This is Part 3 of our video manual for the Korg Kronos Music Workstation, focusing on KARMA and Drum Tracks. For more details, please visit www.korg.com/ Like/Follow us: / korgusa / korgusa / korgofficial
dumb question When looking at a combi in controlk surface mode I see 8 buttons as on keyboard as well. If there are only 4 karma modules, why are there 8 buttons? Thankjs !
in some way thyis is brilliant, but in others leaves so many questions. Needs to show examples of making and/or modifying programs and combi's. Is there such a thing?
@@pyannaguy4361 you can argue that definitely. its a beautiful unit the sounds are great but man its time consuming and tough to master unless you're a full keyboard/synth nut job
I think this is the must useless video about you can do with karma, And thank to this videos, I always thought that karma was just for generate, drum tracks and patterns and stuff like that, but really karma is a tool very very powerful where u can have lot of combination and changing the sounds between themselves.
Bâte Alin-AB It has the basics of an Arranger. It plays backing patterns and changes the pitch or tune of the pattern according to your notes being played. You can decide if it backs with chords or or melodies or crescendos and things a bit more flamboyant than the simplest arrangers. It does drum arrangements and melodic or harmonic arrangements but it falls short of even the simplest arrangers when it comes to preset drum fills, intros and endings. You can have drum fills, intros and endings but it is done differently than a classic arranger and not easy to get the traditional arranger style of fills, intros and endings. But it can do a lot more than traditional intros and endings despite being lacking in the traditional forms. It can change up melodies and harmonies on bass lines, synth lines as well as drum patterns and does it in real time over a set of controls that can be set to a mix of changes that then save in that configuration with switches to let you save 8 change up configurations at a time and those configurations can still be changed as you play realtime. Endless configurations over 32 different aspects of the patterns that you can change in many ways. Then there is the midi control power house that it is. If you want simple traditional arranger, get and arranger. If you want to get advanced and have extensive control over extensive aspects of your arpeggios and drum beats in real time, then get kronos. Kronos has Pattern RPPR that lets you make traditional beats from scratch or copy them as midi files from other sources like an arranger and set them up in Kronos to have what you want and deep editing if you decide you want them to change. If you get Karma software added to Kronos, then you get a whole lot more and the chance to bring traditional arranger fills, intros and endings into Karma. Kronos lets you do anything but you have to work for it. It is a "Work-Station after all. Karma is not easy and takes a long time and effort to get the full potency of it under hand. All of kronos is like that.