The microKORG features a
DSP-based synthesis engine, designed around the same engine found in the Korg MS2000. In Korg's terminology, the fundamental unit of sound is referred to as the "timbre". Each timbre consists of a pair of multi-function
oscillators. Two timbres can be combined in one patch to create a four-oscillator "layer", which can in turn be used to create more complex sounds (although doing so halves the polyphony from four notes to two) Oscillator one (OSC1) can produce one of several
virtual analog-style waveforms, including
sawtooth,
square,
triangle, and
sine waves. Alternatively, OSC1 can produce a so-called "VOX" wave (which simulates human vocal
formants),
white noise, and one of 64 different digital waveforms created via harmonic
additive synthesis. Some of these 64 waveforms (which are really single-cycle
wavetables) were originally featured in the
Korg DW-6000 &
DW-8000 digital-analog hybrid synthesizers of the mid 1980s. The second oscillator (OSC2) is limited to sawtooth, square, and triangle waveforms. Each waveform on OSC1 has a unique modulation feature, including wave morphing,
Pulse-width modulation, and
FM. OSC2 can be detuned, synchronized, and/or
ring-modulated with OSC1 in order to create more complex sounds. OSC1 can also be replaced with the signal from one of the line-level inputs on the back of the unit, allowing for external signals to be processed as if they were an oscillator (via the filters, effects, or even ring-modulated by OSC2). For further shaping of the sound, the microKORG offers several types of digital filters, including Low Pass (-12dB/Oct and -24dB/Oct), Band Pass (-12dB/Oct), and High Pass (-12dB/Oct) modes. Additionally, the unit provides a number of built-in effects, such as
flanger, ensemble (
chorus),
phaser, and
digital delay, all of which can be applied to external signals. For modulation, there are two independent
LFOs, with six different waveforms, allowing for the creation of more complex, time-varying patches. When playing a single timbre, the keyboard is limited to four-voice
polyphony. In layer mode it generally has only two-voice polyphony, although one combination of polyphonic/mono layers allows for effective three-voice polyphony of the second timbre. The microKORG groups its 128 factory preset sound patches into 8 groups: •
Trance •
Techno/
House •
Electronica •
D'n'B/
Breaks •
Hip hop/Vintage • Retro • Special Effects/Hit •
Vocoder A large knob changes the selected sound group. Each group has 16 different patches (two banks of eight); the active patch is selected by the eight LED-illuminated buttons on the front panel, while the accompanying A/B switch toggles between the two banks. All patches are user editable, and do not necessarily have to align with the genre groupings listed on the faceplate. == microKORG S ==