I was specifically addressing affordable outboard gear. Software is another issue, and a controversial one. You can buy something like Reaper for little money, but does it do the job? That all depends on one’s standards and whether one is serious or a hobbyist.
True, all the companies, including Kurzweil, (excepting Behringer) have changed hands. They aren’t the same companies. The Early Behringer stuff made in Germany was well designed and well put together. The differences in our ages could account for you missing the good Behringer days. I’m a bit older than you, but a bit younger than Glen. Considering where we were and what type of music there’s enough spread there and things were happening so fast it’s unlikely that even between the three of us, we were aware of all that was available. So we just had to choose form what we knew.
I own one piece of excellent Behringer gear, the SNR202 Denoiser made in Germany, and still used at Lucas Arts by the way. Behringer is all made in China now.
I grew up on the early Kurzweil stuff like the K250 and I still own the K1200 Pro 76 and 1000 PX expander. After the company reorganized there was a decline in quality, save maybe the K2000. To this day, I’ve not found that Kurzweil piano sound or reliability in the new stuff, so I hold onto these treasures.
Lexicon: Even the LXP-1 (1988?) runs circles around later stuff like the MPX100/110 and the lexicon LXP-15 II (1995) blows away the MPX500 and gives the MPX1 a run for its money. The last really good budget processor was the Reflex (1995) and I can still recommend that over more recent and cheaper models.
The Alesis line has really gone down hill. The old Micro Limiter is a better comp/limiter than the 3630. In general if it says Made in USA, Alesis is decent stuff.
Whether a portastudio sounded like crap or not depended on which one you had. I was partial to the Tascam full-size units. I owned the original 144 then 244 and finally the 246, which I still have in perfect condition. Manufacturers started coming out with cheap plastic minstudios, even Tascam made some, but a lot of the Fostex, Yamaha, vestax, and Peavey portas did sound like crap.
In the late 80’s at my home studio I had the Tascam 246, Ensoniq ESQ-1, The aforementioned Kurweil, a MOOG Opus 3, a Roland TR-707 and a Roland D-110. Lots of other things like a Symetrix 522 compressor, Alesis Midiverb II, Quadraverb, Alesis Micro Limiter, Yamaha SPX-90, and a couple noise gates. The closest I got to the Yamaha FM synths was a TX81Z, which I had for a while, but I never cared for it much or the DX7.
I still have most of the old stuff, all except the original Quadraverb, which I replaced with the Q2.
If you haven’t had the opportunity to work with the Tascam 246 porta I can understand the widely differing reactions people have when they hear the word portastudio. IMO, it was the best ever made, and I could and still can get professional results with that little recorder. After the glory days, 4-track cassette multitrackers were a dime a dozen from more companies than I can remember, and most were, and sounded like toys.
Of course my studio has expanded a lot over the years, but I always made good purchases after researching everything to death. I carefully chose my equipment and kept what worked… still use it along with ProTools and whatever else works. If something sucks I don’t care if its old or new… I’m not interested.
The main difference between then and now is that manufacturers were competing for quality as well as cost. R&D was at full steam trying to keep up with the other guy. As I said earlier, we were a smaller more discriminating sub-culture basically saying, “Ok, dazzle us!” And they did.