What you SEE in the video is a MicroKORG XL+. I used that when shooting the original video - and it's the same video snippets in virtually all demos. But the audio was recorded as MIDI, and the sound you HEAR in this video IS indeed from the MicroKORG 2, which was triggered by that particular MIDI file recorded that day. So, your eyes are correct, but only your eyes. ;-)
I use the exact same clips and MIDI files for two reasons. 1) I gather the videos on categorised playlists that work as shootouts between different synths. For instance this one is here: th-cam.com/play/PLkGHDTvF4ccdRiyMamXeVZ55KVT13m6nc.html&si=-hPG55t4mK9ddTGo Since they use the same MIDI file and backing tracks it should be easier to conpare. 2) It saves a lot of time, which means I can create and share more demos (historically at least one new demo a day, which would not have been possible if I should capture new video every time).
This is NOT microKORG2 but microKORG XL.
What you SEE in the video is a MicroKORG XL+. I used that when shooting the original video - and it's the same video snippets in virtually all demos. But the audio was recorded as MIDI, and the sound you HEAR in this video IS indeed from the MicroKORG 2, which was triggered by that particular MIDI file recorded that day.
So, your eyes are correct, but only your eyes. ;-)
@@SoundsLikeThisGear OK! I got it. But why didn't you play microKORG2 when shooting?
I use the exact same clips and MIDI files for two reasons.
1) I gather the videos on categorised playlists that work as shootouts between different synths. For instance this one is here: th-cam.com/play/PLkGHDTvF4ccdRiyMamXeVZ55KVT13m6nc.html&si=-hPG55t4mK9ddTGo
Since they use the same MIDI file and backing tracks it should be easier to conpare.
2) It saves a lot of time, which means I can create and share more demos (historically at least one new demo a day, which would not have been possible if I should capture new video every time).