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Being a analog thick sounding enthusiast I was a little skeptical about jumping in on a "all-in-one" machine like the Triton Extreme. Now I am incredibly happy with my purchase. I've own/have owned Roland Juno 106, JP8000, Yamaha CS2x, Ensoniq ESQ 1, and Korg Micro-Korg. I was choosing between the Motif ES, Roland Fantom X6 and I chose the Triton for a few different reasons. All were so close in features that it was extremely hard to make decision based on the typical "Which is better"
1. I liked the Fantom screen and was worried about working the vast features of the motif which such a small interface compared to the fantom. The triton offered a nice hybrid...(Large touch screen just no color... who cares...)
2. Valve force... This is a nice analog warm touch to the product. It really makes a nice difference to help narrow the analog gap.
3. To me Fantom didn't have the sound out of the box that Motif had or the Triton. I think the motif had incredible sounds and the triton with appropriate use of combinations/valve force equalled/surassed that of the motif.
4. Cost... the Triton was on sale for about $400 less than the other two on the best day.
5. The triton has thousands of programs that come bundled.
6. I waggered that since I'm not hit producer yet (smiles) and this is my first all in one machine the Triton would be the easiest for me to hit the ground running with from an ease of use perspective and I would be very happy with the sonic quality/capability.
While I agree with some of the thin program sounds of the triton that other novice reviews pointed out, this is absolutely not true when you dive a little deeper. As with most modern non-analog synths these days the trick is in the layering the programs. This helps blend sounds to not sound so thin and get closer to sounding real/analog. So in Triton you have combinations which can have up to 8 layers(Each layer having 2 oscillators). Go grab 4+ differing string programs and layer them into one combination... turn on valve force and wow the sound is absolutely phenominal(I kid you not).
So i truly do believe having so many programs available and the ability to layer up to 8 instruments in one single combinations is an immensely powerfull sonic feature that is easy to over the look in the store if you don't switch the button from "Programs" to "Combinations"
Of course you do use up more polyphony but with all of the options available on the Triton to create songs from cue lists, sampling there is no polyphony threat for even the largest productions. There are just to many options for this to be an issue.
Also Triton went out of their way to make it easy for working in the sequencer with "Combinations" not just programs. This is something that many all in ones never do easily.
Overall this is the most expensive equipment purchase for me... and took a very very long time to get the nerve to invest. I was very worried that once I got it home I would be dissapointed... Well I got it home and I quickly learned that it blows me away daily and that I haven't put a heavy dent in using all the capabilities and every day I'm learning something new about the unit that just continues to make me smile about the $1400 bucks I spent.
VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
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