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Kurzweil alert!


Anderton

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Just got this somewhat enigmatic email, excerpts follow:

 

"This is Joe Goodman. I will be doing press and events for Kurzweil & Young Chang/Weber for the 2007 NAMM show. Mike Papa is the NEW National Sales Manager for Kurzweil...Young Chang is Having a 50th Anniversary Party on Sat., 1/20/2006 at [NAMM]...New Products...New Management Team...Details next..."

 

Mike Papa worked at Oberheim back in the days of the OB-8 and has remained in the industry since then. Joe Goodman is another veteran.

 

We've heard this before, but maybe this time, Kurzweil is back...I'll keep you posted.

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Whew!

 

I was afraid this was an alert that tiny, malevolent nanobots had escaped into the wild and were manufacturing new copies of themselves at breakneck speeds, planning for a major assault on carbon-based life forms.

 

 

This is a relief.

 

 

Also nice to see some veteran industry guys being tapped. The OB-8 was the first "modern" synth I used and compared to the Moog modular (based on a Model 15, IIRC) that I did my first learning on, it was, indeed, a glimpse of the future of synths. (Actually, by the time I was using one in 1981 or '82, that future was pretty much kickin' down the door. But learning in that classic path, starting out with patch cables connecting up the various modules...) [bTW, Wikipedia lists the introduction of the OB-8 as 1983... but I'm pretty sure I was using one as early as summer 1982, if not a year earlier.]

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More choice is always good. I'm a Roland fanboy myself, but spent a large chunk of the mid-late 90s lusting after a K2500 (after reading Jim Aikin's review in Keyboard magazine), then a K2600 after that. Never actually acquired one, Kurzweil fell off the radar and my GAS passed. Would be great to see them back. :)

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I think the term "Singularity" should refer not just to AI maturity, but also coalescence of all of the new technologies (nano, genetic, materials, quantum).

 

It's weird that it has a name now, I've been babbling about this online since there was an "online"....

 

You still see a lot of Kurzweil K250's around... Did they make their own action? Doesn't Fatar make everything now?

 

/ wonders if his MicroPiano module wlil one day rise against me

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I've got a perfectly good Kurzweil synth attached to an old Turtle Beach soundcard that also works but they don't make ISA slots on motherboards anymore, in fact PCI slots are getting rare.

 

It would be nice if Kurzweil or somebody could make a box that would house the soundcard and provide a USB connection on it. There must be quite a few soundcard/synth/rompler/samplers out there that are collecting dust but still very capable.

 

Steve

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1. Falling behind on the poliphony wars. Even if their poliphony was 4x deep, they never stressed that point in their marketing.

2. If you had a PC88 like me, you got pretty tired of replacing the white key counterweights - the tabs kept breaking off and you'd get a kilckety klackety keyboard - pain in the butt.

3. Eventually other mfrs sounds got better and caught up whilst Kurz did not dramatically improve - they started out the best (IMO) though.

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Originally posted by Phil O'Keefe

3. Eventually other mfrs sounds got better and caught up whilst Kurz did not dramatically improve - they started out the best (IMO) though.


The SP88x
still
has one of my favorite "from a plug-in or a box" natural acoustic piano sounds.
:thu:

 

Yeah, and the orchestral sounds also kick some serious sonic a$$!

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Originally posted by Phil O'Keefe

3. Eventually other mfrs sounds got better and caught up whilst Kurz did not dramatically improve - they started out the best (IMO) though.


The SP88x
still
has one of my favorite "from a plug-in or a box" natural acoustic piano sounds.
:thu:

 

+1

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Originally posted by mobobog

what do you think ruined kurzweil?

I always thought of Kurz as the Pro gear, whereas the others were for the Guitar Center crowd (the Pros got them free as promotion gimmicks).

 

High-end always sells less than what is meant for price-point people. Ford always sold more Taurus's than GT Cobra Mustangs.

 

I'm sure that the Yamakorglands sold more synths than Moog. That doesn't make them better, though.

 

Then, the rumours start that they are "ruined". :rolleyes:

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Its seems that Kurz dropped the ball some time after the K2600 and failed to maintain the imagination of the high end crowd. Then, with their back against the wall they decided to go after the mainstream folks which alienated the "pro" crowd further. Now, without a new flagship they have alot of catching up to do! I hope they come back in a big way. I've defected to Yamaha in the meantime. My only complaint is that you can't switch from one sound to another on the Yammy without an embarrassing dead spot like you can on the Kurz.

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Originally posted by Anderton

Young Chang is Having a 50th Anniversary Party on Sat., 1/20/2006 at [NAMM]...New Products...New Management Team...Details next..."


Mike Papa worked at Oberheim back in the days of the OB-8 and has remained in the industry since then. Joe Goodman is another veteran.


 

Mike Papa was the National Sales Manager when I worked at Kurzweil. Very interesting that he's back. :thu:

 

I assume they mean that the party will be 1/20/2007 right? :D

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Originally posted by pdiddy

Its seems that Kurz dropped the ball some time after the K2600 and failed to maintain the imagination of the high end crowd.

Perhaps, but I think the high-end crowd has diminished in size. "Cheap", as opposed to quality, seems to be the operative word.

 

The 2600 is a great machine. Even the 2500 is far from obsolete. But, the last 15 years has not produced a keyboard-oriented group of players. "Producers" :rolleyes: , yes. Players, no.

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I still have a fully loaded K2000RS...sadly it doesn't get much use these days, but it was a great machine for the time. I made more than my money back using that machine to score stuff for TV...the stock Orchestral sounds(+pianos) alone were worth it! Look forward to see what they will come up with in the future.

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Kurzweil, after being bought by Young Chang, was caught up in mega-corporate politics as I recall - - - Mike Martin can probably tell you most of yesterday's news on all that.

 

Kurzweil has always had a unique corporate philosophy about product support and legacy support - in short, they really mean it. Maybe that took the edge off new sales, I dunno. But their stuff is quality and the K2XX series is still miles deeper than 99% of synth users ever dream of going.

 

Let's hope they return to the game and up the ante again like they did with the K2000.

 

nat whilk ii

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