Aight, here's some pics of the things that i use to make music.
It's not really a "setup", because the only thing that doesn't get moved every time is the S950, amp and turntable... the MPCs and monitors i move around whenever i feel like making a beat. I usually start by listening to records, then pick the MPC i feel like working with at the time and set it up on the floor next to the turntable (for sampling) and later in front of the couch with the monitors in place (for trimming samples, making programs, jamming away on the pads, recording, etc). The reason is that i don't have a studio, my studio is also my living room... so i store things away when i don't use them.

MPC60, got it a week ago, started digging into it already and love it! Currently waiting for the 3.10 OS chips and the memory expansion to arrive. Some of my records in the background.

SL1210 MKII, Revox B750 MKII, Akai S950 (newest addition to my setup), more records...

Got it today, managed to sample and play back something, make sure everything works... basically not much of an idea yet, will have to RTFM first!!

2000XL and 2000XL SE with switched face plates, i'm basically using the SE with the standard face plate... keeping the other one for parts if ever needed. More records...

MPC500 (where it all began) and MK (bought it for basslines but rarely use it, i still prefer filtered samples somehow).

Guess what, more records!
I started making beats a little more than three years ago on the MPC 500. This is where i ended up so far.
I plan on getting rid of the computer in my music (which i use for tracking out and mixing right now). What i really need (after recovering from buying the 60 and the S950 and all the upgrades.... sight!) is a good analogue mixing table and further down the road a nice tape machine would complete the idea of my setup... not to forget some effects, filters, comps and EQ's...
I guess I'm going to be old and poor when this is all finished...

"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - R. D. Laing