Synths

Review: Korg microKORG 2 — evolution of a classic

Analysis of the microKORG 2: evolution vs original, features, curiosities and FAQs.

Introduction

The microKORG 2 represents a new incarnation of Korg’s iconic compact synth/vocoder. In this review we assess the changes from the original model, improvements, and trade‑offs. You can browse other compact synths here: compact synths.

Types / Models

The microKORG 2 falls into the class of virtual‑analog compact synths with 37 keys. Competing models include desktop modules + controllers, semi‑modular designs, and variants like the microKORG S.

Discography

  • Daft Punk – “Technologic”
  • Röyksopp – “Eple”
  • M83 – “Midnight City”
  • Tame Impala – “Let It Happen”
  • Goldfrapp – “Ooh La La”

Video

Trivia

  1. microKORG 2 offers 8‑voice polyphony, doubling the original’s 4 voices.
  2. It adds a morphing multimode filter and expanded PCM engine.
  3. It retains the compact 37 mini‑key design and vocoder functionality.
  4. Despite upgrades, patch editing still faces criticisms of dated menu navigation.
  5. The original microKORG’s engine is shared with the Korg MS2000.

Q&A

Q: Is upgrading from microKORG original worthwhile? A: If you need more voices, filters, and features, yes — but the compact format still imposes limits.

Q: Is it suitable for live use? A: Yes — solid build, MIDI/USB support — although a larger screen might be missed.

Q: What are key drawbacks? A: Non‑intuitive patch navigation, limited polyphony for complex layers, and mini keys instead of full size.

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