NAMM 2023: Little things

Roland Gigcaster

Turn your back for one second after NAMM 2023 and Roland slip out the Boss Gigcaster 5 and Gigcaster 8. These are audio streaming mixers aimed at the podcasting community.

Astutely, Roland recognize that these mixer have application beyond podcasting. They are, after all, mixers! Gigcasters have all the features one might want in a small format studio mixer. Thus, Roland show musicians happily strumming, singing and playing keys in their bedroom studios. They are rather attractively and colorfully styled.

Boss Gigcaster 5

The Gigmaster 5 sells for $480 USD and the Gigmaster 8 costs $700.

There’s gold in those podcasting hills and small format podcasting mixers (desktop production boxes) are busting out all over. Yamaha, for example, introduced the AG08 USB streaming mixer ($630) at NAMM 2023. The AG08 joins the lower-priced AG03 mk2 and AG06 mk2 models.

Indiegogo: InstaChord

InstaChord is a MIDI guitar Indiegogo project. They are trying to get enough backers to go into production with expected delivery in April 2024. Early bird bundles go for $374 USD.

The InstaChord looks like a Klingon Bird of Prey. 🙂 There are six strummable “buttons” instead of strings, and a 2-D button matrix instead of a fretboard. Buttons in the matrix select chords using a numeric method similar to I, ii, iii, IV, V, vi, dim vii notation within a scale.

InstChord

InstaChord produces sound through its own internal speaker. The internal tone generator is a Dream SAM2695 (GM sound set). The SAM2695 is the same chip inside of the Akai MPK Mini Play. InstaChord sends and receives MIDI via USB Type C or Bluetooth.

UJEII — AKA “My Main Man” — shows off an early prototype in this Insta Chord Demo (Katsunori UJIIE). UJIIE shows that he can rock out strumming, not just shredding keys!

The InstaChord reminds me of the old You Rock Guitar (still sitting in my closet). Unlike the YRG, InstaChord does not try to mimic guitar strings or fretboard. YRG requires standard fretboard fingering, which is a barrier for many casual players (like me). I simply don’t have the time to practice guitar skills on top of keys. InstaChord requires a modicum of music theory; any good keys player should be able to adapt.

Check out the free InstaChord-i IOS app, if you want a taste.

Not to pick on the InstaChord folks in particular, but, hey! If you have a new product, at least Google the product name before committing to the name. Searching on “InstaChord” took me to the W.A. Productions plug-in by the same name. Come on!

BlackBT SusEx Pedal

BlackBT® announced the SusEx® pedal which combines MIDI foot switch and continuous control (expression) functionality. SusEx is available for pre-order costing $150 USD. It is expected to ship in June 2023.

BlackBT SusEx pedal

I contend that the SusEx is not “the first” to combine footswitch and expression control in one pedal. The “first” title goes, instead, to the Boss/Roland EV-1-WL. I’ve been using the EV-1-WL for well over a year now… Like the Boss EV, SusEx communicates over Bluetooth BLE and USB. No 5-pin capability, tho’

None the less, the SusEx has a cool way of switching between sustain mode and expression mode. It senses foot position and automatically switches mode. With the EV-1-WL, one either adds an external footswitch for sustain, or presses down hard with the toes at the top of the pedal. Check out the SusEx demo video

The SusEx pedal is absolutely tiny and should be lightweight and easy to transport. Dunno about you, but I’m tired of toting around heavy, built like a tank expression pedals. Some folks may not like the pedal throw, but that is personal preference.

Donner

Donner established a reputation for bargain-priced guitar toys. Now they are coming for keys. Donner have a line of portable piano and arranger instruments. Products include the Donner Essential B1 Analog Bass Synthesizer, the DMK-25 PRO MIDI controller, and the D1 Drum Machine and Sequencer. Of course, they also have — TA-DA — podcasting gear, too.

The expanding Donner-verse

The Donner direct sales outlet is currently running a sale on select products including the B1. These guys want market share!

Donner are going to give low-cost specialists Casio and Akai conniptions. I don’t have any direct experience with Donner products, but do suggest getting native English tech writers to produce and edit their marketing literature and manuals. Slipshod writing gives people a bad impression of product quality and many people are unsure about Donner as a brand.

Just a quick Yamaha CK observation. The CKs are clearly aimed at the Roland VR-09, which sells at the same $1,000 price points. The CK beats the VR for non-organ sounds. Fight’s on!

Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski

NAMM 2023: Pickin’ up the pieces

NAMM 2023 is a wrap with all of the major products rolled out. Here are a few items that might have escaped your attention and are worth checking out on-line.

Hammond 122H Heritage Leslie

You just can’t buy a new Hammond XK-4 and not connect its 11-pin speaker port to a new Hammond 122H Heritage Leslie. This new model comes out in August: solid-core wood cabinet, 40 Watts, new servo motors, independently controllable upper horn and lower rotor, switchable from a 122 to a 147. Projected price is $7,000 USD.

Artinoise re.corder

The Artinoise re.corder is not new, but it was at NAMM 2023. The re.corder is a wireless wind controller based on the classic soprano recorder. I took a look at the re.corder a few years ago and decided that it wasn’t quite mature enough. It’s time.

Artinoise re.corder (white)

The re.corder comes in four colors (black, blue, red and white) and is 120g light. Sweetwater handles re.corder sales in the USA and they posted a NAMM 2023 video of the re.corder driving Audio Modeling SWAM Cello.

It’s only $199 USD. Cheap enough to try wind today!

Audio Modeling SWAM and Camelot

Speaking of SWAM, Audio Modeling announced upgrades to SWAM (now v.3.7.0) and Camelot (v.2.2.4). These are the full fat personal computer versions. The Camelot upgrade includes a Yamaha CK Smart Map. That was fast work.

I hope that many of the enhancements will eventually appear in the IOS versions of SWAM and Camelot. I would love to see SWAM ensembles, too.

Audio Modeling, BTW, have a partnership with our friends at ILIO.

Bastl Bestie

Bastl have kicked loose a new box: the Bastl Bestie. The Bestie looks like a Dude, but it’s nasty. Bestie is a 5-channel stereo mixer with stereo distortion and saturation. It can mix clean with distortion kicking in during boost (i.e., rotating past 12 o’clock). Leave Channel 3 unplugged and it feeds the output back to the input.

Like the Dude, Bestie operates on either USB power or four AA batteries. The Bestie is 180 Euro through the B Shop. I didn’t see the Dude in the B Shop, so Bestie may be the new Dude. North American retailers include Patchwerks in Seattle.

This beast could be fun as a key-top small mixer that adds grunge.

mki x es.EDU DIY System

No, I didn’t accidently lean on the QWERTY keyboard. That is the name of the series of educational DIY synth kits developed by Erica Synths and Moritz Klein.

C’mon, dudes. Try your new product names in the Google before branding. If customers can’t easily search on a name (like “re.corder”), they ain’t gonna find you.

Kits in the EDU DIY series include:

  • EDU DIY VCO $79
  • EDU DIY VCA $69
  • EDU DIY EG $69
  • EDU DIY Sequencer $79
  • EDU DIY VCF $84
  • EDU DIY Mixer
  • EDU DIY Noise/S&H
  • EDU DIY Output
  • EDU DIY Wavefolder $109

You’ll find them wherever fine modules are sold. 🙂

Whimsy

Yamaha took a lot of heat by using the word “breakthrough” in its NAMM 2023 (self-)promotion. To some, releasing a modestly priced keyboard like the CK is not “breakthrough” enough, though I see Yamaha selling scads of these.

I’ll close with a little bit of Yamaha whimsy. Thanks and a tip of the hat to the person who posted this link on Gearspace.

Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski

NAMM 2023: IK AXE I/O ONE

It would be easy for a keyboard player to blow off the IK Multimedia AXE I/O ONE. It is so obviously pitched at guitar and bass players.

Not so fast. Where else can you get a 1-in/3-out USB audio interface — with MIDI — for $130 USD?

IK Multimedia AXE I/O ONE

If you’re an iPad-toting keyboard player who needs MIDI IN and stereo audio out, the AXE I/O ONE has it covered. That’s 5-pin MIDI, by the way. The AXE I/O ONE has two expression/switch pedal inputs. Many MIDI controllers do not have an expression pedal input, so the AXE I/O ONE could fill that gap. The control panel application assigns MIDI channel, CC#, minimum and maximum data values. [MacOS and Windows only.]

The main audio input is a Neutrik jack backed by a Class-A mic preamp. You can go clean as well as down and dirty. Should be possible to post-process keyboard audio through an IK effect chain. Audio conversion up to 24-bit/192 kHz is supported. Unfortunately, you can’t hit the AXE I/O ONE with a stereo signal (mono input only).

AXE I/O ONE is USB-C bus powered. The box is 5.1″ x 5.7″ x 2″ (13cm x 14.5cm x 5.2cm) and weighs only 0.8 pound (0.37kg). Software includes AXE Control Panel, Amplitube 5 SE, and TONEX SE. Available today.

If you need to replace your aging Korg Plug-Key or Alesis Control Hub, the AXE I/O ONE is worthy of consideration as long as you can live within its limitations. An IOS control panel app would just about make this perfect for keys at $130.

The Arturia MiniFuse 2 provides similar features for $149 USD. The MiniFuse 2 does stereo input and also has a USB-A hub port. That means you can connect a MIDI controller to your iPad (or computer) through the hub port. Unfortunately, the hub port can source only 250mA of current. Still, a viable alternative.

Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski

NAMM 2023: Round-up

And the big Yamaha reveals are — new Transacousticâ„¢ pianos and the Clavinovaâ„¢ CVP 900 series digital pianos. Thank you for playing.

Given the long run-up to NAMM 2023 (April 13-15), I expected manufacturers to trickle out new product announcements. [Not the usual supernova explosion nebula.] Thus, I’ve collected a round-up of pre-NAMM announcements:

I will continue to monitor the Inter-webs for interesting product announcements.

Keyboard-wise, that’s not a bad bunch of new issues in a global economy which is still recovering from supply chain problems, factory fires and that damned, bloody virus.

CK61 and CK88 keyboards are shipping and first impressions are reported on various forums. It’s good to have product ready when everyone’s passion is high. No point in raising the (marketing) heat when units won’t ship for months and months. Initial impressions are good, but keep an eye out for open box CKs from order-try-return customers.

A Korg NTS-2 oscilloscope kit arrived on my doorstep yesterday, so I will be busy. 🙂

Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski

NAMM 2023: Hammond XK-4

Hammond have dropped the XK-4 hammer just before NAMM, April 13-15, 2023.

Quoting the Hammond XK-4 web pages:

  • New Modelled Tone Wheel 2 (MTW2) sound engine
  • Virtual multi-contact keyboard
  • New digital Leslieâ„¢ speaker algorithm
  • New tube modelling system
  • User-assignable knobs and switches
  • Pitch bend and modulation wheels
  • Color display
  • 11-pin Leslie jack
  • AUX INPUT jack with gain control knob
  • Four control jacks: damper pedal, expression pedal, foot switch, Leslie switch
  • USB-A flash drive and USB-B TO HOST ports
  • 5-pin MIDI IN and OUT
  • Standard AC mains plug (IEC C14)
  • Weight: 20 pounds

Check the Hammond XK-4 product video. The XK-4 details page has links to all-playing demos by Jim Alfredson (organ) and Eric Johnson (drums).

Hammond XK-4 digital tone wheel organ

MTW2 models slight pitch fluctuations due to tonewheel backlash and volume fluctuations due to de-centering. The virtual multi-contact keyboard simulates the feel of an electro-mechanical keyboard.

The XK-4 provides three vintage combo organs: Farfisa, Vox and Acetone. It also includes classical and theatre pipe organ stops which can be registered in the traditional way.

No manual (yet). Folks will want to know more about those assignable knobs, etc. Will the XK-4 make a good controller for non-organ voices on iPad? Will it interoperate with IK Multimedia B-3X? If the XK-4 is a good controller, it’s lack of non-organ sounds could be moot.

The new XK-4 replaces the old XK-1c model. You can find XK-1c advertised as low as $1,395 USD, if you can still get one, that is. Typical XK-1c MAP is $1,725. As usual, no XK-4 price announced as of today. Jim A’s source sez “2K MAP, available August.” Hold your breath. 🙂

Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski

NAMM 2023: Small stuff

Instead of talking about the big kids, here are a few boutique, cottage industry MIDI gizmos. My current fixation is finding a fully programmable, tiny MIDI controller to send patch changes (Bank Select MSB, Bank Select LSB and Program Change messages).

If you’re ready to buy, try tindie.com — an Etsy for independent, boutique electronics. Tindie sells an incredibly wide variety of electronic goods. Keep those inventors and makers busy and happy!

Phantasmal Force

The Distropolis Goods Phantasmal Force is tiiiiinnnnyyyy. It has sixteen individually programmable buttons, a programmable knob and an OLED display. It’s bus-powered and sends MIDI over USB Type C and TRS-A serial ports.

Distropolis Goods Phantasmal Force

Phantasmal Force sells for $125 USD on Tindie. There, you get to customize case and button colors.

The retro, pseudo-typewritten reference manual is a scream.

AMC3 MIDI Controller

The AMC3 MIDI Controller is back in stock. The AMC3 has three, fully programmable, 3x100mm faders (Bourns). The AMC3 is class-compliant, sending MIDI over USB. The AMC3 has a 3-digit LED display.

AMC3 MIDI Controller

The AMC3 reminds me of the Sparkfun Danger Shield, which I used in my Danger Shield Drawbars project. Unlike the Danger Shield, the AMC3 lives in a rugged, dust-resistant ABS chassis. The chassis is 5 by 7 inches. If you’re looking for actual drawbars, try the Crumar D9U kit.

The AMC3 costs $149.99 and AMC3 are offering a 10% discount (good for the next two months).

The AMC3 is configured via tycocommander. Tycocommander is part of the Koromix Tytools package. Although the AMC3 folks don’t mention it, the AMC3 is Teensy-based, hence, tycocommander. Thus, it may be possible to overwrite the original AMC3 code with your own.

I would contact AMC3, however, before doing anything so drastic! Be sure to get a copy of the original factory code!

Anavi Macro Pad 8

Gamers are familiar with macro pad keyboards — small keypads capable of quickly sending multi-character sequences. Stands to reason, if a macro pad can send ASCII over USB, it can send MIDI, too.

Amazon is clogged with macro pads. The trick is finding a macro pad which is fully programmable (as opposed to being configured for ASCII key strokes).

Anavi Macro Pad 8

The Anavi Macro Pad 8 fits the bill. It has eight mechanical key switches and an optional mini OLED display. Everything is mounted in a clear acrylic enclosure (optional). The Macro Pad 8 communicates through a Micro USB port.

According to Anavi:

Anavi Macro Pad 8 is powered by a Microchip ATmega32U4 microcontroller, so it is possible to use as an Arduino Leonardo-compatible development board and upload Arduino sketches through Arduino IDE or PlatformIO.

Now we’re talking!

The base Anavi Macro Pad 8 is $46 USD on Tindie. If you dress it up with the enclosure and OLED, it’s $69 USD, including shipping to the USA. I have one on order. Fulfillment is good and it’s on its way from Bulgaria.

If eight keys are too many, check out the other Anavi products on Tindie.

Random NAMM 2023 comments

In the old news department, Yamaha have released the CK stage keyboards and have given the YC organ-focused keyboard an update. The CKs are good value for the money and are better “all-rounders” than the YCs. The CKs even have pipe organ voices lifted from Genosâ„¢.

If this week’s postings are meager, I spent waaay too much time blasting Yamaha for the lack of pipe organ voices on the YC. Montage and MODX have two decent FM pipe organ performances and should have been included in the YC update. Presently, the CKs undercut Yamaha’s own YC as far as church music is concerned. If you have a Montage or MODX, sample Genos and add pipe organ voices of your own. YC is a closed system in that regard.

Hammond XK-4 teaser

Meanwhile, Yamaha’s competition are not sitting still. Hammond are teasing the XK-4: 61 keys, pitch bend and mod wheels, color display, and assignable knobs. It follows in the footsteps of the lower-cost XK-1c model, having B-3, Farfisa, Vox and pipe organ (!) sounds. The XK-1c MSRP is $1,995 ($1,725 MAP). We await the official announcement for anything definitive. I’m curious to see how Hammond will price this puppy.

The Yamaha NAMM 2023 pages are active with placeholders for a few new products to be announced at the show. Hope for the golden magical unicorn is fading. Still, there is the princess.

Korg are finally shipping the Nu:Tekt NTS-2 oscilloscope in North America. Thank you, Korg!

Back to practicing for Easter Sunday…

Copyright © 2023 Paul J. Drongowski