crystalmsc wrote:glitchrock-buddha wrote:Been playing around with this over the past day since the public beta was released and it's very cool indeed!
You've got the Minimoog, MS-20, Jupiter-6, jupiter-8, Juno-60 and an Alpha Juno, all in one. The Oscillators, filter and envelopes are modeled separately so you can mix and match the different parts. For example take jupiter-8 oscillators and put them through screeching MS-20 filters in series. Very cool.
Go grab the beta!
From the KVR thread:
Triple Oscillator and transistor ladder filter are the Minimoog
The Sallen Key filters and the Eco Oscs are based on the MS-20
The OTA Ladder is based on the Juno-60 and Jupiter 8 filters
The OTA SVF is based on the Jupiter-6 and Alpha Juno filters
The Dual VCO is based on the Jupiter 6 and Jupiter 8 oscillators
The DCO is based on the Juno-60 and Alpha Juno oscillators
The Analog ADSR is based on the Jupiter 8 and Juno 60 envelopes
The Digital ADSR is based on the Jupiter 6 and Alpha Juno envelopes
Sounds very interesting! Any comparison with the dedicated emulator like Arturia's stuff?
It's pretty much unanimous that it nails the originals and is far superior in authenticity to the Arturias and other emulations.
nathannn wrote:mholloway wrote:nathannn wrote:i agree that it sounds great but WHY DOES IT HAVE TO BE IN MONO!!
from the looks of it, to get this in stereo i would have to rack up two of these. i think my pc would blow up if i did that.
the guy that made sylenth1 did it best, each oscilator has one stereo and a pan nob, this makes it super easy for true stereo sound without using a chorus effect.
eh? it has a Poly mode...not sure what you're on about. And the synths it modelled weren't all monosynths: Jupiter 6, Jupiter 8, Juno 60, Alpha Juno. So, only the ms-20 and minimoog are the monosynths on which it is based...
-M
I'm going on about the synth itself being in mono as not in stereo.
Well it was meant to emulate the originals as closely as possible so no individual oscillator pan. But it does have some other cool features like individual modulations for the different voices (which can used for panning for example).
twisted-space wrote:glitchrock-buddha wrote:twisted-space wrote:It'll be better once the multicore support is working.
Shouldn't make a difference in Live. Live uses one core per track. I'm not even sure what the benefit of multicore support would be. I guess some hosts must allow the load from one track to split amongst cores if the plug-in allows?
I'm pretty sure I read that multicore support will be independent of the host. Could well be getting it wrong though.
I didn't think this was possible in Live. I think it's up to the host how it distributes cpu over multiple cores.
flowdesigner wrote:yawn
I got a real moog voyager rme.
buy a used slim phatty or something.
and use Live suite
and make music
So you're advice is, rather than purchase a $120 dollar soft synths which not only faithfully reproduces the sound of about 5 classic analog synths, but also lets you mix the components of it (and can also be saved within your DAW by virtue of being a plug-in), we should instead spend a bunch more money on a used slim phatty? That's just what makes more sense for everybody? Insightful.
Professional Shark Jumper.