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I have a microsampler too. It's another one I haven't figured out much yet. This keyboard has its uses, but feels like Korg tragically missed the opportunity to make something wonderful. I would expect a modern sampling keyboard to have these basic features: --The ability to adjust start, end and loop points for the selected sample on the fly with dedicated controls. --ASDR envelopes (attack/sustain/decay/release) --a pitch wheel and a mod wheel. The microsampler has NONE of these things. I believe there's a way to edit start, end and loop points, but you have to hunt through menus to get there. It's a great tool for making hip-hop beats that use samples. In fact, the feature set is completely steered towards this. It has a nice peak detection feature so you could run a drum beat through it, and it would split each hit into a different sample automatically. Another nice feature lets you sample and assign a key to a sound at the same time. When you turn the mode on, you simply hold down the selected note for as long as you want it to record a sample. The sample is saved to that key. I then use a dry-erase marker on the keys to remind me which sample is on each key. Once you have samples, dedicated switches let you loop and reverse them. You can't loop/reverse the samples all at once - only for the keys that you're holding down. One really annoying thing is that the default samples are all beatboxing sounds. Apparently whoever designed this keyboard is either a beatboxer, or was sleeping with one at the time. I haven't yet figured out how to get it to start up with a "blank slate" on the keys - or even better, the samples I had previously loaded. -- Matt Davignon mattdavignon@gmail.com www.ribosomemusic.com Rigs! www.youtube.com/user/ribosomematt Ruelle Benoit <benoitruelle@yahoo.fr> was all: > The last one: the microsampler might interest you and bring us back on a > looper topic. > It's compact, you can sample/mangle your sound, use it as a crude >multitrack > recorder, use it for glitch/experimental stuff, has a little pattern > sequencer, you can resample several sample in one, use a single sample > chromatically, with or without time strectching (repeater anyone?), allow > easy multisampling, sync several loops ... Perhaps it would suite you. >It's > fun, it's probably the one in which you can the most easily put your > signature sound (it's a sampler). The Con is that it takes some time to >load > a new bank (up to 30 sec for a full loaded bank). > > Ben