SIMPLE SOLUTION. JUST BUY BOTH TRITON AND MOTIF ES, AND HEAVEN DOORS WILL OPEN BEAUTIFULLY. :-)
Rating: 5 out of 5
posted Sunday-Dec-14-033 at 10:45
Tim Armond
a part-time user
from France
writes:
Like Triton lot. Nice sounds good for dance. Motif nice but not for me. Always like Korg. Always good.
Rating: 5 out of 5
posted Friday-Nov-28-033 at 05:07
Fred Jones
a professional user
from Florida
writes:
I do like having everything in one box. Don't get me wrong, I use computers all the time but you could drop me and a Triton Studio on a desert island (plus a generator) and watch that creativity flow. Love the sounds, love the hard disk recording. Motif is nice but I find memory cards a pain in the...
Rating: 5 out of 5
posted Friday-Nov-28-033 at 05:04
Alf Neuman
a part-time user
from Rutland
writes:
Just brought a Triton Studio 61 after trying all the other competition (Motif ES included). I think the last reviewer does not know what he is talking about and should be ignored. Try them both for yourself and see.
Rating: 5 out of 5
posted Thursday-Nov-27-033 at 11:09
a professional user
writes:
a correction in my earlier evalutation of korg triton and motif es sequencers: i meant sequencer not sampler:
"Also lets move on to the sampler...the triton studio has a very lame sampler with 192 ppq, the motif es has 480 ppq sampler"
i might also add that the motif es expansion synth boards ADD polyphony to the existing 128 note polyphony...which means if you add a plg piano synthesizer board, a DX FM board, and a AN analog board, you will get 128(standard)+64(piano)+16(DX)+5(AN) = 213 notes of polyphony...
korg triton studio has only 60 notes of polyphony standard (for the internal samples and sampler), and an additional 60 notes for the expansion boards..