and 50s" on her, was not exactly one of excitement.
My songs and her styles were half a century apart. She was young, vibrant, hip and cool and I was beginning to feel old. She wanted to swing, dance, rock, disco, salsa and feel alive and I wanted to play "Puff the Magic Dragon". This was not working.
We separated for awhile, she sat silent in one corner of the room and I in the other. Sure, she tried to lure me back. Try my MP3 dual player/recorder she purred... but all I could find was a 45 RPM recording of Hank Williams from the 1950s... guess that was the last record that I bought. Record a couple of songs on my sequencer she begged... what? and listen to all of those mistakes I play. Care to join me for a little duet on the vocalizer she cooed... with this voice you gotta be kidding I replied.
In the ensuing months I made a token effort to reconcile by adding a few converted, Yamaha, Ketron and other styles, but it was not enough to ignite the fire... and so we agreed to part.
She takes with her the installed dual MP3 player/recorder, DS1H Korg Damper Pedal, 3 DVD set of Korg Arranger Secrets, V2.01, original disks, manual and the shipping carton she arrived in... and I get to look for a new love.
Visit for sale at:
http://www.synthzone.com/ubbs/Forum29/HTML/002575.html Key of G