

🎶 Your pocket-sized studio for beats that never quit!
The Teenage Engineering PO-33 K.O.! is a compact, battery-powered micro sampler and drum machine featuring 40 seconds of 8-bit sample memory, a built-in microphone and 3.5mm line-in for instant sampling, an intuitive 16-step sequencer, 16 effects, and stereo output. Designed for millennial creators craving portability without sacrificing creative depth, it offers 8 melodic and 8 drum sample slots, a built-in speaker, and up to one month of battery life—making it the ultimate on-the-go music production tool.

































| ASIN | B079M56Z4G |
| Best Sellers Rank | #9,939 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #8 in Drum Machines |
| Body Material | Silikon |
| Color Name | Black |
| Connector Type | Auxiliary |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (2,169) |
| Date First Available | February 11, 2018 |
| Finish Type | Lacquered |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 07350073030842 |
| Included Components | Drums |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 3.21 ounces |
| Item model number | TE010AS033 |
| Manufacturer | Teenage Engineering |
| Material Type | Silikon |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Set Name | PO-33 |
S**1
Unparalleled size and price point for a credit card-sized sampler!
The first time I saw a demo of the Pocket Operators - a YouTube video of the PO-12 Rhythm shot in some dreary, overcast field in Scandinavia - I was blown away. I assumed what I was looking at was just a prototype (nope) and they would rehouse this fragile-looking computer chip...thing in some actual protective case for sale (nope again). But still, it sounded incredible into a powered speaker, seemed legimiately fun to tweak and program, and cost only $60! We've reached a total of nine Pocket Operator units now (as of August 2018), and while the various models have had their ups and downs, it wasn't until I saw demos of the PO-33 K.O. Sampler that I was "blown away" by this series the way in the way that I was when I first saw that YouTube demo and was introduced to the whole concept. Until now, each Pocket Operator seemed planted in its own little niche, but the K.O. Sampler seemed almost limitless. A credit card-sized sampler that can actually sample 40 seconds of audio via on-board microphone OR 3.5mm line in? Powered by 2 AAA batteries?!? For less than $100?!!? Of course, you can't triangulate affordability, quality, and depth of features without making some compromises, and there are important limitations you should know about the PO-33. But I find it to be that rare case with music gear where an affordable piece of hardware with notable shortcomings on paper turns out to be much more powerful and enjoyable once you actually get it in your hands. SAMPLING ENGINE & SOUND QUALITY: There really are quite a large number of ways to get sound onto the PO-33 and then move them around and edit them once there, so I will try to keep this short. The PO-33 is an 8-bit sampler, which basically means that it has a fraction of the digital "information" contained in a note from a 12-bit sampler or a 16-bit Compact Disc, for example. While I found it to be entirely capable of clear, detailed notes, it does reveal a gritty, raw character on many sounds, particularly when you turn it up. This may come across as "bitcrushed" or even "chiptune", depending on the type of sound involved, but this is consistent with the character of the overall Pocket Operator series. In some cases, the 8-bit audio engine creates a cool, driven effect, but I do have to admit I've struggled with it trying to sample a lot of sounds with the Line In jack - particularly bassy sounds like an 808 Bass Drum, which becomes fizzy and almost unrecognizable. Crisper or higher pitched sound better, and you can work with filter/resonance control to try and improve this further. The face of the PO-33 has 16 numbered buttons. These represent both the 16 steps of the sequencer, as well as the 16 "banks" for sampled content. Banks 1-8 are "Melodic" samples. By selecting one of these 8 banks, you get control over 16 notes, representing two octaves of a "harmonic minor plus one" scale. (The original sample/root note is located at the "5" key, and one octave lower on the "13" key, so the scales mirror each other on the upper and lower halves, which is nice). This is a bit of a strange decision by Teenage Engineering, as many of their other melodic Pocket Operators were locked in a C Major scale, presumably so those new to music could just mash in notes and play things in key with multiple devices. More on that in the "Workarounds" section later. Sound banks 9-16 are for "Drum" samples, but here's where it gets a little weird. The default way that "Drum" banks handle samples are to listen for transients and "slice" up 16 samples of different sounds to be laid out as buttons 1-16. So if you sampled a 3-second clip of an "Amen Break", or whatever, it would (in theory) grab different kicks, snares, and hats, and lay them out as 16 triggerable samples. That's potentially very cool, and you CAN adjust the start point and length of each slice, but it isn't a very repeatable or dependable way to set up a new kit. What you can do as an alternative is to copy and paste individual hits recorded as melodic samples into the slots of a "Drum" kit, though that takes a bit of doing. The way that you sample is to hold down the red "record" button and then either make a noise into the microphone OR play a sound through the left side 3.5mm audio jack. The quality of the resulting 8-bit audio is a mixed bag. Some of the synth notes I tried to sample into the K.O. had a noise floor going on that made them almost unusable. At the same time, I was amazed how clear and dynamic the extremely small on-board microphone picked up noises. As an example, I banged an empty soda can on the table, figured out that the note I made with that was close to a C#, and then made a whole melodic loop out of...banging a can on a table. That's an absurd example of what you could do much more effectively with your voice or an actual instrument. One minor annoyance is that while the sample doesn't record until it senses a certain noise level, you do have to hold down two buttons at one time, which then makes it hard to produce whatever noise you are making with your one free hand. SEQUENCER: I won't say too much about the sequencer because if you are familiar with Pocket Operators, it is very similar to how the other units work. I also think the sequencer is the glue that holds these units together and converts them from "adorable music toy" to "surprisingly deep sub-$100 musical instrument". Although each pattern is only one bar (16 steps in 4/4 time), you can program 16 of them and then chain them to repeat in any order over 100 times. It's almost embarrassing how much more powerful the sequencer is on Pocket Operators versus some "serious" music gear costing 5 times as much. And it's full of hidden tricks, such as the ability to set up to 8 note re-triggers per step. (Start playing a sequence, program a note, and then hold the button for that step while pressing the BPM button to cycle through re-trigger options). EFFECTS: The effects options in the PO-33 K.O. aren't as memorable as some of the other units in this series (notably the PO-20 Arcade and especially the PO-32 Tonic), but they cover the basic needs of a sampler and get the job done. You have low- and high-pass filters and resonance control for each sample. There are 15 different effects (plus an "erase" key on "16"), though most of these are variations of stutters and loops. It's still a lot of fun for live performance, and you automate different effects and control parameters within a sequence. LIMITATIONS & WORKAROUNDS: In researching the PO-33, I came across a few pretty major limitations that I feared might sink the device. However, thanks to the overall depth of features, and some clever workarounds to defeat these weaknesses, I find that the K.O. Sampler overcomes them. Probably the most major limitations is that each SAMPLE slot (of which there are 16) is monophonic, while the overall polyphony of the device is limited to four samples played per step. What this means is that if you load "Drum" Bank 9, you can't play a snare and a hi-hat from that bank on the same step. You also can't layer different pitched notes from a single "Melodic" sample on the same step to make chords. I believe the PO-33 prioritizes "Melodic" hits over "Drum" hits. However, you can play multiple "Melodic" samples from different banks at the same time, or individual drum hits from different banks, provided the total number of sounds does not exceed four. You can also copy instruments from the "Drum" banks as individual melodic samples, and the K.O. functions much more like an actual drum machine in that way. The limitations on the scale are another annoyance, but there's an ingenious workaround I came across online that should allow you to play in any major or minor scale: Minor scale: The note you sample becomes the root note of the scale, playable with the "13" button. The remaining notes of the Minor scale can be played in this order: 13-14-15-16-9-10-11-5 Major scale: Sample a note that is 3 half-steps or "semitones" lower than your intended root note. So, if you want a C Major scale, sample an "A" note, and then the root "C" will be on the "15" key. The remaining notes of the Major scale will be on these buttons: 15-16-9-10-11-5-6-7. It sounds convoluted, but try it and match it up to a piano or other instrument for reference, and you'll immediately hear the notes of your scale! SUMMARY: I'm leaving out a ton of features, but the bottom line is that this is a very full-featured sampler that's just a lot of fun to use, and extremely affordable. By comparison, the Korg Volca Sample is nearly twice the price, holds just a bit more sample data (65 seconds vs. 40 seconds on the PO-33), and you cannot load any samples onto it without a computer data transfer. It's really the ability to sample anything, anywhere with such a small (albeit fragile) device that propels the PO-33 K.O. to new heights. Its limitations of a piece of hardware are noteworthy, but the musical possibilities with it are endless.
T**T
Legendary and fun
Love this thing, great for making beats and sampling.
D**Z
Oldschool LoFi Phrase Sampling at a Fraction of the Cost!!!
I hate to be one of those back in my day old guys, but this sampler reminds me of the early days of phrase samples/ samplers with units like the Akai S20, the Yamaha SU10, and of course the Roland SP 202, which I owned them all and regrettably sold at one point, fast forward and there's this Teenage Egineering PO 33 (knockout) phrase/Auto drumchop (Wow just wow) sampler with a built in pattern sequencing and a built in MIC for all under $100 , actually at one point under $70. Is it perfect? No, but for a price point at a fraction of what a used SP 303, or forget about the price of a new Roland SP 404 costs, you get nice grungy but clean 8 bit sampling and stereo (or at least fake stereo, doubling mono) sampling at that. Does it have all the bells and whistles like MIDI or CV, nope but you can sync it to other Pocket Unit by playing a click track, I have the PO 12 drum machine as well and most times I just sync them manually (pressing play) when I use them together. I've included a video of me using the PO 33 with a vocal sample of my own I recorded right into the mic input, and a pattern chain of some of the factory patterns and a few of my of my own made from scratch so far on this unit, hope you enjoy! And I highly recommend this for anybody who makes hip hop/dance/whatever music to have as a basic sample scratchpad. I own other units like the Korg Volca Sample and my biggest grip is that nothing in the sub 500 price range (and please don't mention electribe) actually samples besides the old Korg Microsampler and now this gem. And yes I have an MP and DAW software plug ins yadda, yadda but this brings back the fun of using those old samplers like the Akai S20 and Yamaha SU10 at a fraction of most hardware costs, great job Teenage Engineering!
A**R
Boom bap lofi on a budget.
This thing is so cool, allot of little things to learn, but fairly simple to grasp.
B**T
Neato
I am genuinely surprised what this thing is capable of. The whole collection is actually awesome accessible samplers and drum machines for people on a budget. I have been seeing Teenage Engineering and all the products outside this series are these charming future/retro aesthetic. Very hard to ignore. Then I saw the price Tags on some of them and realized most were out of my ball park. In a sense, because I make music mostly on my daw, I want devices that fill in the analog gaps in my sound design and my overall work process. Not spending excessive amounts on devices I never use. This pocket operator is loads of fun, and as long as you stick to sampling stuff that doesn't require absolute precision cutting of the sample , you should not have any issues . I set mine up , with a older phone feeding it music and a recorder to pick up when I'm sampling. That way I don't have to worry about recording on the device itself.its lofi quality sampling so I like to use it to padout percussion elements and vocal ad libs. It has a charming 8bit feel to it. Then I ran it into my daw, and then my daw back into the device while playing a set..... mixed results but I guess it depends what your playing . Still it's fun to just test sample things with it Otherwise. I took off one star from this because despite loving the device and the screen and knows. I hate that the back of the device is exposed so much . Because I have broken fully cased devices and I'm looking at this one and I'm being as delicate as I can possibly be . We will see. Got the case. Fits ok, but the rear could use some kind of backslip. Please your hurting me.
G**O
I have quite a few drum machines from a maschine plus, novation circuit, kolg volva beats and the pocket operator so I I have a pretty good idea about where this fits into the mix. It's way more powerful than it looks. It's really possible to do some quite complex things on this with only the few settings that you have. For example, yes it's a 16 step sequencer so it's quantized but if you way to have something non quantized you could shift where you trim the same at for example to get it to a microstep. The storage space on it is a bit limiting so it makes you really conserve the space you have. Longer samples for example may be hard to work with. There is a way to back it up to a sound file if you want to though which is nice to have. Recording in it is very easy. The build in mic is ok but record from line in for much better results. The battery life is great so expect a few weeks of continuous use out if 2 battering. The only negative thing I have to say is that the dials are really terrible. It makes it so hard to trim a clip for donfine adjustments. Some people have soldered different ones on that are better quality but I've bit tried it. Get the outrageously expensive case to go with it since it will save your fingers if you use it a lot. Sound quality is good but don't expect high end audio. I've found that if you get a good recording of a sample on it the quality is quite good but this just lends it's self to the type of music it can create. For comparison you can do more on this than a Kirk volca beats and it fits in your pocket. It's actually really good for just jamming and playing live
G**E
Produto muito bem feito e divertido. Uma pena nao ter no Brasil com um preço mais acessivel.
D**.
De calidad llegó a tiempo
H**N
Il PO-33 mi ha veramente stupito. Piccolo e leggerissimo, sembra un giocattolo, ma non lasciatevi ingannare... Non lo è affatto! L'oggettino è un campionatore (ha un mic integrato, un line-in e un line-out) con sequencer e permette di creare beat anche molto complessi. I 16 pad che permettono di suonare, sono suddivisi in due sezioni: "Melodic", dedicata ai suoni che vorrete suonare su una scala cromatica per creare appunto linee melodiche e "Drum" per i suoni di batteria e percussioni. La polifonia è a 4 voci, cioè potrete utilizzare fino a quattro campioni che suonano sovrapposti contemporaneamente, ma c'è da precisare che nella sezione Drum ad ogni pad viene assegnato un intero drum set composto da 16 suoni percussivi, che però corrispondono ad un solo campione; questo comporta che che non potrete, da un unico drum set, suonare contemporaneamente due suoni sovrapposti (es. una cassa e un hi-hat) per farlo dovrete scegliere il secondo suono da un altro drum set. I campioni precaricati in fabbrica non sono entusiasmanti, ma utili per muovere i prami passi con lo strumento e capirne il funzionamento prima di passare a campionare ed elaborare i vostri suoni. Per chi volesse sperimentare da subito con altri sample packs già pronti all'uso, sul sito della casa produttrice potrete scaricarne un paio niente male a questo indirizzo: teenage.engineering/downloads/po-33 Insomma, se quello che cercate è uno strumento realmente tascabile per poter campionare e creare beat ovunque vi troviate, questo è quello che fa per voi.
T**K
Niestety, wewnętrzy mikrofon działa bardzo słabo.
Trustpilot
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