Korg Electribe R
The Korg Electribe R was released in 1999 as a dedicated electronic drum machine to complement the Korg Electribe A bass synthesizer. It features a 64 step sequencer and is MIDI-controllable. The sound is generated by digital signal processor circuits but can be manipulated in realtime (analog modeling synthesizer principle). A cross modulation function (replacing the previous ring modulation of the Mk I version) can be applied to percussion synthesizers 1 and 2 in the ER-1 Mk II version. The only other differences were new preset rhythm patterns and the metal casing. Because of the easy programming possibilities and competitive pricing the ER-1 quickly became popular among DJs and studio musicians. The overall sound character can be described as, although synthetic, similar to classic analog drum machines. However, the sound remains completely "tweakable" allowing realtime human variation and interaction, not unlike 4 simultaneous percussion synthesizers. In 2010, Korg released iElectribe R, a software version of the Electribe R for the iPad.
Korg Electribe R mkII Features
- Analog modeling system plus PCM
- Powerful Cross Modulation
- Audio Input function
- Step Sequencer
- Motion Sequence function
- Low Boost and Delay effects
- Tap Tempo and MIDI Clock
- 4 synthesizer parts
- 4 PCM parts
- 2 audio-in parts
- One accent part
- 256 patterns, 16 songs
- Delay effects: Normal, Motion Sequence, Tempo Delay
- Motion Sequences: synthesizer part-3 parameters, drum part-2 parameters, accent part-one parameter, 64 events
- Pattern sequencer: 64 steps maximum per part; one parameter per part; 64 events per part; 256 patterns maximum per song; 35,700 events maximum
See also
- Roland TR-909
- Korg EA-1
- Korg Electribe series
References
- "Korg Electribes". Future Music. No. 83. Future Publishing. June 1999. p. 72. ISSN 0967-0378. OCLC 1032779031.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Korg Electribe ER-1. |