So I’ve been trying to take my time before buying my first hardware groovebox, and it’s got me thinking about the market. I can remember, maybe 10 or 15 years ago, there was definitely a bigger market for “pro” level grooveboxes. There were Korg, Roland, Elektron and other devices that had the ability to create electronic music in a self-contained way.
Right now, there seems to be a resurgence of hardware usage (burn-out from using computers maybe?) but it seems, to me at least, that there is a gap for pro-level grooveboxes. I understand that there are a number of entry-level devices live the Novation Circuit and the recent Electribes, Volcas etc but there seems to be a niche where the old Roland MC-909, Korg EMX-1, Monomachine or Machinedrum used to sit. I’m not trying to be rude about these cheaper devices but they have relatively limited feature sets and are clearly priced to target beginners or be very focused - not that there’s anything wrong with that.
I’ve been considering buying a second-hand device and I’ve been watching, for example, some Machinedrum and Monomachine videos. These devices had a serious number of tracks, multiple sound engines and synthesis types etc and the video evidence (your honour) would suggest that they were/are very full-featured even by comparison with the current generation of Elektron machines. And there don’t seem to be any competitors unless I’m mistaken. Where is the pro-level Korg groovebox to replace the old EMX-1 or a new Roland groovebox to replace the MC-909?
Let’s take the Analog Rytm MK2 as an example - this is clearly a very capable drum machine and a popular self-contained techno box but aside from the drum engines it only has a relatively limited dual VCO engine to make synth sounds, and you can’t pick and choose the sound engines you want for each track. By comparison, the Machinedrum appears to have 100+ sound machines including ones for non-drum synthesis, 16 LFOs that can span across tracks, all the usual P-Lock goodness etc. The Monomachine also has 5 totally different sound engines and the videos I’m seeing make it look at least as versatile, if not more so, than any of the current Elektron devices.
To be clear - I’m not trying to be critical and I think the current generation Elektron machines look great but where is the next-gen all-in-one groovebox from Elektron, Korg or Roland? Is the market just not there to support it? The Digitone and Digitakt are clearly selling very well and getting almost universal praise, so surely it wouldn’t be a huge leap to make a digital box that had a handful of sound engines (for both percussive and non-percussive sounds), a handful of FX, ENVs and LFOs and 8 or 12 tracks. A bit of wavetable, a bit of subtractive VA, a bit of FM and you’re covering a huge amount of ground.
That thing would be a monster! Have I got this wrong? Is the market just very different now because of DAWs and software? Or is it simply better and more sustainable business to shift a larger number of smaller, cheaper, less featured devices?
Discuss!