Search

Search News Articles

Category/Search Results

Teenage Engineering Launches Reggae‑Focused Sampler
& FX Mic
RIKIO ROCKS

Teenage Engineering Launches Reggae‑Focused Sampler & FX Mic

Attack Mag - News - Feat Images Riddim and Ting

New gear "riddim n' ting" taps into reggae, dub, dancehall and sound‑system culture.

Teenage Engineering has unveiled two new devices specifically designed for reggae, dub, and sound-system style performance and production: the sampler/sequencer groove-box EP-40 Riddim Supertone and the handheld performance microphone with built-in effects EP-2350 Ting. Together, the bundle of new devices is referred to as "riddim n' ting"

Both instruments are derived from earlier models in the company’s EP series, notably the EP-133 K.O. II and the EP-1320 Medieval. The EP‑40 offers sampling, sequencing and live loop performance; the Ting provides an effects‑microphone interface to add vocal/dub‑style textures to a set.

Key features of EP‑40 and Ting

The EP‑40 Riddim Supertone is described as a “powerful sampler, sequencer and composer” built for expressive live performance. It supports 12 stereo or 16 mono voices, 128 MB internal memory, a subtractive synth engine for bass and lead sounds, and a grid‑based “LOP play mode” with mute/unmute pad functionality for live remixing. 

Teengage engineering riddim and ting riddim n' ting

Its sound bank comprises well over 300 handcrafted samples styled for reggae, dub and dancehall: drums, percussion, bass, leads, chord stabs, multisampled keys, melodica and guitar.  Many of the sounds and music are from artists representing all corners of the scene, including King Jammy, Mad Professor, Mafia & Fluxy, and more.

It also includes an onboard synth engine (dub sirens and lead/bass presets) and performance-oriented features, such as pressure-sensitive pads. 

Complementing it, the EP‑2350 Ting is a handheld microphone/interface unit with built‑in vocal effects (echo, echo + spring, pixie, robot) and four sample trigger buttons (for classic sound‑system hits like air horn and laser). It connects via a 3.5 mm line output into the EP‑40 or any sound system.

Pricing

Riddim n' ting is available now for £299.

Find out more on the Teenage Engineering website.

[product-collection] [social-links heading="Follow Attack Magazine" facebook="https://www.facebook.com/attackmag" twitter="https://twitter.com/attackmag1" instagram="https://www.instagram.com/attackmag/" youtube="https://www.youtube.com/user/attackmag" soundcloud="https://soundcloud.com/attackmag" tiktok="https://www.tiktok.com/@attackmagazine"]
Previous Article AlphaTheta Halts CDJ-3000 Firmware Rollout After DJs Report Vanishing Playlists
Next Article Britain’s Dancefloor Crisis: How Government Inaction Is Killing Nightlife and What Must Change
Print
40