my inner 8 year old just smiled.aizo wrote:I tend to think of Live instruments as Legos. By it self a cute plain little toy but if you like to build and customize, then you can make some really crazy stuff with them.

my inner 8 year old just smiled.aizo wrote:I tend to think of Live instruments as Legos. By it self a cute plain little toy but if you like to build and customize, then you can make some really crazy stuff with them.
agreed!love the modular approach.. racks are a god send..aizo wrote:I tend to think of Live instruments as Legos. By it self a cute plain little toy but if you like to build and customize, then you can make some really crazy stuff with them.
Maybe Im offtopic but can u explain that?3dot... wrote:agreed!love the modular approach.. racks are a god send..aizo wrote:I tend to think of Live instruments as Legos. By it self a cute plain little toy but if you like to build and customize, then you can make some really crazy stuff with them.
but even before .. you can route stuff around pretty easily..
today you can even create 'feedback chains' inside a track using a certain hole in the fence..
#43 wrote:Maybe Im offtopic but can u explain that?3dot... wrote:agreed!love the modular approach.. racks are a god send..aizo wrote:I tend to think of Live instruments as Legos. By it self a cute plain little toy but if you like to build and customize, then you can make some really crazy stuff with them.
but even before .. you can route stuff around pretty easily..
today you can even create 'feedback chains' inside a track using a certain hole in the fence..
here's an example..#43 wrote:Maybe Im offtopic but can u explain that?3dot... wrote:agreed!love the modular approach.. racks are a god send..aizo wrote:I tend to think of Live instruments as Legos. By it self a cute plain little toy but if you like to build and customize, then you can make some really crazy stuff with them.
but even before .. you can route stuff around pretty easily..
today you can even create 'feedback chains' inside a track using a certain hole in the fence..
funny, I haven't wanted to be bothered by any 3rd party vsts for a long while (except just NI, Waves and Antares), but tonight I paid $20 for my first VST in ages - Muon Tau MkIIgromgrom wrote:I found this topic very interesting and must say that i absolutely LOVE operator
Slightly off topic: i've just been using Live's instruments plus free third party VSTs up to now. What would you recommend as a first third party synth? I hear Zebra 2 is insanely powerful and have tried it out and loved it. This might be a stupid question, but how does Zebra compare to the Komplete instruments? (Massive, FM8, Absynth, etc)
exactly why i want those 2.nebulae wrote:A lot of people will tell you that Zebra is the only synth you'll ever need. It's certainly been the king of the heap for many years, and with good reason. It's a very reasonable investment. Plus, if you send in a picture of some older hardware of yours that you're retiring, you'll get a coupon off for $50, which makes Zebra a very valuable $149 purchase.
You might also look into Sylenth1, which is very easy to program and just a lovely, phat sounding, easy to program virtual analog that is very versatile.
That is exactly what i'm doing right nowscutheotaku wrote:I second Sylenth1 - it's an excellent sounding, affordable plugin. It's got a great sound, and easy-to-use interface, and, if you use them, tons of great presets. It's a great pro synth, but also a great, rewarding synth for beginners. I'd definitely check out the demo if I were you: http://www.lennardigital.com/modules/sylenth1/