What I like about it is that you can sample on-the-fly and use the touch screen to fire off those samples instantly within your music. No fuss, no mess. But of course, it goes a lot deeper than that. You can slice up samples, sync them to each other, build loops with different tempos and perform it all back through the interface or over MIDI. It’s a great little workflow that lends itself to dawless tabletop music making.
It comes with over 800 samples ready to go although really you’re going to be wanting to make your own as you go – that’s what it’s good at.
There are 8 pages to deal with selectable from the 8 buttons on the front panel. “Pads” and “Keys”lets you play your samples in real time from either drum pads or a virtual keyboard. “Seqs” is for building sequences and “Song” lets you chain these together into songs. “FX” and “Mix” do what you imagine them to do, “PSet” is for browsing prests and “Tools” is where the sample editing comes into play. The info button at the top brings up information within the page, sampling settings and such like. Data entry is achieved via the 4 big knobs. Then with the three big Stop, Rec and Play buttons you are all set.
The only slight disappointment is that the stereo input and 3 stereo outputs are all on mini-jack but then it fits with the compact nature of the device and also it’s a not uncommon Eurorack style format.