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Native Instruments Kore £370

NI has delivered the future of plug-in management, and it works

The touch-sensitive knobs offer precise control.

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The concept behind Kore actually very simple. Instead of loading your plug-ins into your DAW, you load the Kore plug-in instead.

This contains a database of all your sounds, and when you double-click on one of them, the plug-in that originally created the sound is automatically loaded into Kore and the correct preset selected.

Since Kore is designed to index every sound and effect on your computer network, they're all categorised into 'types' so that you can quickly find what you're looking for.

Hardware

When sounds are loaded, you use the eight knobs and buttons on the hardware controller to adjust their parameters. You might suspect that eight knobs isn't enough, but Kore has a set of four arrow keys that lets you easily navigate through many pages of controller assignments.

Since the bright-orange LCD panel tells you the name of the current page - and which parameters are assigned to the knobs and buttons - there's never any confusion as to what any knob or button will do. When you touch one, it takes over the entire LCD panel, and its value is clearly displayed alongside a horizontal bar.

Kore uses the VST automation system to operate your plug-ins, so the LCD panel typically displays meaningful values such as '3.6KHz', 'Square Wave', or '+12dB'. This is a far cry from some other MIDI controllers, which simply display meaningless numeric data.

Its high-resolution knobs also combine fine adjustment with minimum spin, while faintly-glowing LEDs adorn each active control across the entire panel.

Surrounding Kore's jog wheel is a set of dedicated function keys that enables you to navigate a menu system so comprehensive that you can actually build entirely new sounds from scratch (without having to look at your computer or the mouse).

The system is designed in such a way that if you took Kore on stage, you could quite feasibly perform an entire gig with your laptop folded up and stowed out of the way.

Since the Kore hardware also features a high quality built-in soundcard (with stereo outputs on high-level balanced jack sockets), it looks and behaves like a self-contained synth module.

Although photographs of the Kore hardware suggest that it's a similar shape and size to NI's Rig Kontrol, it's actually much smaller. As such, you'd have no problems fitting it into your gig-bag. It seems robust enough - but then again, but we'll reserve judgement on Kore's road-worthiness until after it's done a few tours of duty.

Software

After installing the software and plugging in the controller, experienced computer musicians should have no problems getting to grips with Kore. Its operation is usually self-evident, and elements of the system that aren't can quickly be discovered through experimentation.

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MusicRadar rating

4.5 of 5

Pros

A complete sound management and design tool. Effortless browsing of all your sounds. High-precision, hands-on editing.

Cons

Controller unit also functions as a USB dongle. Currently no surround support in the plug-in version.

Verdict

You might not think that you need it, but Kore will change the way you work. And once you’ve tried it, you’ll never want to be without it.

Review Policy

All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.

Specification

Kore

Price:
£370
Description:
A sound design platform with a hardware controller and audio interface.
Features:
Midi in/outand s/pdif out.
Bundled Software:
Kore plugin manager for VST, AU, RTAS and DXI.
OS Requirements:
Apple Mac OS X 10.3.9 or later, Microsoft Windows XP SP 2
Platform:
MacOS/Windows
Power Supply:
USB
Ram Required (MB) (MB):
512
Input/Output Connections:
1/4, Balanced-line Out, Headphone Out
Unit Power Source:
USB
LCD Screen:
true
Software Editor:
true

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