Akai MPC500
Pros:
Best Portable Sampler Sequencer out. Can run on batteries. Classic MPC approach to beat production. Very small and sturdy.
Cons:
The USB connection is strictly for data transfer, not DAW control. Does not Phrase Sample.
I got a Happy Birthday e-mail from Illmuzik so I thought I'd drop by and drop a few lines. But instead of leaving a bunch of blah blah I thought I'd leave you guys with something useful. An MPC500 Review. I have outgrown my little Oxygen 8 so I was looking for something else to add to my setup. I wanted to try pads instead of keys. I looked up a lot of videos on YouTube and Google Video about Pad controllers like the MPD16, MPD24 and the Korg PadKontrol. There weren't too many videos about pad controllers but tons about MPCs.
October 2, 2006:
When I went to Guitar Center to get a MPD24, I found out they weren't out yet. They guy tried to give me a brand new MPC2000XL completely upgraded for $1300. I almost went for it but jumping from $199 to $1300 is not what I was trying to do. And you guys claim to be able to get one for E800 some where. But knowing what an MPC can do, I was very tempted. Since he didn't have the MPD24, I was going to get the Korg pads.... but then he broke out the MPC500. For $799 I can have a pad controller for my computer as well as a stand alone sampler/sequencer unit. I bought it as soon as he showed it to me.
October 10, 2006:
My birthday... Before I went home, I stopped by Guitar center to return it. The two cons listed above are the reasons why. I was willing to just use the midi ports to use this unit with my computer. My ultimate goal was to use this unit as an extension of my current setup. I wanted to build beats in Logic and Reason, but use the MPC500 for an ON-The-Go extension of my current setup. Basically loading the same snares and kicks I like to use on my computers onto the MPC, and then load the samples I want to play around with on the MPC500 to take advantage of it's workflow. But since you can't control the DAW through the USB, you need a Midi connection for your laptop. That kills the portability of this unit for use as a controller for your laptop because now you have to carry midi gear to get it to work. But if you are smart you'd be saying, "Ominous... this is a portable MPC, why the hell are you need you laptop when you are holding an MPC?" That's a good point. That's why I didn't trip about the USB situation. What kills me about the MPC500 is it does not Phrase Sample.
For those of you who have an MPC, you know how disappointed I was to find this out. Now, it claims to support phrase samples but I don't see how since the MPC500 has 12 pads and not 16. You can chop up individual files and assign them to pads but the phrase sample feature is way faster than you having to repeat the process for each pad. This for me kills the magic of an MPC. When you are in the groove and you want to just start banging pads to bust out beats, you don't want to have to spend 30 minutes assigning sounds to pads when it could have only taken 10 minutes with Phrase sampling. This goes against the whole reason why the MPC workflow is superior to a computer. You can tap the tempo into the unit instead of trying to calculate it like you do on a computer. And you can spend more time playing with arrangements than messing with Pad Assignments. And the reality of it is... you don't have to have that feature. Without it is the MPC is still the sh*t.
Now don't get me wrong. The MPC500 is an unbeatable unit. You can't get a better portable production station. The freedom of battery power cannot be understated. I'm talking MPC production in you car, on the bus, at lunch... wherever. And as far as I am concerned, you can't beat the MPC style of beat production because it is so hands on and configured around your natural rhythm. And that's coming from a hardcore computer user folks. But... there is no reason why in today's age of technology that you can't control a DAW through the USB connection and no MPC should be without Phrase Sampling.
I mean, just ask yourself these questions. Why can the MPD16 and the MPD24 control you computer's DAW through the USB port but the 500 can't? Why can an older MPC1000 phrase sample but a newer 500 can't? The truth is, you can take your pre-chopped wav files from you computer and transfer them to you MPC and them make beats anywhere you want to go on the MPC500. That's what I ended up doing. But one, the transfer rate was horribly slow. I'm talking annoying slow. Two, if I am going to chop wavs on my CPU, why the hell would I need a portable sampler sequencer when I can just walk around with my laptop and continue to make the beat since I chopped it up on the laptop to begin with? And then on top of all that... once I loaded my sounds onto the 500, I learned the hard way about naming convention. You can't name files for you MPC the way you can on you computer. I have file names that are 20+ characters long. The MPC only recognizes like 9 characters or something. So if you have 10 files named ImpeachthePres_drumloop_01, ImpeachthePres_drumloop_02, etc, etc. It keeps triggering the first sound because it can't distinguish the difference between the files because all it sees is "ImpeachthePres_dr". So then I had to shorten all the names to get the MPC500 to see all the sounds.
Don't take my word for it. Maybe I'm just a retard and I didn't know how to properly use the unit. Maybe it does control your computer through the USB port and I just had my unit set up incorrectly. Don't let me steer people wrong. If you know different... say so. But once I found out it doesn't Phrase sample, I no longer cared to see if I was doing something wrong. And the Phrase sampling issue is the truth because it says it right in the manual. And again, this is only my opinion. In the hands of some you talented producers, you can bang out some nice tracks on an MPC500. But I figured, for what you pay you should get everything it can offer.
Phrase sampling is not an end all issue. But I am sure I don't have to tell you, workflow is so important. The faster and easier it is for you to get you ideas out onto a track, the better. You don't want to waste your time editing samples the way this thing makes you do it. Unless of course, this is all you have.
I ended up getting an Axiom 61. So far I already like it. More keys and drum pads. From what I can tell, it is a Reason workhorse. As soon as I figure it out, I will post a video of how it works with Reason instead of typing a huge ass review. I will still probably get an MPD24 because I ain't dragging a big ass 61 key keyboard around with my laptop. I'll try to get that Axiom video up by November 1st.