Korg Trinity
The Korg Trinity is a synthesizer and music workstation released by Korg in 1995. It was Korg's first modern workstation and marked a significant evolution from its predecessors by offering features such as built-in digital audio recording, 32-note polyphony, an extensive internal sound library, assignable effects, and a large touchscreen for advanced control and editing functions, a feature not previously seen on any musical instrument. It also offered modular expansion for not only sounds, but also studio-grade features such as ADAT, various sound engine processors, audio recording capability, and more.
The Trinity was considered one of the most comprehensive music workstations, in terms of features, at the time. After the discontinuation of the M1, the Trinity became the next Korg flagship synthesizer. In 1998, Trinity V3 models were introduced, incorporating sound engines from the Korg Z1.
Background
The Trinity and the Korg Prophecy were both introduced on the same day, drawing significantly from the technology developed for KORG's OASYS "Open Architecture Synthesis System" synthesizer. While the OASYS was a prototype that was showcased but not released commercially, it was built on an open DSP system concept capable of loading diverse models for various synthesis types and physical modelling sound generators, utilizing a multi-DSP architecture. The Trinity boasted the ACCESS sound generator, which included 48 MB of PCM waveforms and introduced resonant filters into Korg's workstation lineup for the first time.The Trinity's design, from its aesthetic to its operational framework, draws heavily from the Korg 'T' and '01' series, incorporating elements such as Programs, Combis, and sequencing capabilities, as well as familiar global configurations and disk operations.
Sounds and features
The Trinity utilizes a large, touch-sensitive screen for editing, allowing users to select parameter names or icons and modify values using the data entry fader, up/down buttons, the 10-key keypad, or the spinwheel. Resting a finger on the screen displays an enlarged control, which can be adjusted by dragging the finger up, down, or around the screen.It utilizes 16-bit, 48kHz PCM samples stored in 24MB of ROM, effectively doubled to 48Mb through 2:1 data compression. The sound library comprises over 1,000 individual samples, including 374 multisamples and an extensive drum library of 258 PCM sounds. Users can create up to 12 customizable drum kits, with the ability to apply up to four effects per kit. Additionally, each drum sound can be independently panned and sent to the filter.
Trinity's effects system was revolutionary at the time for the number of simultaneous effects, the ability of the user to assign those simultaneous effects with a great degree of freedom, the large number, variety, programmability of effects algorithms, and realtime effects control.
The effects system included eight-total user-assigned "Insert Effect" "Size" processing blocks, plus two distinct "Master Effect" send/return scheme processors.
The Insert effect blocks are assigned by the user in series-chains of "Size 1", and/or "Size 2", and/or "Size 4" effects, with a Program limit totaling Size four or fewer blocks and three or fewer algorithms in series, or a Drum Kit limit of total Size four or fewer blocks and four or fewer algorithms in series or parallel, or multitimbral Combination or Sequencer Modes in Timbre Groups each utilizing all eight or fewer Size blocks divided into one or more series-chains with three or fewer algorithms per series for Programs and/or series-chains or parallel with four or fewer algorithms for Drum Kits.
The "Master-Modulation" and "Master-Reverb/Delay" mono-in/stereo-out processors were routed as send/return, so in multitimbral Combination and Sequencer Modes, each Timbre or Timbre Group has independent Master send levels. Finally there is a basic low/high shelving EQ before the Trinity main outputs.
Models and upgrades
The Trinity series launched with four different models; the base Trinity featured a synth-weighted 61-note keyboard with channel aftertouch. The Trinity Plus included the "Solo Synthesizer" board, incorporating the sound engine and effects of the Korg Prophecy for integration into the workstation. This feature was also standard in the higher-end models: the Trinity Pro with synth-weighted 76-note keyboard with channel aftertouch, and the Trinity ProX, offering an 88-note piano-weighted hammer-action keyboard with channel aftertouch and the HDR-TRI 4-track digital recorder plus SCSI and digital audio interface expansion.All Trinity models were capable of being enhanced with the same multiple expansion options.
The PBS-TRI expansion board featured 8MB of PCM flash-ROM for loading Akai, Korg, and AIFF format samples and also included two separate S-RAM chips to be installed in sockets on the Trinity main PCB that were activated when the PBS-TRI board was installed, resulting in doubled sound-patch memory locations for Programs, Combinations, Drum Kits, and any installed Solo/MOSS DSP synthesizer .
The HDR-TRI upgrade transformed the Trinity into a four-track hard disk recording and editing platform, adding SCSI, S/PDIF and analog audio inputs, and also enabling external audio procerssing through Trinity's Master Effects processors.
An SCSI-TRI option added SCSI interfacing to external high-speed mass-storage like hard and/or optical drives.
The DI-TRI 4-channel ADAT-compatible digital audio interface with word clock syncronization.
The SOLO-TRI "Solo DSP Synthesizer" option, compatible with Korg Prophecy soundpatches, was also available separately for the base Trinity. A Trinity version 1 or 2 operating system is required to utilize an installed SOLO-TRI board and enable access to Program "Bank S" containing Solo DSP Synthesizer soundpatches.
Later, the MOSS-TRI "MOSS DSP Synthesizer" option compatible with Korg Z1 soundpatches was available separately. A Trinity version 3 operating system is required to utilize an installed MOSS-TRI board and enable access to Program "Bank M" containing MOSS DSP Synthesizer soundpatches.
All Trinity expansion options were designed for installation only by authorized service centers or dealers, not by end-users, and required accessing Trinity's main internals, exposing its power supply circuitry. Therefore, expansion option installation instructions were available only to service centers and dealers, and are not included in expansion option user manuals. In practice, the expansion option boards installed via simple sockets similar to personal computer boards, some also secured with metal brackets and screws.