Then, for the less well‑heeled, there's the PC3LE range, of which the subject of this review, the PC3LE7, is the 76-note version. The three models in the PC3 series are the flagship ROMplers, which Kurzweil slightly confusingly call 'Performance Controllers'. The spirit of those older keyboards - and some of their specific technologies - lives on in Kurzweil's current line‑up. Some were available for a surprisingly long time: the various incarnations of the upgradeable K2600 workstation, for example, launched back in the days of SCSI hard drives and floppy disks in 1999. In the '90s and noughties, their output included numerous pro‑oriented and often expensive instruments that were equally well suited to live and studio work. Kurzweil have been in the keyboard workstation game for about as long as anyone, and in the 1980s were frequently at the cutting edge of sampling and sample‑playback technology. Kurzweil's new workstation maintains the company's reputation for solid reliability, and does so at a lower cost than you might expect.
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