Korg • DW-8000

Korg DW-8000 Image

Take Korg's first digitally controlled analog synth hybrid (DW-6000) two steps higher and you get the more popular DW-8000. Sound is digitally generated from the DWGS (Digital Waveform Generator System) and has been doubled from 8 sampled digital waveforms to 16 simple analog to complex digital waveforms. The DW-8000 has 8 voice polyphony in two modes, or one monophonic mode with all eight voices stacked. The analog VCF resonant filter and VCA both have independent ADBSSR envelopes. Parameters can be altered in real time via a single programmable slider. There are 64 presets that can be reprogrammed by the user.

Korg EX-8000 Image

When the DW-8000 succeeded the DW-6000, it expanded it to 8 notes polyphony, 16 sampled waveforms, a velocity sensitive keyboard with programmable aftertouch, auto-bend, a simple arpeggiator and a digital delay unit. The Digital Delay was an astonishing goody for the time, offering up to 512ms delay, phasing, flanging, chorusing and other time effects. Both the Arpeggiator, Auto-Bend and Digital Delay make this synth an inspiring and great sounding machine to use for great 303 basslines, techno and house bass and synth sounds and more! The EX-8000 (pictured above) is a rackmount version of the DW-8000. Several 3rd-party developers offered expansion boards for the DW-8000 providing up to 1024 presets, layered sounds, keyboard splits and Sample+Hold for the LFO. Though later overshadowed by the M1, the DW-8000 has been used by Divine Masquerade, Juno Reactor, Depeche Mode, Dream Theater, Joe Zawinul, and Keith Emerson.


VISITOR COMMENTS

Comments page 1 of 5
Click here to add a comment
John Jansen
Posted 373 days ago
I like the front panel switch for mono / poly. I wish all my synths had that feature.
Analogue Crazy
Posted 442 days ago
A really beutiful sound, as complex and dark as digital with the warmth and pure class of analogue. Its a shame the DW was sort-lived, it sounds far better than most other digital gear.
Pepe
Posted 462 days ago
The nice thing about this synth is the combination of digital synthesis with analog filters. The filter can sound warm or nasty. I use my DW-8000 a lot because of the filter's sound and the ability to vary the parameters in small steps. So I can always tweak the filter per hand as if it was programmed. The DWGS system in the DW-8000 works neatless. The M1 has those sounds as well, but if you use them with the M1 you can hear that it has sample steps between the tone intervals. The DW-8000's DWGS sounds a lot more analog. I love the sawtooth waveform for it can be razor sharp as I haven't heard it from any analog beast. The E-Piano and Bell waveforms can sound very cool and combined with external effects they are so beautiful! The Organ and Clavinet sounds and of course the Square and Sine waveforms are pretty good. The other waveforms are mostly useless, an exception is the Digital Bass which sounds very thin but it can create nice digital leads when the filter is used effectively.
bill
Posted 462 days ago
its a pretty wicked synth and they still can be had pretty cheap. i kind of think this synth is going to become a bit more of a collectors item as time goes by it really is wickedly cool. the filter is so cool and that delay hardwired into the mains is part of the magic of this synth.
 

infoRatings


Demos & Media


Specifications




Resources