

The Sonic Palette can be used with any MIDI equipped musical hardware. For example , the Kurzweil K5000 which is a full featured keyboard workstation, with features enough to almost get your coffee.

The Sonic Palette can give you control of very complex (or simple) patches that keyboards like this and many others, like the Yamaha Motif, can create.
Sound
modules made by Roland, Dave Smith, Korg, Virus, and others,
often have as much and sometimes more power than keyboard
workstations.
Plus, with the Sonic Palette, who needs the keyboard part anyway ;) So why not use a module like these? They have an great cost to music ratio.



Most of our customers use the Sonic Palette with computer software. This is understandable as high quality software is available, and personal computers, especially laptops are now powerful enough to run synthesizers.

But perhaps more importantly, the level of interface control that a computer with it's large screen gives you really lends itself to all the controls that the Sonic Palette makes available. Especially when you realize how incredibly easy it is to assign physical controls to virtual ones.
I must say here that Reason by Propellerhead, is the reason for this product, no pun intended. It's wealth of synthesizers and virtural knobs got me thinking about interfaces for this new (at the time) kind of software.
But since I started working on the controller, I have discovered many mind blowing pieces of software like the stuff that Native Instruments makes including Absynth.

Then there's the software that is amazing because it works great and it is cheap or free like GarageBand.

I would be remiss if I did not mention that you need to have a MIDI to USB interface to get the MIDI into your computer. You only need one MIDI IN so you can use any MIDI interface, including these small and inexpensive ones, from Edirol, and Mark of the Unicorn, or go WIRELESS with M-Audio's MidAir!



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