Future Music

Akai Force

Is the much talked about standalone production system a standout hit?

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After a series of photo leaks online ahead of this year’s NAMM Show, the rumour mill went into overdrive, with talk of a ‘standalone Push’.

This leak was revealed to be Force, Akai Profession­al’s new companion to their MPC Live and MPC-X units. Billed as a “standalone music production/DJ performanc­e system”, it’s a fully self-contained studio environmen­t running its own

OS on an internal multi-core processor (16GB internal hard drive, 2GB RAM) – no laptop required.

Following in the footsteps of the MPC X, Akai are catering to producers and live performers who want to break free from the shackles of a laptop and controller setup, more specifical­ly the pairing of Ableton’s Live DAW and their companion Push 2 controller, or Native Instrument­s’ hardware and software hybrid, Maschine.

With Force sharing far more than a passing resemblanc­e to the Live and Push combo, comparison­s are obvious. Can Akai justify Force’s £1,300 price tag in a world where so many electronic musicians already own a computer, audio interface, DAW software and some kind of MIDI controller? And will this new arrival cause many to ditch all that?

Connectivi­ty-wise, this newgenerat­ion MPC is certainly impressive. Round the back, signal is routed out via a pair of stereo 1/4” TRS outputs: a Master (1/2) Out and a second pair able to act as either a second stereo aux out or a DJ-esque stereo cue output (outputs 3/4). On the front panel there’s a single 1/4” headphone output with level control, plus a Cue Mix knob for blending between the Master and outputs 3/4 – ideal for, say, testing your outgoing mix before routing it through main speakers, DJ-style.

Back to the rear panel, incoming audio signals are plugged into the pair of combo XLR/1/4” inputs (Inputs 1/2), levelled with the Gain knob, and flipped between Line and Instrument levels; while a +48V switch can be flipped to engage phantom power for a mic signal. This flexible connectivi­ty allows you to pipe in (and sample) audio from any source you like.

To import your own samples there are a pair of USB A ports (which also handle USB MIDI) and an SD card slot. On the underside lives a 2.5” SATA drive slot, facilitati­ng storage expansion through an SSD or HDD hard drive. For Ableton Link and other connectivi­ty, Force has built-in WiFi and Bluetooth, and you can also connect to your computer manually via the Ethernet or USB-B ports.

In true Akai style, Force is also equipped to handle control signals. Space-saving 1/8” MIDI In, Out and Thru ports are present (three 1/8”-to-MIDI connectors are supplied), and those USB ports can also handle MIDI. The four 1/8” CV/ Gate outputs let you control CV-capable gear.

As with any similarly high priced product, unboxing Force feels quite the event. It disappoint­s on the ‘portable’ front – at just under 4kg, with a sizable chassis – but this only adds to the luxurious, sturdy feel.

If you’re familiar with Ableton’s first generation Push – which Akai helped to create – you’ll feel right at home with Force’s layout. A matrix grid of8x 8 velocity-and after touchsensi­tive RGB pads commands the lower half, complete with flanking

buttons for switching modes, navigating menus, triggering scenes, etc. Above sits a horizontal row of assignable rotaries, each with its own mini OLED screen, which is angled for easy viewing – a nice touch.

Force’s upper area is mainly devoted to the 7” multi-gesture, full colour touchscree­n. This is gorgeous, and works well, but in use, its touch response is less responsive than, say, an iPad – pinch-zooming, taps and scrolls occasional­ly don’t register. Thankfully, to the right of the screen sits a chunky encoder, also used for scrolling and click-selecting. This is a comfortabl­e workflow for Pioneer CDJ users, and I often ended up reaching for this knob instead of the screen. Keeping with the DJ aesthetic, there’s a crossfader for mixing and jumping between clips – more on this shortly – plus other navigation­al buttons (Play, Rec, Undo, etc) and a Master Volume knob.

On firing up Force, you’re greeted with a dazzling light show, and the option to open one of 16 demo projects. These show off some of the 10GB bundled sample content from brands like Sample Magic and Sample Tools by Cr2, and although these sessions are great for getting an initial feel, most seem geared to EDM. Most people will instead want to start composing from scratch.

A Project opens in Matrix Mode, which is analogous to Ableton Live’s Session View. Vertical columns represent tracks, with cyclical clips running horizontal­ly. In Launch mode, clips can be launched individual­ly, or entire rows can be triggered by tapping the right Launch buttons, done using either the pads or the screen. Navigation and performanc­e playback is executed using the plentiful function buttons and on-screen options. Clips are also easily assigned to either the A or B side of that crossfader and then flipped between, DJ-style, which feels particular­ly intuitive in a live scenario.

A master Project is comprised of several track types specific to Force. Up to eight stereo Audio Tracks can play back imported or recorded samples, complete with auto or manual timestretc­hing; Drum Tracks allow for per-pad sample and kit playback in classic MPC style; and

Force effortless­ly handles almost every aspect of electronic music creation

MIDI and CV tracks are used to trigger external gear.

I particular­ly like the workflow and approach of a Keygroup track type: funnel out MIDI to an external instrument, pipe its signal back in, and Force can automatica­lly multisampl­e a defined set of notes. Great for creating collection­s of bespoke multisampl­ed patches, ready for playback.

Audio and MIDI data can be laid down and edited in myriad ways, and although a lot of these options are inspired by the Ableton Push workflow, the touchscree­n takes things much deeper.

For all except Audio Tracks, Note Mode turns the pads into a keyboard for chromatic MIDI note playback, where the various scale and progressio­n modes can be used to lock your playing in key. The velocity- and aftertouch-sensitive pads are a joy to use, feeling as responsive as you’d expect from the original creators of the MPC.

Step-sequencing comes into play when programmin­g Drum Track data: the bottom-left 4x4 pads are for note selection, the bottom-right 4x4 pads become velocity selectors, then you paint in steps on the top 4x8 range.

Once you’ve recorded in note data, Clip Edit Mode reveals that data on the screen, piano roll-style. Various touch-editing functions are available, but as mentioned earlier, the sometimes-laggy touchscree­n makes this more fiddly than editing in your DAW’s MIDI region on a computer.

Then there’s the dedicated Mixer area, which turns the screen into a bank of faders, for full control over levelling, panning, automation and more. Here, you can also tab to your project’s Sends, Returns and Master Out, where processors and aux effects are dialled in across the session.

Force takes time to master, even if you’re familiar with Push or Maschine. However, as it’s basically a ‘DAW in a box’, this is expected, and testament to the amount you can do. Once used to it, you’ll find yourself composing in whole new ways.

One gripe: despite letting you chain clip playback, the lack of a true ‘song’ mode makes Force more of a sketchpad and performanc­e tool than a true song arranger. This may be addressed with a future update.

Next to establishe­d computerpo­wered DAW-and-controller pairings such as Ableton Live/Push or NI Maschine, Force’s value propositio­n does come into question. It’s far from within an entry-level producer’s price range, yet many advanced musicians will probably already own a laptop/ controller setup that’s as portable as the weightily-sized Force.

Plus, cost aside, your existing computer-and-audio-interface rig is far more powerful – you can run unlimited track counts, call up your favourite third-party instrument­s and effects, linearly arrange entire compositio­ns, and more.

Taken on its own, however, Force is an undeniably impressive standalone system that can effortless­ly handle almost every aspect of electronic music creation, sequencing and performanc­e. Not only can you compose, perform and remix tracks on the fly internally, but you can also trigger, play back and sample all of your external MIDI/CV hardware, making it a true studio hub. If you’re willing to commit, Force just might be your new MPC for the modern age.

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PADDED OUT: FINISHING TOUCH: MIXING IT UP: IN THE DETAILS: 8x8 matrix of velocityan­d aftertouch-sensitive RGB pads A gorgeous 7” multi-gesture touchscree­n DJ-style crossfader for A/B clip-switching Eight macros for various assignment­s
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