Without setting out to do so, I've managed to fill my music room (not talented enough to call it a studio) exclusively with Japanese gear. I don't know if it's the cost, the genre associations, or if the stuff is just plain better, but I'm infinitely more interested in Korg/Roland than the likes of Moog, Sequential, EMS, etc.
I credit Korg in particular with making analog accessible again. I wouldn't trade my MS-20 mini for anything.
its exciting to think collaborations involving less-or-more diverse music for people to discover! I love radios for this because of the genre diversities it gives listeners. From reading the Chris Moyles auto-biography I found a topic this fascinating. From Daft-Punk to Fatboy-Slim and more!
When I read the title, I think of Ryuchi Sakamoto. I'm no musician, or musical historian, but that man is a genius in a similar way to Mozart, or Scott Joplin.
Interesting related bit of info: Charanjit Singh made arguably the first acid house music album, 'Ten Ragas to a Disco Beat', in large part due to the fact that he bought one of the first synths while shopping in Singapore:
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 21.8 ms ] threadI credit Korg in particular with making analog accessible again. I wouldn't trade my MS-20 mini for anything.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charanjit_Singh_(musician)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tT64B6vs9Mc