Komplete Kontrol mk 2
T he second generation of NI’s innovative 
MIDI keyboard claims even deeper 
integration than its predecessor (
212, 9/10)
with their own Komplete suite of instruments 
and Maschine, as well as NKS-compatible 
plugins from developers including Arturia, Rob 
Papen and u-he. It’s available in 49- (£479) and 
61-key (£559) versions, and while the Fatar synth 
action keybed is unchanged, everything else 
has been redesigned to match the 
simultaneously-released Maschine Mk3 (
249, 
10/10). It’s got the same sexy new look and feel, 
and – more importantly – the same full-colour 
LED screens (replacing Mk1’s monochrome text 
displays), the same combination 4-way joystick/
rotary encoder/button, and a new layout 
similarly reconigured for worklow parity.
Physical presence
Komplete Kontrol Mk2 is 23mm deeper from 
front to back than its predecessor, as is to be 
expected given the addition of the screens. 
Happily, it’s now USB bus-powered, and we know 
that many Mk1 users will be overjoyed at the 
ejection of the pitch and modulation touchstrips 
in favour of regular pitch and mod wheels and a 
single freely-assignable touchstrip. The build 
quality is exceptional – it feels and plays like a 
premium instrument in every sense.
 Native Instruments  
  Komplete Kontrol
 Mk2    
£479/559  
With its all-new dual displays and improved integration with Maschine 
and certain DAWs, this futuristic keyboard hits all the right notes
“The build quality is 
exceptional – it feels 
and plays like a 
premium instrument 
in every sense”
Komplete Kontrol Mk2 hooks into the 
Komplete Kontrol software, which runs 
standalone or as a VST/AU/AAX plugin. Without 
that, it’s is just a conventional controller 
keyboard, albeit CC-mappable using the free 
Controller Editor software. Komplete Kontrol is a 
browser for all your NI and NKS instruments, 
essentially. Prior to Mk2, you had to look at it on 
your computer monitor to see what you were 
selecting, and use a single push encoder for 
stepped navigation and loading. Now, the dual 
screens replicate every bit of it in glorious 
technicolour, and the main row of capacitive 
knobs (touch to pop up menus) and 4D encoder 
give ‘parallel’ access to a series of hierarchical 
selection ilters – it’s a vast improvement. Hit the 
Browse button and the left screen shows your NI 
and NKS-compatible plugins as thumbnails, 
while the right lists their presets and banks. 
Select a single instrument or category (drums, 
samplers or synths), and ilter the resulting 
EDITOR’S CHOICE
94  /  COMPUTER MUSIC  /  December 2017
>  reviews  /  native instruments komplete kontrol mk2
CMU250.rev_kkmk2.indd 94 11/10/2017 14:45


