Couldn’t agree more about the 606. Brilliant grooving despite no swing.
As a long time MPC60 user, now OT user, I’m convinced ‘grooviness’ is simply related to sequencer tightness, i.e. low jitter. Basically machines sound best when they behave exactly like machines!
The OT to my ears (And I’m comparing tracks I did on MPC with my new OT tunes) grooves marginally better than the MPC60 (even on straight 16ths no swing) I’m convinced it can only be the tightness factor that does this. As for swing/unquantised hits - to my mind any little microgrooves need to repeat absolutely CONSISTENTLY on each repeat for it to ‘groove’ right.
When I sync my OT/AK from MBP DAW I find they lose a tiny bit of the groovy magic (Its a very subtle difference, but I feel it in my feet!)
Would love one of those Innerclock thingies one day to resolve this 'cos DAW as master is sometimes useful for big arrangements.
The TR606 can loop all day and keep your head nodding. OT is the same.
I reckon the MPCs groovy reputation comes from the fact that through the 90’s until mid noughties it was the lowest jitter sampling drum machine available. (Roland W30 was pretty damn tight too but I can’t imagine many Hip Hop producers enjoying the whole W30 menu-diving experience!) MPC timing was no better than a TR606, TR808, TR909, but of course they weren’t samplers! MPC60 certainly shits on any DAW system I’ve ever used though - and I’m talking about very well-specced custom systems.
As for swing, well yeah the MPC60/3000 deserve their reputation for groovy swingy-ness, but I honestly think the OT matches the MPCs in this department too. I read an interview with Roger Linn where he basically dismissed the whole idea of MPCs having some magical swing algorithm, and this further convinced me that my ‘tightness’ theory is correct.
Sorry for the essay but this subject has always fascinated me. And DAW timing has always annoyed me… 