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Hi Rainer, Thank you for the review. I'm also investigating about the KP3 features for a while. Unfortunately, it seems you can't use a foot controller to select the memories and to trigger the sampling. There were also sync issues but it seems Korg has adressed these in the last OS. Ben. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Rainer Thelonius Balthasar Straschill" <rs@moinlabs.de> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Monday, June 11, 2007 11:12 PM Subject: short review: Korg KP3 Kaoss Pad > By the end of the 90ies, Korg created a revolution on the market for > electronic audio effects. Their KP1 didn't have the astonishing pitch > shifters or reverbs of some high-class effects, nor did it offer > never-seen-before modularity and huge number of parameters like the > well-known competitors. They also didn't knock us out with a price tag in > the $100 region for a 24/96 device, nor did they include state of the art > converters or whatnot. > You got some 60 effects presets, each of them had two parameters which > could > be modified. No possibility to save user presets, and the sound quality > was > rather poor. It did however have a different UI than all of the TCs or > Eventides or Lexicons. The Kaoss Pad's signature X-Y pad which blinked in > red when you moved your finger on it. > The package was rounded off with a mic and turntable in, and with its > tabletop package design, it really served the plug'n'play market, > especially > for DJs (and their wannabe brethren). > > Great examples of its use include Radiohead's live renditions of > "Everything > in its right place", and I seem to remember one list member here had >four > of > these in his setup. > > Some years later, Korg released the followup KP2, which had two sample > lots > which could be used independently to the effects engine, and some of the > effects were now MIDI synced. And the audio quality was vastly improved. > > Back in the day, I got myself a KP1, and it can be heard all over the > early > Eclectic Blah work, as well as on the "Dem Andenken eines Engels" Album > (on > "Epliogue", I play a duet with my guitar and the KP1s sample slot >operated > with my toes). The KP2 had its debut on the "Neinnein auf dem kleinen >Weg" > album (owners of that album might check out the tracks "A Hard Man's Cut" > and "Massive Retaliation"). I did back then decide to keep the KP1, >simply > because some of its effect had such a "vintage digital" feel to them the > KP2 > simply couldn't (or didn't want to) reach. > > Last year, the KP3 was released, and this time, the KP2 wasn't > discontinued. > I had to get one sooner or later. > > The most important changes: four independent sample slots (each a >maximum > of > 16 beats at 74bpm long), where you can select each 2-beat-slice > independently. A resample function. A SD card slot for storing the > samples, > plus USB connectivity. Improved configurability for using the KP3 as a > MIDI > controller. About all effects are now MIDI-synced. And finally, it looks > much cooler than before, not only because of the all-black housing, but > also > because of the improved touchpad (which now displays funny running > patterns > when not in use) and three-color LEDs on the sample buttons. > > > On to a first test drive (just got it today). I put it at the end of my > microrig (guitar->Zoom G2.1u->Boss DD20). > > I'd call the effect quality "sufficient for the application". As >expected, > the ultra-dirty filter and distortion effects from the KP1 haven't > returned, > but the list of effects is complemented by some nice strange > panning-delay-formant-filters, interesting lo-fi stuff and combinations. > As > with the KP2, you get some stupid synth voices and a few basic drum > patterns. > And now you have the possibility to record finger movements on the pad >and > then play them back. Another cool new functionality is that when you > remove > your fingers from the pad, the effect in action is not just turned off, >it > is faded out in a cool delay fashion. > > The funny part, however, and the part where the biggest change has > happened, > is the sampling functionality. It has turned the Kaoss pad into a > four-track > phrase sampler with effects and resample functionality. As to the > important > question "Is it a looper"? According to the LD definition, "a Real-Time > Looper must be able to sample audio and loop it on the fly, and allow the > user to sample new material while the current loop is playing". This can > be > done. > > First you have to set your bpm rate (everything is bpm-based here, and I > guess it will help if you use a looper which sends a MIDI clock). Then >you > hit "Sample" and set your sample length as 2, 4, 8 or 16 beats (below 73 > bpm, only 8 beats, below 36 bpm, only 4 beats). Hit one of the four >sample > buttons, and the thing starts recording from the input (line or mic). > After > the preset beat length has passed, it will switch to loop playback, which > can be stopped and re-engaged by pressing the sample button again. If you > hit the sample button again before the loop has finished recording, the > sample is automatically saved as a one-shot sample. > You can move into a non-destructive sample edit mode, where you can move > the > starting point by multiples of 1/32nd of a beat (or 1/128th in musical > notation) for +/-1 beat. And you can select which of the total of eight > slices of the sample you want to play and which you don't want to. > Unfortunately, moving into edit mode will stop all other samples from > playback as well as the effects engine. > There is a resample mode, where the sampler takes the output of the KP3 >as > its input - and this allows for true overdubbing. > Changing the bpm setting will pitch the samples already in memory - the > bpm > range goes from 20 to 300, btw. > > > So how does it work as part of a looping setup? The answer: it depends on > what you already have and what you want to do. In my setup (or in any > setup > with a simple one-track looper), the possibility of having four > independent > tracks to which I can copy loops which I record in the DD20 is > awesome...plus the feature of artifact-free varispeeding. Add to that the > choice of performance-oriented effects and the cool looks, and throw in > the > option to use prerecorded sample loops (e.g. to give you some drum >grooves > from which you can select specific slices), and you really got a thing > here > to turn your medidative small guitar looping setup into some electronic > dance-infected thing - or to extend your one-person-ensemble setup > hindered > by the restrictions of the one-track looper into a four-piece combo. >With > a > price tag between the RC50 and the EH 2880, you get less looping than >with > those - but far more effects and show! > > Rainer > >