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Last weekend I stopped by the local music store and happened upon the new Korg KARMA keyboard sitting in the keyboard section. As I understand it, the keyboard is a hardware implementation of somebody's MAX patch, using Korg's Triton sound engine. The onboard controls include 4 "chord memory" buttons. The little placard mounted on the stand next to the keyboard suggested holding down the chord buttons then messing around with the 8 main parameter knobs. These buttons do more than just trigger chords - they can apparently also be programmed to trigger simple sequenced phrases/loops/drum parts. At any rate, for most of the example patches, one knob varies the swing amount of the rhythm (from robotically straight to really funky), another varies chord density, another varies velocity threshold or something like that, etc. The chord buttons were neat, but I had the most fun when I started messing with the keyboard itself. For one patch, I was triggering wild piano arpeggios whose intervals changed with one knob twist and harmonic content changed with another knob twist. For the "Tricky" rhythm patch, radical changes in time signature, swing amount, etc. were within easy reach of the knobs. For virtually all patches, different notes and velocities around the keyboard caused noticeable behavioral changes. All in all, the KARMA keyboard turned out to be quite addictive. There are some more things I'd like to know before I shell out the cash for it (Sam Ash had it for $1795) such as whether the notes generated by the chord buttons can have their volume levels set independently of the master volume and whether it will respond to incoming MIDI messages from, say a Handsonic or MIDI guitar, in the same interactive manner that it responds to someone playing its keyboard directly. I'd also like to know if you can record your own phrase, loop it in realtime, then subject your brand new loop to the same type of radical alterations (time signature, swing amount, chord density, etc.). Here's the informational site of the guy behind KARMA: http://www.karma-lab.com/ There's mention of a software release for Macintosh coming up. I'm guessing this is a software-only version of KARMA rather than some sort of editor-librarian. Paolo _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com