Seriously? I was jyst complaining that the people who showed the synth so far either didn't know what they were going for, or didn't have enough time. So, I saw this pop up, as the perfect answer! But I forgot - this is a trade show, so they could mess up a soup sandwich. "Wow, it looks like you could do xxxx if you had patch cords! Do you have any patch cords?" "No." ... "Seriously?"
It's NAMM, there's guitars everywhere and pedals, there are most certainly patch cables but yeah Korg was not prepared or just lazy, unacceptable in my opinion and with the price of this thing, c'mon! I can't find one video anywhere even of an original vintage one being patched, what gives?
@@GhostRAOfficial That would make a lot of sense, especially since his 2600 had so many unique mods. Plus, Korg is making it again, so it wouldn't require much redesign. Great idea!
The ONE guy who should be allowed to have unmitigated access this glorious instrument! I saw so many people at the show fumbling around with this who had no idea how to use it, looks like the sound designers who saved the presets didn’t even realize they saved them with tuning problems. Anthony, we love you… You are a national treasure.
@@WatchTheThrown temperature change affects the tuning of analog electronic instruments, as well as many acoustic instruments. Older analog circuits were less stable than many modern analog circuits. So here you have a large electronic instrument generating a lot of its own heat once it is turned on, add to that hot lights, the body temperatures of people around it, and the temperature being regulated inside the exhibition building, and you have many variables that can alter the tuning.
Oh my, Anthony gave the Korg "experts" a run for the money. This is the highlight of the show and with some luck Korg understands and appreciates this. Amazing, amazing.
Hi Anthony, What a brilliant video, the difference between this and Nick Batt's is like day vs night lol! I really loved how whilst Luke was showing the features this synth has, you were not just explaining but also actually showing how to make this thing sing!! I think this what I enjoy most about your channel - how you get the best out of the gear you use.
WOW ! 🙂 A great video ! Anthony is the Yoda of analog synth. Luke was listening, and learning from a master. Merci pour cette fantastique présentation du PS-3300 ! 🙂
A great video! Anthony has such a marvellous ability to present his thought process and insights - I think he also might have just gained Korg a few extra PS-3300 sales here!
Learned from the best just now, he was able to hear tuning issues within the patch immediately. Diagnosed it by singling out the oscillators then building it back up.
Because of this video i'm gonna make sure to buy one when it releases for my studio later this year. This thing is amazing, and at a $13,000 expected price, it is a steal compared to what a PS-3300 costs
This is that kind of video that i started with hitting thumbs up button and then watched the video. Now after it i put couple of more 👍👍👍. It is so dream come true synth in worthy hands🔥 fire
A genius taking a genius instrument apart. Thanks Anthony for giving these insights in what used to be my most favourite synth, back in the late 70s. Unfortunately too expensive for a poor student, at that time. So thrilled to see that Korg is bringing out the PS-3300 FS. I am extremely tempted.
Love how he can explain the synth better than Korg’s demo guy. How many people would be intimidated by a synth with all these knobs where anything can go wrong. Anthony tamed the synth like he made it and explains all the science behind it as he goes along. A true synth master!
Although I personally could never afford one, I'm glad Korg brought the PS-3300 back! Though I have a few Korgs from a MS-20 mini to Minilogue XD, I'm still pretty new to sound design and this demo showed off a lot more of what the PS-3300 can do than I've seen in other coverage of it.
Anthony, I really enjoy your channel - you are a master of synthesis and you have great taste. Thanks for all the information you are always passing along. I graduated on Music Synthesis at Berklee and you still continue to inspire me. Keep up the great work.
Thank you so much for providing us with this content! Would never be able to go there, so having you taking us there and sharing your experience is pure gold for me!
It isn't often one gets to see a video of someone Enthusiastically demoing these synth-show synths Thoroughly like a curious programmer with some knowledge. Thanks Anthony 👍
That's a remarkable synthesizer. Thanks for using it as a teaching tool. (I have been meaning to watch this, but once a thing slips down my sub list, it may take a while for me to get to a video. I am glad I went back.) Exposing the one-module sounds gives a clear sense of the baseline beauty of the instrument. Multiplying those lovely possibilities just makes the instrument a real beast, in a very positive sense. Alas, I will never own one. It sure would be a blast to have one to while away my declining years.
Fantastic video! For many, we're not looking for instruction on how to be a better keyboard player... we're eager to gain knowledge on how to understand what is going on... why does the sound I'm hearing sound like that... how was it created... how can I recreate it... how can I make a similar sound on a different synth. Of the many people I follow I have to say... Anthony is a wonderful teacher by breaking down the how and why like he does. It seems he just forgot one thing! He forgot to bring Dr Mix along!
What an amazing sounding synth. I wish to see something sounding like this but more affordable. Also maybe a size more compatible with home studios. But in general they did a great job here, clearly.
I would use this for sound design purposes only and making fully use of its polyphonic power. I have played with Cherry Audio’s VST version of the PS3300 and it clearly gives a great insight to how the actual PS3300 works in its workflow and its patch points. Nothing beats the analog Korg PS3300 !!!!
The PS-3300 and you, to me the stars of this year's Namm show. Besides, nice to hear why a damper pedal is called damper, as the name in Itself basically is a contradiction.
Excellent breakdown of this wonderful instrument like only Anthony can. Well done. Thank you Korg. I hope this will be saved on the Korg website as a online tutorial for this instrument.