![]() As it can be battery powered via the built in rechargeable lithium power pack, it’s going to be just at home hiked into a DJ box with you or for composing on the go as it is as the centrepiece of a small home studio.Īll that said, the unit can also be used as a control surface for the MPC 2.0 software when you run the software on your Mac or PC, too, so really you’ve got the best of both worlds here. The controls include proper pads plus a big encoder knob, and it has two Midi sockets for adding drum machines, keyboard and so on. It is a relatively small unit, yet very flexible and powerful, with lots of RAM (2GB) and disk storage (16GB) plus an SD slot two inputs for recording anything from a mic to a turntable (the twin RCAs have an earth pole) plus six configurable jack outputs and full use being made of the touchscreen, which – for instance – can be used to drag and drop Midi for quickly filling out compositions. We’re focusing on the MPC Live here as we feel it offers the most interest to our audience of DJs and DJ/producers. ![]() Both eschew the need for a computer by running Akai Pro’s MPC software natively, and offer the flexibility of a large touchscreen plus the tactile fun of real controls. Just ahead of next week’s NAMM Show, Akai Pro has outed two new MPC-branded music production devices, the MPC Live and the bigger MPC X. Small and light (under 3kg), the powerful Akai Pro MPC Live can also run on batteries, and have a turntable attached to it – is it the ultimate composition tool for DJ/producers to both compose and perform on?
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