vos
11
Thanks for chiming in!
The main (non-financial) hesitation I have on the AK is the size with regard to using it for gigs. I hate checking gear as luggage, and am afraid I’ll have to from time to time with AK. I prefer to only write with what I can take to gigs, as it makes the transition to performance smooth.
Buying a 2nd A4 to replace the AK for gigs only seems unreasonably excessive. But from a songwriting perspective, I’m really pining for the AK+A4 combo.
Procuring a Nord Drum just to get back 1 voice on the A4 really opened my mind to how powerful it is to have as many A4 voices at your disposal as you can.
I hadn’t considered the configuration of different chains on each instrument. Imagining 8 voices of poly rhythms now!
As much as I love my Rytm/MnM/A4/ND1 configuration, I can absolutely see how an AK+A4+ND configuration could please me just as well. It would be quite different sonically, but for my deeper music it might just be the best solution.
AK will probably be my next Elektron purchase. It might not be for a while, but it’s good to know it is there for me to grow into at some point.[/quote]
If size matters the A4 is more practikal for live-gigs ( if you don’t need a keyboard ). But ones I tried the keyboard I was sold. It’s got a very light toutch witch I love. Mutch more than all socalled semi -weighted keyboards nowadays. maybe good for piano-players but to hard for me - for shure if I wanna play percussive on it. I like this immedeate reaction with almost no resistance and I find it a strange evolution making weighted keyboars for a synths
I noticed getting different results when composing on one of them. Being almost identical instruments this must be because of the interface difference . I have no preference - boh interfaces have advantages. ( A4 is great to take aroud with headphones
)