Korg Trinity

The Korg Trinity is a synthesizer music workstation released by Korg in 1995. It was also the first workstation to offer modular expansion for not only sounds, but also studio-grade feature such as ADAT, various sound engine processors, audio recording capability, and more. It was considered one of the most comprehensive music workstations, in term of features, at the time.

Trinity
ManufacturerKorg
Dates1995 ~ 1998
Technical specifications
PolyphonyMax 32 voices/32 oscillators total
Timbrality16 tracks
Oscillator32
Synthesis typePCM-based substractive (optional VA/FM/physical modeling)
FilterHigh Pass 12dB/oct, Low Pass 12dB/oct, Band Pass 6dB/oct, Band Reject 6dB/oct, resonant, two per oscillator
Storage memory-256 Combinations
-256 Programs
-64 programs (MOSS or SOLO board)
Effects-110 effects algorithms
-Up to 8 simultaneous (in Combi mode) Insert (8 "Size"/blocks total) plus Master Reverb/Delay (8 algorithms) plus Master Modulation (6 algorithms) effects plus Master EQ (2-band)
Input/output
Keyboard61, 76 or 88 keys with velocity and aftertouch
External control4x audio-output, headphones, MIDI in/out/thru, 3x pedal

Ex-Dream Theater keyboardist Derek Sherinian in collaboration with KORG sound designer Jack Hotop created Sherinian's signature guitaristic lead sound on the Trinity in 1996.

The Korg Triton succeeded the Korg Trinity in 1999.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.