![]() However, Alesis has resisted the temptation to extend the rotary dial and pad offer on the MkII, leaving these at four and eight and there are still no sliders present. Whilst it is still biased towards the left side of the upper panel, it allows for a greater breadth of interaction between the keyboard and a wider control set. The MkII design moves this extended functionality above the keyboard to a more central location. ![]() It allows greater interaction between the keyboard and wider control set The original offered a 49-key instrument but placed its additional controllers – a set of eight pads, function buttons, pitchbend and modulation wheels and four rotary encoders – to the left-hand side, making for a wide, thin instrument which rather assumed you wanted to play notes with your right hand and provide additional control with your left. ![]() The redesign of the second-generation V49 is substantial. ![]() The latest controller to tempt is from Alesis, with V2 of the V49 controller available for less than £100. But if your primary devotion is to your DAW and you’re seeking a more general-purpose controller keyboard, Novation, M-Audio and Alesis are among those offering ever-greater features at increasingly low prices. ![]()
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