kdapapa.blogg.se

Komplete kontrol a25 review
Komplete kontrol a25 review





komplete kontrol a25 review

It also has a MIDI mode so it can be turned into a MIDI controller, and custom maps built using the Controller Editor software. In software terms, you can do almost everything you can do with the S series. As with the S series, the physical controls are designed to tie into the Komplete Kontrol software and also your DAW and any NKS-compatible plug-ins you may be running. There are traditional mod and pitch bend wheels, as well as octave buttons at the bottom left corner of the front panel. The semi-weighted keys are full size, and well suited to most kinds of playing you’re ever likely to do on a 25 or 49-key instrument. The company has always tiered its hardware - from more entry level all the way to big and professional, but this is the first time it has really ventured into price brackets that seem designed to tempt ordinary consumers - by which I mean people not necessarily already in the music technology world. One important theme of NI’s recent mega-update of its products was that for the first time it included more affordable models of its hardware controllers. As a piano player I have a stage piano that never leaves the house, several performance keyboards too large for my studio desk and a Komplete Kontrol S61 which is great, but as I find myself working on the move more and more, I have begun to want a super-portable MIDI keyboard with the functionality of the Komplete Kontrol system. The larger models just space their controls out more. Sometimes as reviewers we are lucky enough to be able to request specific models for review - so why the smallest, 25-key model, you may ask? Well, in terms of their functionality, all three models - 24, 49 and 61-keys - are identical, save for the number of keys.







Komplete kontrol a25 review