Teenage Engineering wisely got out ahead of everyone and released the EP-40 Riddim and Ting combo just before the holidays (and January 2026 NAMM).
I went absolutely berzerk when I heard the EP-40 and quickly pulled out the Korg Volca Sample 2 to see what I could do. There’s a lot to love about the Sample 2. Its USB port and the Korg Volca Sample Librarian make sample management a snap. The step programmable sample parameters supply a lot of dynamic messin’ along with the tempo and swing knobs. The controls may be small, but I love their immediate accessibility.
The analogue isolator controls are a kick, too. You can dynamically kill or boost the low and high ends. Korg provide similar capabilities in their Volca Mix. That and the compression and stereo field effects are the reason why I keep the Volca Mix in the toolbox.
I wanted to create long-loop grooves as though I was working in Ableton Live. One of my favorite entertainments is to launch Live and drop in a few samples and hear what comes out. The Sample 2 workflow is not as smooth as Live since everything needs to go through the Volca Sample Librarian. Oh, well.
Other issues arise when using long samples (e.g., two or more bars). Lack of sample space is a major issue. The Sample 2 has only 8 megabytes — yes, 8 megabytes — of sample space. The Sample 2 operates at a 31.25kHz sampling rate and it’s not clear if down-sampling saves any space. (The Librarian does sample rate conversion.) An old trick to save space is to “pitch up” incoming samples and then slow them down during playback (returning the sound to its original pitch). This technique adds yet another prep step and buzzkill.
The Sample 2 comes with great factory samples. That’s both good and bad. The factory samples occupy roughly 80% of sample memory leaving you with 20% free. That’s roughly 26 seconds of available user sample time. Sure, you can wipe the factory samples, but really?
I smacked into limited memory capacity immediately. I trimmed several dub loops into 2 to 4 bar loops. None the less, drum, bass, skank and fill loops hit 100% right quick.
Loops longer than two bars trip another issue. Longer loops continue to play after hitting the stop button. This is known behavior and it is annoying. Next, if you want to play a two bar loop, you need to adjust the tempo down to half. That way, one can trick the Sample’s sequencer into thinking it’s a two-bar sequencer. Of course, this spreads the 16 sequencer steps across two bars thereby cutting your time resolution in half (eighth notes). Go for four bars and the resolution is cut to four quarter notes per bar.
Overall, I think Korg conceptualized the Sample 2 (and its predecessor) as a digital beat box to which a user can add short one-shots. In that regard, Volca Sample is quite successful, especially at its price point. It’s not designed for long samples.
I always like to give the gear I have (Sample 2) first shot and buy if necessary. As to EP-40 Riddim and Ting, I’ll have more to say after UPS gets here. 🙂
Teenage Engineering, by the way, are showing Field System Black in time for NAMM 2026. If you want to hear more about TE’s development process, I strongly recommend WVFRM’s interview with David Eriksson, co-founder and lead engineer of TE. If I were teaching today, it would be required for class.
Copyright © 2026 Paul J. Drongowski
