![]() ![]() But here are some important things to know – having at least met with the teams that developed the gear and gotten a quick hands-on. We will have a review unit in next week, and you know I like to get in depth with how machines work. My guess is the Maschine MK3 and Komplete Kontrol MKII will make a splash, precisely because they seem focused on how these two users bases work. And for hard-core Komplete users, Komplete Kontrol saw some popularity, though perhaps didn’t radically transform workflows. The MKII, with color, better pads, and better workflow certainly had some people selling their MKIs. Since then, few pieces of hardware have had quite the impact that Maschine MKI did. Maschine was built with software and hardware designed in parallel. This was the year the APC40 and Launchpad had just hit the market – without a screen, and at that point with only limited control capabilities. ![]() ![]() It’s funny to think that back in 2009, the first release of Maschine really set the bar for integrating production software with a hardware controller. Here are some early impressions of what’s new, in advance of our review. Native Instruments just revised their Maschine and Komplete Kontrol hardware. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |