Teenage Engineering Pairs Its Reggae-themed Sampler With A New Voice-changing Mic

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Teenage Engineering’s Riddim looks for illustration conscionable different return connected nan company’s EP–133 KO II sampler. But it really has a batch much going on, particularly erstwhile paired pinch nan caller EP–2350 Ting mic. 

The Ting has nosy CB-radio vibes, and TE describes it arsenic being “lo-fi by design.” It’s sewage 4 built-in voice-changing effects, including echo, pixie, robot, and – basal for each dub reggae jams – echo positive outpouring reverb. There’s a lever connected nan broadside of nan mic too, for modifying effects connected nan alert arsenic you’re performing. You tin besides trigger 4 user-swappable samples straight from nan mic. 

Unfortunately, correct now, you tin only get Ting arsenic portion of a $329 Riddim n’ Ting bundle. We’ve reached retired to TE to spot if nan institution will beryllium offering it separately astatine immoderate point.

Unlike nan EP–1320 Medieval, The EP-40 Riddim is nary elemental rebadge of nan KO II. Yes, it is chiefly a sampler that conscionable happens to beryllium loaded pinch reggae focused sounds from nan likes of King Jammy and Mad Professor. But, it besides boasts 1 further main effect, double nan storage, and a due subtractive synth motor called Supertone. Supertone tin present bass listen and classical leads, but it besides has a dub siren mode that’s unit delicate — nan harder you property nan faster it oscillates. 

While Teenage Engineering cogwheel has a estimation for astronomical prices, nan $299 KO II, and now its $329 Riddim spinoff, connection amazingly coagulated values. The KO II is an incredibly tin sampler that nan institution has issued astatine slightest one awesome update to. They’re not going to switch your MPC, but they’re tin of whipping up value tunes astatine a fraction of nan price.

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