The Korg N264 and N364 keyboards were 76- and 61-key (respectively) music workstation synthesizers based on the AI2 synthesis engine, with eight megabytes of sample rom first released in 1996. They have 936 programs and combinations, featuring 430 Multisounds and 215 Drum sounds. They have 64-note polyphony. They were the first Korg keyboards to include the Real-time Pattern Play and Record (RPPR) function, which makes it possible to record and save musical phrases as patterns that can then be played back by simply pressing the assigned key. Without sampling features, these keyboards are dated today, though their sequencing function is still useful. Today, the various keyboards in Korg's Triton line are used for similar purposes.
Just curious, why does the KORG N364 sell for such high prices on eBay while the bigger N5 (which as far as I know has all of the N364's sounds plus many more) is so much cheaper? Did I miss something here?
...FS-61 M3 (61): Matsu****a SK-61 M3 (73): Matsu****a SK-73 M3 (88): Korg RH3 MS2000 (44): Fatar TP/7BA N1 (88): Yamaha AE2-88 N264 (76): Fatar TP/9S, ungewichtet N364 (61): Fatar TP/9S, ungewichtet OASYS (88): Fatar TP/41 (Custom-Anfertigung), als RH2 bezeichnet OASYS (76): Yamaha FS-E76 Pa-1x Pro (76): Fatar TP/8SK PA-2x Pro (76): Fatar TP/8SK PA-3x Pro (76): Fatar TP/8SK PA588 (88): Fatar TP/40, bei Korg aber als RH3...
Can this info be 100 % trusted? I'm about to buy a Yamaha Motif 6 or 6ES only that here it is said to have the keybed FS C61 - the same as the SY-77. Is this true?
Nobody has reviewed this product yet. Have an opinion?