Yeah, but when you actually use one the MIDI sequencing is quite limited, and it doesn’t play so well with other gear (eg you can’t sequence CCs from a DAW or individual parameters in general, only patch modulators). There have been a lot of excuses made for why, about the lack of processing power and memory and so on, but then you look at the specs of the MPC60 from 1987 and the Tempest sequencer looks pretty weak :zonked:

The character of the Tempest is more likely to be determined most by the re-use of existing DSI voice architecture (which has never been well known for it’s drum synthesis capabilities) than anything else…

I do like the drum sounds I’ve got out of it and think it often gets a bad rap in this area. But it sure slows things down.

Being marketed as a drum machine that does seem a little weird but the TB303 was originally designed as a bass guitar emulator and look where that ended up. :slight_smile:

Sort of. It’s not that unusual of a synth architecture, quite close to the Mopho basically. It is a little bit slower to program than usual as a synth because of some drum machine things, eg there are only two knobs for attack and decay in the envleope section, you have to press a button to get at the Sustain/Release parameters. And there’s no free-running LFOs, they retrigger every note-on.