Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2012 7:30 pm
Them's fightin' words.Ben79 wrote:That's a beautiful bit of misconstruing right there, I dare say David Cameron would love to have you on his bench.
Them's fightin' words.Ben79 wrote:That's a beautiful bit of misconstruing right there, I dare say David Cameron would love to have you on his bench.
I haven't. Synths aren't commonly carried here... I'm pretty surprised the Stage is in stock and that they had a Gaia before. I'd have to order anything I want to test to get it in the store :/plaidbeer wrote:Went by a GC this morning to kill some time and I went into the keyboard room for the hell of it. I messed around with the Juno-Gi, Di, and Korg M50. The Gi and Di are a big step up from the Juno-G I had, in terms of pianos and string pads. As for the Wurlitzers and Rhodes electric pianos, I think the M50 beats them both and you have a touch screen interface with the M50. Have you checked out one of those?
You won't get a piano sound out of an original Juno. But I agree, they're great fun to use, and intuitive. I have a 106, got it for a total bargain about 12 years ago.riotshield wrote:I had the chance to play Juno 60 and it was immense. I dont know how you aim to use your synth but my advice would be to look for a nice analog synth like Juno 60/106 or Prophet. It looks like those synths have fewer capabilities than the all new flashy ones but the quality of the sounds you get is spectacular, you get lost in those sounds for hours
The DW-8000/EX-8000 is a lot of fun. You can get some pretty murky/trippy sounds when cranking the resonance and adding the onboard delay. The only drawback to the DW-8000 was that it had the worst feeling keys I've ever used. Clackety and noisy.Mages wrote:really want a poly-800 or DW-6000/8000. awesome space documentary type sounds.