Boom-Bap Blessings From the Future (and Maybe the Past)**
By a Boom-Bap Producer Who Still Keeps His SP-1200 in a Glass Case Like the Declaration of Independence
Teenage Engineering has officially lost their minds — in the best possible way — with the EP-40 Riddim N Ting, a handheld groove-blaster that feels like the lovechild of a Game Boy, a drum machine, and the sweaty wall of a Kingston dancehall circa ’92. For a company famous for making devices that look like IKEA furniture mated with NASA hardware, the EP-40 leans deep into riddim culture, pocket-sized chaos, and just enough weirdness to remind you it’s still very much TE.
But don’t get it twisted — from a Boom-Bap perspective?
This little thing might be tiny, but it hits harder than a dusty 12-bit snare coming straight from 1994.
The Specs (a.k.a. Why This Little Box Can Actually Hang)
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Sound Engine: 32-bit digital synthesis + sample playback
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Sample Time: 60 seconds (mono) — yes, you WILL learn discipline
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Patterns: 128 slots
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Storage: 8 MB (TE, please… please)
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FX: Dub Delay, Dirty LP/HP filters, Riddim Chorus, Dancehall Flanger
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Sequencer: 4-track pattern sequencer with micro-timing
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Connectivity: USB-C, 3.5mm I/O, Bluetooth MIDI
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Battery: 6 hours rechargeable
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Price: Somewhere between “affordable TE” and “I guess this is still cheaper than a new MPC pad set”
How It Feels to Use (Boom-Bap Edition)
You know how most TE devices make you feel like you need a degree in Scandinavian Geometry just to change the tempo?
The EP-40 is shockingly straightforward. You can chop, trigger, sequence, and mangle samples faster than you can say “Preemo snare.”
Sample chopping:
Surprisingly slick. Not SP-1200 gritty, not MPC surgical — but crunchy enough when you push the filter and drive together. It gives loops that “SP-303 on a hot day” glow.
Pads:
“Pads” is a generous term. They’re more like “buttons that identify as pads.” But they’re responsive, and with the right quantize offset you can fake some nasty swing.
Swing:
This thing has REAL swing.
Not “trap hi-hat swing.”
Not “lofi beat tape swing.”
I’m talking “Dilla walked through the building and unplugged something important” swing.
Compared to the EP-133 KO II (the so-called Boom-Bap Punching Bag)
Let’s be honest — Boom-Bap producers have a complicated relationship with the KO II.
Yes, it’s fun.
Yes, it can hit hard.
Yes, it feels like a sampler designed by a graffiti artist and an electrical engineer in a bodega.
But…
EP-40 vs KO II:
| Feature | EP-40 Riddim N Ting | EP-133 KO II |
|---|---|---|
| Sample Time | 60 sec | 6 minutes |
| Workflow | Dancehall-focused, quick patterns | Linear, more MPC-ish |
| FX Quality | Cleaner, more spacey | Dirtier, more lofi |
| Portability | More portable | Still portable but chunkier |
| Boom-Bap Chops | Better filters, worse memory | Better memory, more structure |
| Riddim Energy | 10/10 | Depends on caffeine |
Winner?
If you’re all about chop → sequence → bounce, the KO II is still king.
But if you want riddim energy with Boom-Bap flavor, the EP-40 wins purely for vibes.
Compared to the EP-1320 Medieval (the Knight at the Round Table of Samplers)
The EP-1320 Medieval is TE’s “What if Ableton lived in a castle?” machine. Gorgeous, huge capabilities, and absolutely wild FX.
EP-40 vs Medieval:
| Feature | EP-40 | EP-1320 Medieval |
|---|---|---|
| Target Genre | Dancehall, Riddim, AF Caribbean styles | Cinematic, EDM, Alt Hip-Hop |
| Sample Time | 60 sec | 4 GB internal |
| FX | Warm, dubby, gritty | Massive, lush, orchestral |
| Live Performance | Pocket-sized hype machine | Big rig centerpiece |
| Swing | Ridiculously good | Respectable |
| Learning Curve | Minimal | Like reading an actual medieval scroll |
Winner?
It’s apples vs trebuchets.
Medieval is deep, powerful, and expensive.
EP-40 is instant, addictive, and gritty.
Boom-Bap producers will appreciate the immediacy of the EP-40 way more — it’s like a handheld sketchpad that encourages dirty loops instead of pristine mixes.
The 2350 Ting Mic — AKA the “Why Does This Work So Well?” Add-On
When you first see the 2350 Ting Mic, you’ll assume it’s a joke.
It looks like a toy karaoke mic from 1997 that you’d win at a Chuck E. Cheese after spending $400 in tokens.
Then you use it…
And suddenly you’re recording:
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Toasting vocals
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Percussion hits
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Gritty breath samples
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Claps
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Room noise
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Actual household objects because Boom-Bap producers can’t behave
The Ting Mic isn’t high-fidelity. It’s not supposed to be.
It’s textured, mid-forward, noisy, and perfect for sampling into the EP-40’s filters.
You can make entire riddims using nothing but mouth noises and a bag of rice if you really want to.
Pro tip:
Turn on the EP-40’s drive + HP filter combo → record percussion with the Ting Mic → instant “1998 vinyl crackle drum kit” energy.
Final Take
The EP-40 Riddim N Ting isn’t trying to replace your MPC, SP, or KO II.
It’s here to do one thing really well:
🔥 Kick out riddims, chops, and raw grooves FAST — and make you smile while doing it.
It’s playful, gritty where it counts, and surprisingly powerful for something that weighs less than a quarter-water.
If the KO II is the backpack boom-bap machine…
And the EP-1320 Medieval is the cinematic super-sampler…
Then the EP-40 is the dancehall-punk cousin who shows up to the studio with cheap rum, a bag of plantain chips, and three fire loops he made in the Uber on the way over.
And honestly?
Sometimes that’s exactly what Boom-Bap needs.
You can pick up the Riddim N Ting for $329 on Teenage Engineering’s Website

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