It should be mentioned the strengths of each IMO.foosnark wrote: Mon Dec 16, 2024 3:54 am None of the cheaper controllers I've used were any good at all until I tried a Seaboard Block (the predecessor to the M, not the LED squares which are crap IMHO). It felt good to play slow chords with it, with very precise control over pressure and pitch... when it didn't cut out intermittently and frustrate the shit out of me. It was pretty awful for fast playing and velocity-based patches IMHO.
So, if you plan to play slow, and accurate pressure and pitch matter to you, AND if you get a unit that doesn't flake out, it might be worth it.
I love my Linnstrument 128 though... I got a used one, and it cost about 3x what the Seaboard did but it's also at least 3x better.
For slow chords and subtle pitch slides, while I enjoyed the squishiness of the Seaboard, the Linnstrument is equally accurate and playable. But it's also very well suited for faster parts and finger drumming. It does the grid thing, which greatly expands the available octave range while staying compact, and it's more configurable than Launchpad Pro or Polyend Medusa, with all the configuration right there on the unit. It's almost perfect IMHO.
The Seaboard Block or M is really good in the pressure and velocity department, it's also good with slide, but, for me anyway I wanted to engage pressure at the same time as slide for dramatic parts and it would lock my knuckles. Others don't have this issue, likely because they aren't playing it like that, but it was/is a downside of the M to me. The slide is a long throw though which is nice for subtle bowed string type sounds.
The Linnstrument is absolutely fantastic with pitch, nothing beats it IMO, whole chords can be slid etc. it's not bad with slide, but it's a tiny window, best for lest drastic changes in shound. Velocity is so so, it's a pad so you get what is possible with a pad, not too much. It responds really fast and the grid has alternate functions.
The Push 3 is nice pad size wise, a good amount of slide, and pitch is similar to the Linnstrument, but 64 pads holds it back personally, you adjust your playing to it, not the other way around.
I would say on all of these Pressure and velocity are sort of mixed up, you can get used to it but I wouldn't have drastically different things assigned to them, since you will get some random play between them. That's probably where the Expressive E Osmose would come in.