Originally posted by Anthony Johnson:
I fully agree with the post by "to the genesys"
His comments are almost identical to what I have said when, some time ago, I made a post on here and also on another site regarding the lack of modules.
I have, in the past, already written to Roland and Korg because both of these companies have previously sold some of their products in module form.
Ketron is alone among the arranger manufacturers in that they have always produced a module. I still use a Solton MS40 - still ultra reliable after many years of use and humping around on gigs. This has a few sounds which are still better than some on both my Tyros3 & Technics KN7000.
The Ketron SD3 is a brilliant module, let down only because it has stuck with the outdated floppy disk rather than build in a USB pen drive fitting. It can be bought with a Hard Drive but this is a rip-off by Ketron - the price difference is disgusting when you consider the cheap prices of giant hard drives which are on the market now.
As I have stated before, If every manufacturer offered a module, I would definitely buy them all - easy to swap around (or even use in unison) and there is no better way of sussing a keyboard out without a big spend. It was the use, many years ago, of a Technics SMAC 1200 module, (which I still have - working perfectly) which turned me onto Technics keyboards and led to me buying many of their products. This should be all the incentive any manufacturer needs.
Tony
Regarding your experience with Technics that is a reason that a lot of persons over look for an arranger module.
The arranger module would not be for someone to replace their current arranger but it would provide them with arranger sounds, styles and features from another manufacturer.
You would not have every conceivable button on the arranger. You would have the essential buttons for gigging.
And, as Diki has stated on another thread, a foot pedal can be use to eliminate having to use your hand for some of the most used functions on an arranger. So I think he also understands how an arranger module can be used.
After you have the arranger module, when the real TOTL arranger comes out the customer may have been converted to that brand. And if not, the manufacturer has their name in that person’s rig.
You would have to look at the arranger as a marketing tool for the manufacturer.
Its like the I phone. It has computer task that are best done on a computer. But what the I phone does is saturate the market with Mac tools and products so when selling computers, Mac has the reference to I phones. Same thing with arranger modules.
So if Korg, Roland or Casio wants to get back in to the arranger market (TOTL or MOTL), they may be well served to take a new approach.
Not to mention, they could encourage some of the ws market with this new machine.
I know there is another thread about arranger modules, but that is a completely different product than what I am talking about. Over there, they are just talking about taking the keys from an arranger and selling it as a module. That is far from what I am advocating.