Korg Kronos Kontakt Access

But Kontakt is infinite . The Kronos is finite — nine engines, fixed effects, a certain Korg character. Kontakt has no character except what you load into it. That’s both its weakness and its superpower. You can make it sound like a 1940s wire recorder, a decaying music box, or a Buchla synth from 1972.

On one side of the studio sits the — a battleship of a workstation, its brushed aluminum chassis cool under fluorescent lights. Nine sound engines live inside it: the plucked strings of the SGX-2, the magnetic tape hiss of the CX-3 tonewheel organ, the ghostly FM tones of the MOD-7. It’s a self-contained universe, designed to never need a computer. You power it on, and within seconds, weighted keys are under your fingers, no drivers, no updates, no mouse. korg kronos kontakt

Certainly. Here’s a short piece that explores the relationship between the (a hardware workstation) and Kontakt (a software sampler) — a topic that sits at the crossroads of tactile production and deep software sampling. Title: The Bridge Between Keys and Code But Kontakt is infinite