![]() ![]() It is worth noting that all shiftings have to be accomplished by pressure in the desired plane as any attempt to twist the control surface will simply result in it coming off in your hand. A Left or Right Shifting moves the wooden surface in the horizontal plane, and a combination of the two types of shifting produces that which you’d expect. Depending on where and how hard you press it along its length, you can produce either subtle or extreme Shiftings of either type. A slider concealed under the control surface sets the physical ‘sensitivity’ of the lateral movements via a pair of steel springs.Įxpressive E call these vertical and horizontal motions ‘Shiftings’ and, since the wooden control surface is suspended at either end, a Top Shifting describes a tilt down at its far end and a Bottom Shifting a tilt at the near end. Four independent sensors detect these vertical and lateral movements. A second suspension, sitting within the first but independent of it, allows the control surface to be moved left or right in the horizontal plane. Its smoothly tactile wooden control surface almost appears to hover above the base, but closer inspection reveals that it is attached by magnets to an underlying assembly that ‘floats’ on a pair of silicone cylinders, thereby allowing the control surface to be pushed downwards at any point along the length of its longitudinal axis. Physically, the Touché is an attractive and well-built unit whose black, soft-touch base measures a fairly substantial 24 x 10 x 2cm. A Windows 10 Lié beta is imminent, but no release date for the actual program has yet been set. Currently the Touché and its supporting Lié software (recently upgraded to v1.2) are limited to working under Mac OS (10.10 and above). ![]() With the release of the Touché, French company Expressive E have brought to market a USB/MIDI/CV hardware controller whose raison d’être is to deliver an intuitive, touch-based approach to controlling the parameters not only of hardware synthesizers, but also of VST software instruments running within a DAW. Once synthesis arrived on the musical scene, note production and the modification of pitch and sound began to be mediated by relatively crude, mechanical means that often struggled to become an integral part of the musical process. My opinion is that there are no more convenient, precise and pleasure way to control 3 parameters by just one hand (and I have even tried wii remote as midi controller in the past).The use of touch to control music has a history as long as that of music itself, giving musicians a physically intimate and essentially intuitive relationship with their instruments. Lié software with presets and UVI instrument is a nice bonus, but I am happy it can work without a computer (still needs to be USB-powered). And I am so glad that I have found it finally. I was looking for years for any external Pitch/Mod wheel combo to add my digital Hammond that is lacking of it and which I am using as a master keyboard. I had some small difficulties in the beginning as its firmware has to be updated, Lié need to refresh plug-ins list in order to see them and manual didn't cover Presonus Studio One set-up which is my main DAW (besides C9 and LPX), but Expressive E support was responsive and sent me some helpful instructions with screenshots. And I will be able easily integrate it into any CV set-up if I will go Eurorack way someday. Kontakt based brass and strings instruments) is just outstanding.ĬV out works great with my external filter as well. The level of articulations it brings to hardware synth (those funky basses and leads!) and to sampled instruments (i.e. Touché really meet and exceeded my expectations.
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