Thanks for sharing…always enjoy Jack’s videos and this was no exception.docbop wrote:I was one of the one's saying the new Nord Stage 4 is more of an update than a Upgrade and frustrated. Then I watched Jack Duxbury's latest video on it and have totally changed my mind about the Stage 4 there is a lot of change, but most are subtle but to a working musician wanting a keyboard designed for making changes in a live setting or creating quickly in the studio are great. Nord's problem is their first videos of the Stage 4 were just feature lists that didn't sound like much until a video like Jack's showing how to put them to use.Gambold wrote:My "bitterness" and "harsh speculation" is founded on my perception that Clavia is on a slow burn to irrelevance and, eventually, a dead business. I haven't seen anything in the past few years to convince me otherwise. True, complaining on this forum won't change anything, but at least my bleatings land on actual ears that care about Nord and its products. Nord itself doesn't respond to emails or phone calls about anything anymore, so expressing concerns directly to them would be about as effective as sending up smoke signals from the fire pit in my backyard.
Usually the response to complaints or criticism is "go shop somewhere else." This is a variation on the old "love it or leave it" retort that some people think is an appropriate reaction to a disgruntled long-time customer. Well, it's not. When you've spent as much money, time and love on Nord instruments as most of its customer base has, those customers have the right and obligation to complain or point out problems as they see them.
Certainly those problems can be debated. I don't have a monopoly on the truth and who knows, maybe Clavia is doing the best job possible with marketing and developing their product line. So why slam them at NAMM? Because all the problems are there in one package. No new products except one hugely-overpriced keyboard (about which most Stage 3 users seem less than thrilled). Someone playing the same tiresome soft jazz that Nord seems to think most of their customers play. A general sense that this is a company whose heyday is in the past, and who don't have a plan for the future.
I for one don't like living in the past. But that's where we are all increasingly finding ourselves, when we talk about Nord.
So am I going to buy a Stage 4 88 no too pricey for me and overkill for the things I do, my Stage 3 is good enough for me.
I'd say anyone really wanting to know the benefits of the Stage 4 check out Jack's video
My take on the Stage 4 is if you’re looking for a single board solution it’s very close to being perfect, so while expensive it’s not super crazy although US pricing is inflated.
I never play on a single board though - call it paranoia or just preference, but I like 2 or 3 on stage. So my latest rig combo has a NS3C on bottom, NW2 in the middle and a Rev2 on top, with a racked VST Mac Mini and Yamaha Motif Rack XS. If I was so inclined I could probably sell most of this and get a Stage 4. Or even just sell the NS3C and NW2 and get 90% of what I have now in a NS4C.
But I won’t, even though my back would prefer it.