Korg Phase8 Is a Cyberpunk Kalimba for Producers Who Are Bored of Regular Synths

On first glance, Korg’s Phase8 looks like something Love Hultén might have dreamt up after a late night with a kalimba and a soldering iron. It has that same altar like presence, where every screw and surface feels intentional, and the exposed steel bars read more like a kinetic sculpture than a row of notes. You do not just see an instrument, you see a machine that wants to be played, prodded, and prepared with whatever objects are lying around your studio.

The result is a tabletop artifact that feels half lab instrument, half folk relic. Phase8 invites the same sort of ritualistic interaction Hultén builds into his one off consoles and synth shrines. You can sequence it like a modern groovebox, but it really comes alive when your hands, a pencil, or even a river stone start interfering with those vibrating tines.

Designer: Korg

This whole thing runs on what Korg is calling “Acoustic Synthesis,” which is a fancy way of saying it hits stuff. Under each of those eight steel resonators sits an electromagnetic hammer that physically strikes the bar when triggered. A capacitive pickup then captures the resulting acoustic vibration and sends it back into the synth engine for shaping. It is a completely different path from the usual oscillator-filter-amp chain. The entire unit weighs a solid 1.71kg and measures just 231mm wide, giving it the dense, purposeful feel of a piece of lab equipment, not a lightweight music toy.

That physical interaction model is the entire point. Korg explicitly tells you to pluck, mute, and strum the resonators. They even encourage placing found objects on them to create new textures. An “AIR” slider on the side lets you boost or dampen the raw acoustic response, effectively mixing between the pure electronic signal and the sound of the physical object vibrating in the room. This haptic approach is a clever rebellion against the menu-diving and screen-staring that defines so much modern gear. It demands your physical attention.

Of course, this is a Tatsuya Takahashi project, so the experimental nature is backed by serious engineering. It has a polymetric sequencer, full MIDI and USB-C implementation, and even CV input for talking to modular rigs. At $1,150, it is not an impulse buy, but it also signals that Korg sees this as a proper studio centerpiece. They built an instrument that feels alive because, in a very real sense, its sound generation depends on physical, vibrating matter.

The post Korg Phase8 Is a Cyberpunk Kalimba for Producers Who Are Bored of Regular Synths first appeared on Yanko Design.

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