Trinity | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Korg |
Dates | 1995 ~ 1999 |
Price | $3,599/£2,395 MSRP (Trinity)[1] $3,999/£2,700 MSRP (Trinity Plus)[1] |
Technical specifications | |
Polyphony | 32 oscillators / max 32 voices |
Timbrality | 16-part |
Oscillator | 32 total, 2 max/Program |
Synthesis type | PCM-based subtractive (optional VA/FM/physical modelling) |
Filter | 2 multimode filters per oscillator, |
Aftertouch expression | yes, channel |
Velocity expression | yes |
Storage memory | 256 Combinations 256 Programs (64 MOSS Bank M/S, if installed) (expandable to 512/512/[128] with PBS-TRI option) |
Effects | Insert: 8 total "Size" processing blocks accessing 100 algorithms of 1/2/4 blocks each, Master-Chorus/Delay: 8 algorithms, Master-Reverb: 6 algorithms |
Input/output | |
Keyboard | 61, 76 or 88 keys with velocity and aftertouch |
External control | 4x audio-output, headphones, MIDI in/out/thru, 3x pedal |
The Korg Trinity is a synthesizer and music workstation released by Korg in 1995. It was Korg's first modern workstation and marked a significant evolution from its predecessors by offering features such as built-in digital audio recording, 32-note polyphony, an extensive internal sound library, assignable effects, and a large touchscreen for advanced control and editing functions, a feature not previously seen on any musical instrument.[2][3] It also offered modular expansion for not only sounds, but also studio-grade features such as ADAT, various sound engine processors, audio recording capability, and more.[4]
The Trinity was considered one of the most comprehensive music workstations, in terms of features, at the time.[1] In 1998, Trinity V3 models were introduced, incorporating sound engines from the Korg Z1.