Kaoss Pad
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mini-KP by Korg | |||
Keyboard: | none - XY-pad | ||
---|---|---|---|
Velocity sensitive: | no | ||
Aftertouch: | no | ||
External control: | none | ||
Memory: | none | ||
Onboard effects: | none | ||
Produced: | 2007 - | ||
Original price: | ~$200 |
The Kaoss Pad is a touchpad MIDI controller, sampler, and effects processor for audio and musical instruments made by Korg.
The Kaoss Pad's touchpad can be used to control its internal effects engine, which can be applied to a line-in signal or to samples recorded from the line-in. Effects types include pitch shifting, distortion, filtering, wah-wah, tremolo, flanging, delay, reverberation, auto-panning, gating, phasing, and ring modulation.
The Kaoss Pad can also be used as a MIDI controller, with the x- and y-axis positions of a finger on its pad being output via a MIDI out connection as two continuous controller streams. The sum of the x and y positions can also be output as a third continuous controller stream.
The original model, released in 1999, is known as the KP1 Kaoss Pad. Korg have since released an updated version of the Kaoss Pad: the KP2, with a number of new features; the KPE1 Kaoss Pad Entrancer, a Kaoss pad that can process both sound and video; and most recently the KP3, which began shipping in October 2006.
In the spring of 2007, Korg released a newer version of the Kaoss Pad, entitled the mini-KP. This new Kaoss Pad was based on the KP3, using many of the same essential elements. As the name suggests, the mini-KP is a reduced-in-size version of its big brother, the KP3. The mini-KP offers 100 effects/programs and two memory banks. It is powered by 4 AA batteries so that users can fully utilize the portability of the mini-KP; however, the mini-KP lacks a backlit X/Y touchscreen and has no MIDI output.
[edit] Notable Kaoss Pad users
- Jonny Greenwood of Radiohead
- Matthew Bellamy of Muse (Built into many of his newer guitars)
- Alessandro Cortini of Nine Inch Nails
- Jochen Arbeit of Einstürzende Neubauten
- Doseone
- El-P lists a "Chaoss Pad" (sic) among the minimal amount of gear used to make Fantastic Damage.
- Brian Eno
- Rick Kay of Fighting the Will
- Chris Kilmore
- Korn
- Big City Orchestra uses a bank of 6, several circuit bent by Univac
- Blake Lewis
- John Linnell of They Might Be Giants
- Russell Lissack of Bloc Party
- Modeselektor
- Brian Molko of Placebo
- Peter Murphy
- Yoshimi P-We of Boredoms (notably for Psycho Baba)
- Paris in the 1920s
- Mike Patton
- Rou Reynolds of Enter Shikari
- Chris Spicuzza of Chimaira
- Jeff Tweedy and Nels Cline of Wilco.
- Jeremy Michael Ward and Omar Rodríguez-López of The Mars Volta
- Sid Wilson of SlipKnot
- British beatboxer Beardyman
- Tufraniuh
- Original89
- Johnny Noise of Seliquia