Well done sir! It’s super cool see someone new making this kind of videos and very inspiring your clearness and make the point that is your first hardware review , I hope you can grow well and achieve your goals , keep going !
You sister appreciates all the preparations that you did for her wedding ;) I am happy to see you enjoying your new toy now that you have more time! Lovely video bro
Those controllers are more for loops and triggering patterns, if you're producing music you may want to go with the keyboard version. Akai make a few keyboards with the same pads/controllers as that but with a keyboard too. Akai Professional MPK Mini Plus for example which is 3 octave, 8 pads (£125 so probably cheaper than that controller for you) or the MPC Key 61, full 5 octave, 16 pads, lot more control with a screen for browsing patches. Personally I'm not a fan of those rubber pads, I would prefer using the keys on a keyboard to trigger drums, just feels better to me. I know both the pads and keys have a pressure sensor but makes more sense with the travel of a key to me. For techno, especially if you're going to be playing live with saved clips/samples then that might be good for you thanks to it's portability. Hope you have fun with it anyway.
Well done sir! It’s super cool see someone new making this kind of videos and very inspiring your clearness and make the point that is your first hardware review , I hope you can grow well and achieve your goals , keep going !
You sister appreciates all the preparations that you did for her wedding ;) I am happy to see you enjoying your new toy now that you have more time! Lovely video bro
Nice! "The sweetest edition" of ableton, ghehe.
Hahaha nice man, just blurted that one out there 😂 Cool to see someone picked it up 🤣🙏🏻😂
Those controllers are more for loops and triggering patterns, if you're producing music you may want to go with the keyboard version. Akai make a few keyboards with the same pads/controllers as that but with a keyboard too. Akai Professional MPK Mini Plus for example which is 3 octave, 8 pads (£125 so probably cheaper than that controller for you) or the MPC Key 61, full 5 octave, 16 pads, lot more control with a screen for browsing patches.
Personally I'm not a fan of those rubber pads, I would prefer using the keys on a keyboard to trigger drums, just feels better to me. I know both the pads and keys have a pressure sensor but makes more sense with the travel of a key to me.
For techno, especially if you're going to be playing live with saved clips/samples then that might be good for you thanks to it's portability. Hope you have fun with it anyway.
nice
now i can put a voice to the face
sweet unboxing
cant wait to hear what it sounds like
Thanks a bunch mate! Then you're going to love the next one 👌🏻😁😁😁
@@DJTFalcon cant wait
🙏😁