Korg triton Keyboard info
The Triton was Korg's flagship workstation synthesizer when it first was released.. It looks and sounds beautiful, It is a digital 62-voice synthesizer with built-in sequencing and arpeggiators and an ultra-large touch-screen control panel at the center of its face-plate that makes it a very easy to use synthesizer.In the blink of an eye you’ll get all the info you need.Whether your mixing a midi file on it,route the 8 insert effects or select a sound you’ll always get a very good overview of what your doing.This is a big plus compared to some other synths out there.
32MB of multi-sample sounds that sound clear and quite warm. With these samples and the Triton's in-depth programmability you can create pretty much any sound, from an orchestral flute with life-like vibrato to all-out chord-stabs with filtering for dance-floor house music, complete with beats and arpeggio patterns and phrases.
On-board is a stereo-sampler. With 16MB RAM(expanable to 96 MB) and space for up to 1,000 samples . There are plenty of on-board very good digital effects as well for sprucing up your samples or the Triton's own internal multi-samples. Controllers include a Joystick, 2 assignable switches, 4 assignable knobs, 3 arpeggiator control knobs and inputs for a damper pedal, PC Interface Host and 2 audio-ins for the sampler section. There are also stereo outputs plus 4 individual outputs. A dedicated 16-track sequencer with a 100,000 note capacity, Real-Time Pattern Play functions and an Arpeggiator with several patterns round this beast out as a truly all-in-one music workstation.
The Korg Triton was released in 3 different types: the 61 keys, the 76 keys and the 88 keys version. I've used the Korg Triton 61-keys version for about 6 years on stage and it worked fine for me, almost with no problems.The only problem I ever had was the main output, it just was worn out.Had it fixed for about $25 and was on the road again.
Check out the Sounds menu and hear what makes me love this machine so much!
The Korg Triton was released in 3 different types: the 61 keys, the 76 keys and the 88 keys version.
I've used the Korg Triton 61-keys version for about 6 years on stage and it worked fine for me, almost with no problems.The only problem I ever had was the main output, it just was worn out.Had it fixed for about $25 and was on the road again.
