For me, the A4 sounds really nice with very little work. I have only one issue with the sound, which I will get to below.

One of the blurbs above mentioned how this isn’t really suited for the studio and more for live… well, I would have to 100% agree with this statement. Anytime I see a stereo out only, kits and patterns saving all sorts of data - - continuous encoders etc… I see a machine for live performance. So the A4, paired with a couple choice elektron boxes provides you with everything you need for live electronic music. Everything syncs up perfectly, you can change patterns on 1 machine and all the droids will follow suit. When you switch patterns, your in completely different sonic territory, pending on what you have saved in your patterns/kits. So… yes… studio…maybe, but DEFINITELY a groovebox for the new era.

Regarding the effects… I would say that the effects on this machine are perfect for the sounds it creates. I often record the stereo out of this machine into my AI with no post processing/compression/limiting… nothing… and it sounds good. One of the reasons I chose this machine over many others is because the effects ARE good and I have limited space, so I cant by a couple desktops and a slew of guitar effect pedals… I’m pretty much stuck with size of one desk. So… for me AGAIN the stereo out is not an issue… it would only be an issue if I couldn’t add the effects I wanted to the individual tracks… but since I can (within the A4), I have no complaints. (this is one of the reasons I never got into the blofeld… I just couldn’t get passed that really weird digital sounding reverb). I like the sound of the overdrive… it can add some nice crunch to bass lines, the reverb to me is a thing of beauty… better than any reverb I ever used in any DAW or any groovebox and can hold it’s own with the guitar pedal reverb boxes I tinkered with. I also think the delay has quite a bit of charm and the way you can bleed it to the reverb is kind of cool (I’ve yet to use this function on a track).

Okay… so now for the bad. To me the sounds are very CONSTRAINED and lack any wild peaks. When I’ve programmed a 303 type bass synth, and I start tweaking the filters, I can get some screams out of it, but… the actual volume of this synth doesn’t change… again… good for live, but sometimes you almost want things to get out of control… and when I jam on the A4, things seldom go out of control. I can get some amazing warm bass lines, synths, strings… but it always feels like there is a sort of protective blanket over-top the music, keeping it together.

The other thing I found odd is how the synth patches behave differently when your changing octaves… don’t know what is up with that, but I often can’t use the same 303 patch twice. I usually have to program these from scratch and they’re pretty much unique for whatever scale, and octave I’m jamming on.

Regarding the love/hate thing… well here’s the rub. With the machinedrum, when I hit play the first time I bought this, and I played that horrible preset patch… I thought “Dear God, what did I just waste my money on”, and I spent the better part of a month just trying to make it sound nice, and while I was doing this… all sorts of strange music and sounds came out, stuff I never dreamed of in my head… as if the machine was controlling me. The music that came out of using just the machinedrum, sounded nothing like anything I made in the past. It was new, fresh, often times shitty, but GOD DAMN IT, IT WAS MINE!!! Now for the A4… it didn’t take me as long to squeeze some passable sounds out of this machine, but I started making music, the music was warm, melodic, well received… but it just lacked a certain something. For starters, it sounded very much like the stuff I made with Propellerheads REASON. Although the enjoyment I had from making this music with actual hardware is 10fold more than making it with software, it just had this sort of really nice, play it in a car, or when people are over sort of thing going on, and I’m no professional musician, nor do I have any desire to make music you can play for Mom (or anyone else for that matter).

When I make machinedrum music… it’s angular, harsh, often times just HORRIBLE… but… it’s really cool, because these #ucked up sounds happen, toms start screaming, samples get mangled… and all the while, it maintains this cold, impersonal space.

When I make A4 music, it’s warm… like eating meat and potatoes or getting a hug from Mom… it sounds full and nice… but it’s just a little more predictable. When I’m tweaking stuff… I know exactly what will happen, when I tweak on the machinedrum… I’m at God’s mercy, and he’s often merciless.

Just my $0.02… Cheers:)