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The Korg Triton is a music workstation synthesizer, featuring digital sampling and sequencing, released in 1999. [1] [2] [3] It uses Korg's "HI (Hyper Integrated) Synthesis" system and was eventually available in several model variants with numerous upgrade options. The Triton became renowned as a benchmark of keyboard technology, and has been ...
Korg CX-3: Not to be confused with Korg's CX-3 from 1979. This digital modeling organ added MIDI and many new features. Korg MS2000 Analog modeling synthesizer. Korg Triton Rack 2U Rackmount version of the Triton. Korg Pa80: A new range of arranger from Korg was introduced in year 2000: the Pa Series. Pa80 was the first model introduced in ...
The release also debuted an emulation of the Korg Triton, offering all 4,000 PCM-based presets, encompassing most sounds from Korg’s eight PCM Expansion boards. This version enhanced the polyphony to 256 voices but omitted the sampler, sequencer, and the capability to run a MOSS engine found in the original instrument. [14] [15] [16]
The Z1's MOSS engine was subsequently integrated into plugin expansion boards for Korg's workstation synthesizers, including the MOSS-TRI (1998) for Korg Trinity V3, and EXB-MOSS (1999) for Korg Triton "Classic", Triton-Rack, Karma, Triton Studio, and Triton Extreme, enabling identical synthesis capabilities, but with changes to polyphony ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Korg Trinity; Korg Triton; V. Korg VC-10; ... This page was last edited on 3 June 2024, ...
KORG has since diversified into digital effects, tuners, recording equipment, electronic hand percussion, and software instruments. [5] [6] In 1992, KORG acquired Vox, then primarily a manufacturer of guitar amplifiers. [7] KORG was the exclusive distributor of Marshall Amplification products in the US for decades. This arrangement ended in 2010.
The Korg Z1 is a digital synthesizer released by Korg in 1997. The Z1 built upon the foundation set by the monophonic Prophecy released two years prior by offering 12-note polyphony and featuring expanded oscillator options, a polyphonic arpeggiator and an XY touchpad for enhanced performance interaction.
The Korg OASYS is a workstation synthesizer released in early 2005, 1 year after the successful Korg Triton Extreme. Unlike the Triton series, the OASYS uses a custom Linux operating system that was designed to be arbitrarily expandable via software updates, with its functionality limited only by the PC -like hardware.