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Expressive e touche review
Expressive e touche review











expressive e touche review
  1. Expressive e touche review manual#
  2. Expressive e touche review software#

In my first flight of Touché exuberance, I found myself playing the keyboard and moving my finger across the Touché at every turn. Within minutes I was controlling some of my favoured Audio Unit-based synths with the Touché. Initially, this left me scratching my head for a while, until I realised it’s of course possible to set up the Touché to send any MIDI CC to a current track. Cute… however, this will present a problem if you’re a Logic user, as you will need a VST Wrapper for VST based plug-ins if you want to see and use any this way.

Expressive e touche review software#

There are plenty of filter-based swells and far more besides, but the Lié software also allows operation of VST plug-ins from within it. Once Lié is active, as a software instrument in a DAW, it’s immediately playable as an instrument in its own right, thanks to some healthy and wonderful sounds from soft-synth experts UVI – and these included patches are there to show off what can be achieved. This does everything you wish it to do in terms of setting up controllers, whether MIDI CC or CV based. Once connected and installed, the way to get at the workings of the Touché is via the Lié plug-in. But as I would quickly find out, there’s more to it that that. The top, bottom, left and right areas tilt, lean and depress, with each having a MIDI controller or CV assigned, meaning you can assign whatever MIDI CC you want to an area, and as you apply pressure in that area, it will send out a CC or CV level. If you think of the ‘plank of wood balancing on a football’ scenario, you’ll not be a million miles away from how this works and feels. The Touché is essentially a controller, a bit like an X-Y controller, with operation happening through the ‘touch’ of the upper surface. Upon removing it from the box, you’ll find it to be reassuringly heavy.Underneath the unit are more goodies – MIDI breakout cables and possibly the most expensive braided-USB cable I’ve seen… Quality assured. Towards the lower end of the unit, there are two large and flush-mounted buttons, with an infinite-pot style encoder in the middle. Looking rather like a sustain pedal, with a large, rounded rectangular area sitting proud, the Touché looks and feels great, with a neoprene-esque finish to the base, and a nice piece of dark wood on top. 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).Opening the box for the first time, you can immediately tell that this is a piece of quality equipment. 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.

Expressive e touche review manual#

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.

expressive e touche review

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.













Expressive e touche review