I got quite excited a couple of years back by the same thing ( I was rich then ! Lol) but did a little digging on their Wiki and found this:
“Using a standard five-pin MIDI cable, connect the CNTRL-R MIDI in and out to the MIDI in and out of your sound-card or other MIDI interface. The CNTRL-R must be plugged into a USB host and have MIDI software running (even if it’s something basic like MIDI Monitor (http://www.snoize.com) or MIDI OX ([url=“http://www.midiox.com/”]http://www.midiox.com) running. This is a by-product of USB-powered class-compliant devices with no external power source. However, once you have the CNTRL-R connected to a computer and some simple MIDI application running, you can send the CNTRL:R’s MIDI out the MIDI output jack. It is worth noting that there is a special “MIDI Merge” function that determines if the MIDI data from using the controls on the CNTRL-R will be sent out the MIDI jack. By default, MIDI Merge is enabled, however, if you are not getting MIDI data from the CNTRL-R out the MIDI jack, it is worth double-checking [url=“http://wiki.lividinstruments.com/wiki/CNTRL-R_Editor#MIDI_Merge”]MIDI Merge in the Editor.”
i.e although it has 5 pin midi DIN out, you cannot use it standalone with the OT. Bye bye CTRL.R. The dream was nice while it lasted…