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DonaldChang
Banned
Isn't this stuff hardware EQs ,compressors, exciters right?I saw someone on a music production site refferring to equipment like his korg triton and roland fantom keyboards as "outboard gear" 

Government can impose limits on everything but stupidity... He can call them whatever he wants to call them, but I'm with Massive on this one. You play instruments, you process audio with outboard gear. I consider my keyboard to be an instrument, and all the extra effects processing I run it through to be the outboard gear.Massive Master said:I suppose I'd call those (instruments) "instruments" as opposed to "outboard gear" but hey, it's a free country, right?
Those are not instruments, they are outboard gear. They receive signals from a device and process accordingly.MadAudio said:So what about a rackmount synth module? Or drum module?
sile2001 said:Those are not instruments, they are outboard gear. They receive signals from a device and process accordingly.
SonicAlbert said:I'm noticing a slight trend toward calling anything hardware "outboard". Like you have software synths and you have "outboard" synths. I prefer to refer to hardware synths and synth modules by just that term "hardware". Before soft synths that wasn't necessary.
I think the term "outboard" goes a lot further back though when you are referring to signal processing devices like hardware eq's, compressors, fx, etc.
We also need to distinguish between midi signals and audio signals. Most synths don't process external audio, although some do. In fact, most synths don't process midi information either, they simply respond to it. Big difference between that and audio signal processing gear in the traditional sense.
tdukex said:Is my MIDI keyboard controller an instrument (I do play it) or a piece of outboard gear (it doesn't produce any sounds of it's own)?