Have to use it in real life to find out if the UI feels ‘direct’ enough. Sonically, the synth nails what Wavestation fans expect even just as a preset machine, this is an awesome source of rich, pulsating pads, oddball textures and powerful multi-timbral patches. The engine is fully editable, obviously there’s some menu diving involved (inevitable with a synth as deep as this). Korg has done a fantastic job of walking the line between being faithful to a classic and offering something new. Yeah, the randomize feature looks good, with control over what to randomize and %. I think it’s a little deeper than you give it credit for and besides there’s always this: Would certainly look nice next to my Sub37 More like a players' synth with hands-on control of most params needed when playing live for people not into deeper sound editing and being OK to get a full-size keyboard without aftertouch and USB without audio support.Ī proper editor would be great (the synth controls are very good but they suffer from the same long-winded procedure of actually finding the right sample like in iWavestation) but the Sysex spec indicates that this might not even be technically supported by its firmware.Īll that, including USB audio, could probably done in firmware so I guess I'll wait and see what KORG will add. #KORG WAVESTATION WS1 SYNTHESYSER MANUAL#OK, got the manual and the impression that this is a synth with a fantastic sound engine but limited control in regards to sound editing.
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