I'm into hardware synths (I've got several MIDI rack synth-modules and a couple of drum machines) and want to use those by MIDI sequencing and recording them with Waveform, adding EQ/effects etc. within Waveform. In time I might add some soft-synths as well, but first and foremost I want to continue using my MIDI hardware synths.
So the keyboard controller will ultimately replace a couple of 80s MIDI keyboard synths which I no longer need (I have their equivalent 19" rack modules). It has to have a nice keybed (preferrably 61 keys, or at least 49, nice quiet and smooth keyboard action, velocity sensitive, preferrably aftertouch). I see that today's keyboards come with lots of knobs, sliders and pads and understand they can be used to control the DAW and plugin functions -which I think sounds great (I like a more "hands on approach" as opposed to clicking/aiming the mouse for absolutely everything), but am unsure how this all works -and how it works with Waveform Pro.
Can these controls be assigned to work as a virtual analog mixer, to physically control stuff like EQ, panning, levels, effect send/return and so on? It would be so nice to emulate an analog multi-track mixing environment. I have a little analog multitrack studio experience, but by no means an expert, so feel free to comment on this if you have better workflow suggestions.
Back to finding a suitable keyboard: do they basically work the same (the knobs/switches/sliders are assignable for any DAW?) or do they use different standards which means keyboard A only works with a specific DAW and keyboard B works with another DAW?
I've got my eyes on the Native Instruments Komplete Kontrol A-series or S-series keyboards (they seem professional unlike many of the "Christmas tree lighting/toy keyboards" around) but don't have that many knobs, nor any sliders or pads (then again I'm not sure how many of those I would need for productive use).......

(Native Instruments Komplete Kontrol A-61)

(Native Instruments Komplete Kontrol S-61)

(Roland A-800 Pro)
