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-- whats a good *first* synth to purchase?
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Posted by patticus on Oct-01-2001 02:15:

whats a good *first* synth to purchase?

i dont know anything about production, in the sense of sampling and sequencing. i have reason. what should i look at? something with an arpeggiator, etc... ?
should i go all out and buy the biggest friggin thing out there, or will that overwhelm me off the bat.
some input from all would be welcome, Please ?

i dont want some toy that only produces amateur sounding stuff... of course.. id say probably tops price range MAX $3000 cdn or so


Posted by Peter Campbell on Oct-01-2001 07:23:

this was a post I made to some one els, I have put the synths in orange

when you get into the Pro world you will need Hardware and Software
this is what a PRO setup would have in it.

*Cubase 5.0 (sequencer software)
*Nuendo 1.5(sequencer and movie software with 5.1-7.1 DVD souround sound)
*Waldorf Microwave XT, Novation SuperNova 2, Access Virus A or B ( three of the biggest Hard synths around, all great for Trance.
*VST Plug-ins and Instruments(a software must with Cubase, there are 100s of them)
*Midi Keyboard (for all of them rack synths)


Posted by patticus on Oct-01-2001 07:44:

thanks pete, good to see you're still around.

so this stuff would probably be outta my range right now?
any one of those orange ones, right?? not all 3..

and why woudl i still need a midi keyboard


Posted by Peter Campbell on Oct-01-2001 08:55:

quote:
Originally posted by patticus


so this stuff would probably be outta my range right now?


and why woudl i still need a midi keyboard


no I think they are all under $3000 US

thats cause most of them are RACK Synths

Supernova


Virus B


Microwave XT


you cant Get the Microwave XTK, its the only one with a keboard.


http://www.harmony-central.com/Newp.../Supernova.html

http://www.access-music.de/virusb_basics.htm

I recommend The Microwave XT

http://www.waldorf-gmbh.de/microwave2/microwavext.html

and get you self a copy of Cubase and a Midi keboard and you will be producing like a PRO in no time.


Posted by Pjotr G on Oct-01-2001 13:05:

I'm surpised nobody proposed the Roland JV-1080
It's like pretty standard for a trance setup and it can do alot, a virus is Phat too, but it's more something to expand your studio with


Posted by patticus on Oct-02-2001 23:02:

hm, sweet, thanks for you info guys

but i didnt even know that those things w/ just dials WERE synths!
those are the rack synths? and then midi has an actual "key" keyboard?
can you explain the diff and usage of each please, just a bit...

i was only thinking initially of an actualy keyboard w/ keys like a piano, heh. not like a one octave one
but 60 keys or whatever.. its pretty big. like that korg w/ the arpeggiator if you know what i mean...


Posted by Eugene on Oct-03-2001 01:10:

So, those are synths?
I thought synths were keyboards, however complicated...


Posted by Pjotr G on Oct-03-2001 11:03:

ok here's the deal.
A synth is a tone generator, and it's usually called a synth when it has explicit tone editing capabilities (VCO's VCA's VCF's LFO's n stuff). Now a synth CAN have a keyboard but it isn't necessary. The idea behind this is that when you have a studio with 10 synths in it, you don't need 10 keyboards with it, just one master controller will do (no need to fill up unnecessary space is there). So via midi you can hook up a rack synth to a controller (keyboard), mostly via a sequencer, and then you can play the rack synth with the controller keyboard. This said, not every keyboard is a synth. There are also just controller keyboards out there with no tone generator onboard and there are also keyboard WITH sounds onboard but no editing capabilities. This is not considered a synth, but is usually pointed to with the vague word "keyboard". Some synths are available in both rack and keys form. There are also more categories of synths, like Analogues (analog oscillators, analog filters; Minimoog), Virtual Analogues (digital oscillator, analog/digital filters; nord lead), FM synths (frequency modulation; DX-7) and a bunch more i reckon.


Posted by patticus on Oct-13-2001 20:22:

so whats up with this hyped "nord lead" synth? i hear that's what all the big producers use..

anyways so you would i be able to make do w/ something like
reason (there's a sequencer in that, right?)
one of those rack synths, like the microwave or supernova
studiologic sl-61 (as a midi controller?)

how does that sounds?

actually those nice rack synths are probably really out of my range for now, but anyways that's pretty much all i'd need right. ?

either of you guys?


Posted by Pjotr G on Oct-13-2001 22:29:

quote:
Originally posted by patticus
so whats up with this hyped "nord lead" synth? i hear that's what all the big producers use..

anyways so you would i be able to make do w/ something like
reason (there's a sequencer in that, right?)
one of those rack synths, like the microwave or supernova
studiologic sl-61 (as a midi controller?)

how does that sounds?

actually those nice rack synths are probably really out of my range for now, but anyways that's pretty much all i'd need right. ?

either of you guys?

Well you can start off with such a setup, but calling it all you'd need...a studio is never quite finished . All those thingies have a different sound to it, but anyways, for a *first* synth, you could go with a synth like you mentioned (nord lead, supernova, microwave) but they are pretty distinct, and i personally would go for something with a lot of..."different" sounds in it, like, as i said, a JV. Unless you are very satisfied with the sounds of Reason and you only need the synths for the phat leads that reason can't provide, then what u said would make a sensable setup. btw I'm not even gonna go into samplers


Posted by patticus on Oct-14-2001 08:26:

ok, thanks, so that roland jv is a rack synth? or its a controller?

cuz i WOULD need one of the mentioned midi controllers even if i got that right..

it doesnt matter so much what kind of keyboard i get, right.. i mean i have about as much musical training as anyone, so obviously more octaves + features = good, but editing-wise.. would it really matter, in terms of capabilities?


Posted by Peter Campbell on Oct-14-2001 10:48:

CLAVIA - NORD-LEAD



New: NORD-LEAD-1 : � (Keys) 999, (Rack) 799 ......NORD-LEAD-2: � (Keys) 1495, (Rack) 1295

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Ok........ the Nord Lead is not a new synth, it's been around a few years.... I aint ever used one, but I just wanted to add it to the list, as after all, it's one of the main competitors in the Virtual Analog race........

The NORD-LEAD-1, is pretty cheap now compared to it's released price which was, if I remember right, about 1400 ish (UK)....... You get a 4 part, 4 voice modelling synth, with 2 oscillators per voice.... so it's 4 seperate monosynths, or a 4 voice polysynth..... You can expand the unit to go to 12 voices with an 8 voice expansion add-on, that also offers extra patch storage banks via PCMCIA cards.....

All the controls on the Nord's have a dedicated control knob.... and they all output midi... and of course all the parameters recieve midi to, with some nifty extra's like midi trigger routing to control the LFO's or Arpeggiator clock...

Both units are versatile, fat sounding studio or live machines, well respected and well rated........

Anyhow...... I just leave the spec's, cos there's nothing I can say except they do sound nice and fat....... Hopefully, some Nord-Lead users will add comments to give us a real user experience......

The NORD-LEAD-2, is a higher power unit available again as Keyboard or Rack, this unit bumps the voices up to 16, retains the 4 part multi-mode, but gives you 4 seperate outputs to mix 'em on seperate channels.....You also get a Sine wave oscillator choice, ring modulation, distortion on the filter and extra LFO wave coices and destinations amongst others........

Again..... I haven't had a chance to try this one either...... so again, I'll just add the spec's, and hope for some cool user notes........ No demo audio seems to be available from the Uk distributor, so I cant really say if it's possible to get some RA of these units, unless I go and get a demo somewhere....... anyhow..... here's the spec's..... add yer comments pleas... and if you do own & use one, as much info as you can muster please.... cheers.....Oh yes...... Visit the Clavia site, where there is loads of info, and you can also check the Nord 'Modular' system which operate with a hardware unit and onscreen computor patch creation....



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SPEC'S




NORD LEAD 1


(Nord Lead Rack)




Voices
4 voices expandable to 12. 4 part multi-timbral.

Special features
Velocity programming: Each function, controlled by a knob, can be programmed to velocity. Morphing: Each function, controlled by a knob, can also be controlled by the modulation wheel / pedal to continuously fade between two values.

Performance controllers
4 octave velocity sensitive keyboard with octave shift buttons (5 oct.). Modulation wheel, the "Pitch Stick" (featuring no dead zone at zero crossing), pedal input for sustain or expression pedal. Patent pending for the "Pitch Stick".

User interface
2 digit display, 26 knobs and 19 buttons for program editing.

Oscillator section
Two oscillators generating triangle, sawtooth or pulse (with adjustable width) waveforms. Oscillator 2 can also generate nolse with a color control. Oscillator 2 can be hard "synched" to oscillator 1. Linear deep frequency modulation of osc 1 from osc 2.

Filter section
12 dB "2 pole" lowpass, 24 dB "4 pole" lowpass, bandpass or highpass. Cut off, resonance, envelope amount, envelope amount controlled by velocity, keyboard tracking and ADSR envelope.

Amplifier
section ADSR envelope, gain control.

Modulation section
LFO 1 generating triangle, saw or random routed to Osc 1 +2, Osc 2, filter or pulse-width. LFO 2 produces a triangle waveform, routed to Osc 1 and 2 or amplifier. It also controls the rate for the arpeggiator. Arpeggiator: Range: 1 - 4 octave. Modes: up, down, up/down. Modulation envelope (attack, decay) for osc 2 pitch or FM amount.

Performance section
Play mode: Poly, legato, mono, unison mono, unison poly. Manual mode. Four program slots for layering possibilities. Portamento / auto portamento.

Audio Out
Stereo output. Modes: Stereo, mono and multitimbral (A C + B D) mode. Headphones out. Stereo 18 bit DAC.

Memory
40 user-programs, 59 factory programs and 100 factory performances. With the 8 voice expansion card, the Nord Lead can hold an additional 297 (99 x 3) user-programs and 100 user-performance programs on a PCMCIA 128 kilobyte battery backed RAM card.

MIDI features
All control knobs and switches for program editing send and receive Control Change messages. System exclusive bulk dumps. One program or all programs. MIDI clock synchronizing LFO 1 and LFO 2/arpeggiator. � Triggering of the filter and amplifier envelopes and velocity control from separate programmable MIDI channel and note numbers.

Dimensions
865f W) 265(D) 105(H) mm. Weight 6.7 kg 34.0"(W) 10.4"(D) 4.1"(H). Weight: 14.71bs.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NORD LEAD 2


(Nord Lead-2 Rack version)




Voices
16 voices. 4 part multi-timbral.

Special features
Velocity programming: Each function, that is controlled by a knob, can be programmed to be controlled by velocity. Morphing: Each function, that is controlled by a knob, can also be controlled by the modulation wheel / pedal to continuously fade between two sets of values.

Performance controllers
4 octave velocity sensitive keyboard with octave shift buttons (5 oct.). Keyboard split, two sections. Modulation wheel, the "Pitch Stick" (featuring no dead zone at zero crossing), 1 pedal input for sustain and 1 for expression pedal. Patent pending for the "Pitch Stick".

User interface
3 digit display, 26 knobs and 27 buttons for program editing.

Oscillator section
Oscillator 1 generating sinus, triangle, sawtooth or pulse with adjustable width, wave forms. Oscillator 2 generating triangle, sawtooth or pulse (with adjustable width) wave forms and can also generate noise with a color control. Oscillator 2 can be hard "synched" to oscillator 1. Linear deep frequency modulation of osc 1 from osc 2. A wide range of new waveforms with a strong formant character is achieved with the new synchable noise, where noise can be synched to Osc. 1.

Filter section
12 dB "2 pole" lowpass, 24 dB "4 pole" lowpass, bandpass or highpass. Cut off, resonance, envelope amount, envelope amount controlled by velocity. ADSR envelope. Filter keyboard tracking can be set to full, half or off. Filter distortion.

Amplifier section
ADSR envelope, gain control.

Modulation section
Lfo 1 generating triangle, saw, pulse, LF filtered noise and random staircase routed to Osc 1+2, Osc 2, filter, pulse-width and FM amount. Lfo 2 produces a triangle waveform, routed to Osc 1 and 2 or amplifier. It also controls the rate for the arpeggiator. Arpeggiator: Range: 1 - 4 octave. Modes: up, down, up/down, random. Echo can be set between 1 and 8 repeats. Modulation envelope (attack, decay) for Osc 2 pitch, FM amount and pulse width.

Performance section
Play mode: Poly, legato, mono, unison mono, unison poly. Manual mode. Four program slots for layering possibilities. Portamento / auto portamento.

Percussion kits
10 analog drumkits. Each percussion kit holds 8 independent sounds, configurated in 8 zones across the keyboard.

Memory
40 user-programs, 59 factory programs and 100 factory performances. An additional 297 (99 x 3) user-programs, 100 user-performance programs and 30 drumkits can be saved on a PCMCIA 64 (or more) kilobyte battery backed RAM card.

Audio Out
4 outputs. Each slot have its own output. Modes: Stereo, mono and multitimbral mode. Headphones output. High resolution low noise 18 bit DAC.

MIDI features
All control knobs and switches for program editing send and receive Control Change messages. System exclusive bulk dumps. One program or all programs. MIDI clock synchronizing LFO 1 and LFO 2/arpeggiator. Triggering of the filter and amplifier envelopes and velocity control from separate programmable MIDI channel and note numbers.

Dimensions
865(W) 265(D) 105(H) mm. Weight 6.7 kg. 34.0"(W) 10.4"(D) 4.1"(H). Weight: 14.7 lbs.


Posted by Peter Campbell on Oct-14-2001 10:57:

quote:
Originally posted by Pjotr G
I'm surpised nobody proposed the Roland JV-1080
It's like pretty standard for a trance setup and it can do alot, a virus is Phat too, but it's more something to expand your studio with




ROLAND - JV1080







--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


I added in the JV 1080 as they are like workhorse multitimbrel synth modules of legendary status almost...

The JV2080 is more of the same with more wave ram, up to 8 boards....but whilst a great synth... it's overkill a bit.... whereas the older 1080, has the same polyphony... and can be had cheapish if you need a big digital synth......

So the 1080.... basically they are good all rounder work synths... giving 64-voice polyphony and 16-part multitimbral capability,.... already famed for their filters, Roland's 32 bit processing in the JV's gives smooth as you want from digital sweeps... not too steppy.... so you can controller-it away and it'll be smooth.... you've got about 448 waveforms to play with onboard

This is an excellent synth for those who want to do some all round music, yet get plenty of sounds for all eventualities..... cos with a few boards, you can get dance drums & techno & vintage stuff etc...

The top comes off, and you can plug in up to four SR-JV80 Series wave expansion boards that the JV's share with the XP80/50...to augment the 8 meg already onboard..... giving a wacking amount of rom samples from dance drums & sounds, thru world music & classical, to vintage synths and whatever you like....They released one in the summer called techno.. for what it's worth.... but naturally , the synthesis is powerful enuff (and even more so with any added board or card waves.)... to create anything from simple to deep sounds... and all the piano's, organs & strings etc you like.... it is all cursors and menu's of course.... so not a great... "Rush-it-and-fuck-with-it" unit....but it'll take controllers once your sounds are set up....

now.... it is a JV... and it all does have a sound... an overall gloss that is Roland...JV... that comes with all units... they have a sound... not withstanding that, it's a good digital choice if you see a bargain one around.... if you have maybe a sampler & some very specific dance synth/s... and want to add a digital unit for layers, weirdness and a massive potential pallette.... try the JV.... it has to be said tho, the boards are about 2 and a 1/2 each .... (new), so getting some secondhand added will obviously push up the price....

Anyhow... lots of onboard multi effects... some of them are insertable.......8 reverb types, 1 chorus, 40 EFX.... its got a preset memory of 4 x 128 patches & 8 rhythm sets, with 64 performance setups...... you've got 128 user memories, which sags a bit compared to the K2000 say, with it's 999....

No disk drive... groan... i feel a 'data-card' selling exercise coming on... yup...M-512 datacards only unless you wanna dump the stuff over.....hey... it'll also take a pcm wave card with another 2 mb of waveforms...i think these cards are interchangable with other Roland synths......

You got midi in,out,thru, ..... 6 outs....mix-out-L+R.....Out-1-L+R.... out-2 -L+R....... plus phones.........

there ya go..... a workhorse..... and really, even in todays madness of 256 note poly units, it is a good synth if you've got a bit of cash, and want a powerful digital module with flexibility and classy sounds.... however..if you dont want to synthesis with the JV, and want more instant 'dance' sounds. then to expand it up to become more of a 'dance sounds' unit, would mean adding a few boards, the techno & vintage maybe....... and then the price goes up... anyone selling it s/h with added boards will want more... then i can compare it to an old secondhand k2000 as a choice, cos with a board or two in the JV, it comes up secondhand to about the same price as an old versioned k2000 which can load samples to get drums from the akai range or formatted disks.....

So comparing the two as a good digital synth , i'd lean toward the K for dance... it's got much less polyphony, at 24 notes..... but not so much an issue depending on the music you do... loads samples tho as raw akai files... no keymaps... but you can build custom drum kit & load other samples.... it can do ruff sounds ......

Thought that might be worth a note if you're looking at mid 1000 quid digital synths to do drums and sounds to build round.... the K has a disk drive too... !... but loaded with a few cards, the JV offers huge waveform choices.... & more polyphony.... much more of a full production tool.....and no loading disks and stuff... the cards & sounds are in there when you boot.... sure you can upgrade the K with a dance waves board & sample facilities etc... but we're talking comparisons at a street price similar of around 600-800 for the expanded JV (with say 2 cards)... comparing to a unexpanded K2000 with maybe 4mb of ram....

anyways... the JV...... has to be listed....




The JV 1080 and the Microwave XT are
Digital synths, they came along in the early 80's and subjectively blew people away with their 'realistic' sound when imitating real sounds like piano's. Gettting a decent 'real' piano or other sound had previously involved buying samplers with all their loading and setting up etc, or settling for a rough but passable approximation supplied by the yamaha Dx series; the previous holder of the 'best cheap/small/transportable piano' sound on the market. But besides doing great real sounds, these synths also offer another huge pallette of sounds to your arsenal, and in the ever moving search for new sounds crossed with the current euro-trance explosion and it's classical non-techno leanings, these synths like the classic Roland D50 are making a comeback in peoples minds & armouries. Digital synths are your source for the weird and wonderful - pizz string attacks with fat booming trance sawtooth decays, harsh or thin and subtle sonic sounds� and they do superb pads 7 atmosphere's� You gotta have at least one of everything, and whilst you can live without a good digital synth fine, if you are into deep pads, sounds artefacts and sonic sculpting, these types of synths yeild superb results in the right context and offer a great sonic balance & depth alongside any 'Real' or 'Virtual' analog synths in your mix.



WALDORF - MICROWAVE XT

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





The famous Microwave XT.... It's basically a Microwave-2, plus the addition of some 44 dedicated controller knobs & dials transmitting midi data... The unit is also upgraded from the MW2 to have a 5U rack surface area which is also tablemounting dj-mixer/plinth style, and as you can see it comes in black & orange colours... The extra rack-space compared to the Microwave-2 is required to facilitate all the extra controllers which upgrades & makes the XT a very powerful instrument with fast editing and hands on control thruought...

Well, what can you say about hese things?... One of the worlds most respected synth companies it would be fair to say, and the Microwave family is up there with the cream of digital synth's.... These MicroWave's family give everything from hard lead lines to the truly weird & wonderful - If you only have to buy ONE synth, look seriously at the Microwave range.




Spec's


Multi Mode with 8 individual instruments
10 voices
128 multis
256 sounds
64 ROM wavetables
32 RAM wavetables
64 waves per wavetable
500 waves
arpeggiator, syncable to MIDI Clock
programmable arpeggiator rhythm pattern per sound
4 integrated effect units (1 Chorus available for any instrument in multi mode, 1 separate effect for each of the first 3 instruments in multi mode)
all parameters real time controllable through MIDI continous controller
1 dial for page access
44 dials for parameter changes
2 buttons for parameter changes
1 master volume potentiometer
1 Play / Shift button
5 buttons for mode selection (3 buttons for "Sound", 1 button for "Multi", 1 button for "Global")
1 Standby button with alert function to assure that all edited sounds are stored
MIDI In / Out / Thru
1 stereo input
2 stereo outputs
19"/5U, desktop unit and rack-mountable




Parameters Per Voice


2 oscillators
oscillator synchronization
oscillator FM, fully modulatable
2 wave generators
noise generator
ring modulator
adjustable quality levels for aliasing, interpolation and clipping
mixer, all levels (Wave 1, Wave 2, Noise, Ring Modulation, External In) modulatable with high resolution
2 multi mode filters, connected serially

filter 1:
low pass 12dB
low pass 24dB
band pass 12dB
high pass 12dB
sinus shaper with low pass filter 12dB
wave shaper with low pass filter 12dB (selected wavetable determines the available shaper waves)
Sample & Hold with low pass filter 12dB (real time sample rate reduction down to 23Hz)
dual parallel filter with 12dB low pass and 12dB band pass, cutoff offset parameter for band pass
12dB low pass filter with filter FM (cutoff modulation through oscillator 2)

filter 2:
low pass 6dB
high pass 6dB

stereo amplifier, fully modulatable
8-time/level wave envelope with loop function, "one shot" mode, times and levels modulatable
ADSR filter envelope, each phase modulatable separately
ADSR amplifier envelope, each phase modulatable separately
4-time/level free envelope, bipolar, one shot mode, times and levels modulatable
all envelopes work with separate trigger- and voice-modes, either monophonic or polyphonic:
single trigger with zero return
single trigger with return to last level
retrigger with zero return
retrigger with return to last level
dual mode (two voices per note)
unisono (all free voices at once)
two LFOs, each with different shapes, syncable to MIDI clock, LFO 2 can be synced to LFO 1
modulation matrix with 16 slots, all sources and destinations of the MicroWave and the Pulse plus new connections
4 freely usable modifiers with several operators and algorithms




Physical Controller knobs & dials

Oscillator 1
Octave (with clicks)
Semitone (with clicks)
Detune
FM Amount
Oscillator 2

Octave (with clicks)
Semitone (with clicks)
Detune
Sync (button)
Waves 1 / 2

Wavetable (with clicks)
Wave 1

Startwave
Env. Amount
Wave 2

Startwave
Env. Amount
Mix

Wave 1
Ringmod
Wave 2
Noise
Filter

Cutoff
Resonance
Type (with clicks)
Keytrack
Env. Amount
Env. Velocity
Amplifier

Volume
Env. Velocity
LFO 1

Speed
Shape (with clicks)
LFO 2

Speed
Shape (with clicks)
Mod Amount

Mod 1
Mod 2
Glide

Time
Active (button)



Envelopes - (8 multi purpose dials)


Wave Env 1-4
Time 1
Level 1
Time 2
Level 2
Time 3
Level 3
Time 4
Level 4

Wave Env 5-8
Time 5
Level 5
Time 6
Level 6
Time 7
Level 7
Time 8
Level 8

Free Env
Time 1
Level 1
Time 2
Level 2
Time 3
Sustain
Release
Rel. Level

Filter / Amplifier
Attack
Decay
Sustain
Release
Attack
Decay
Sustain
Release






Other Microwave II/XT OS features:
Adjustable Aliasing: "listen to aliasing distortion just like in the dawn of the first digital musical instruments like the PPG Wave or the first Microwave."
Adjustable Time Quantization: "sometimes one might wish to add additional harshness to the lower end, just like the first microwave did, and this is what Time Quantization is for: The wave interpolation is overridden in five steps to get this extra fizziness."

2 Clipping Modes:
Saturate - "This is the kind of distortion classic analog circuits will generate."
Overflow - "The polarity of the signal's part above the maximum level will be negated."

Random Patch Generator added (OS 1.303)
Oscillator FM added (OS 1.307) - Osc1 is Carrier and Osc2 Modulator
Arpeggiator Notes can be sent to MIDI out. (OS 1.500) - Adjustable globally in Sound Mode or by Instrument in Multi Mode.


Posted by Pjotr G on Oct-14-2001 13:32:

quote:
Originally posted by patticus
ok, thanks, so that roland jv is a rack synth? or its a controller?

cuz i WOULD need one of the mentioned midi controllers even if i got that right..

it doesnt matter so much what kind of keyboard i get, right.. i mean i have about as much musical training as anyone, so obviously more octaves + features = good, but editing-wise.. would it really matter, in terms of capabilities?

The JV is a rack synth...and when looking for a midi controller MAKE SURE it is velocity-sensitive. Look out for one with aftertouch too. And the more midi-assignable pots or sliders, the better. The very least it should have pitch bend and modulation.

And DJ Pete, you should write a book


Posted by Eugene on Oct-14-2001 16:21:

So IN CONCLUSION, what is a good keyboard-and-synth (in one) to get, with lots of features and a good price?


Posted by patticus on Oct-14-2001 19:58:

damn pete, that WAS a book you wrote.. im gonna have to bookmark it.. heh.
thanks. and pjotr too.. so basically if im starting out, i should seriously look at that stuff anyways, or will it overwhelm me?

is it like spinning, where you shouldnt try to start out w/ *budget beginner* equipment because it really wont help you get anywhere..

in which case id probably save up for a nord lead or jv or microwave something.. not to mention a midi controller..

btw sorry i dont understand half the techie stuff in there pete, heh, but i'll go thru it again.

Thank you for your input.

oh ok so what should the MAIN criteria be for distinguishing btw rack synths... like, voices, or notes, or handling capabilities etc?

like when i go to the store and some guy starts spouting out shit, what should i pay attn to.


Posted by Peter Campbell on Oct-15-2001 06:58:

quote:
Originally posted by Eugene
So IN CONCLUSION, what is a good keyboard-and-synth (in one) to get, with lots of features and a good price?



WALDORF - MICROWAVE XTK









The Microwave XTK Version extends the Microwave family to include a keyboard version. This unit is basically a Microwave XT spec, with added keys... Same amount of controller knobs & dials, same spec's, poly & multi-parts etc...




49 key keyboard, velocity and release velocity, monophonic aftertouch
Pitch Bend wheel
Modulation wheel



Posted by Peter Campbell on Oct-15-2001 07:24:

quote:
Originally posted by patticus


oh ok so what should the MAIN criteria be for distinguishing btw rack synths... like, voices, or notes, or handling capabilities etc?

like when i go to the store and some guy starts spouting out shit, what should i pay attn to.



I will make it short, quite simply let you ear tell you what sounds good.
Go to a music store that sells well know synths and play with the presets and turn all them knobs, just see what you can get out of it.
And one thing don't buy it on the spot, come back 2,3 times just to really work it.

I can give you all the info and my ider on what I think is best, but in the end its all up to you.


Posted by Ayianapa on Nov-04-2001 13:55:

Invisible Grin In conclusion

quote:
Originally posted by Eugene
So IN CONCLUSION, what is a good keyboard-and-synth (in one) to get, with lots of features and a good price?


It's up to you what is a good synth and what is not. You're the one who's gonna use it. The most important thing is that you like the sound of the gear you are buying, because that is what really matters. But a nice price, great effects and cool features are always good.

And I don't think the Waldorf XT is good as your first synth. I have one myself and it's not your "bread and butter" synth. It's good for those sound you are likely not to get anywhere else


Posted by amit on Nov-04-2001 15:56:

i one question. Do these synths come with drums beats?

Okay if i had 2 thousand dollars (US)! what set up would i get?


Posted by Ayianapa on Nov-04-2001 18:07:

Thumbs up

They don't come with beats, but they come with drum patches (instruments). You can get some cool 909 kicks out of virtual analogs (like the virus, nordlead and nova) but I think their hihats suck, at least on my synths. So, for beats I'd get a cracked version of Rebirth or Fruityloops. Rebirth has got a TR-909 and TR-808 which is the best for trance and techno. The classic drum sounds

Another option would be to get a sampler for beats. Perhaps a cheap Akai S2000 if you're going hardware, or if you prefer the cheaper solution, software samplers, you got the EXS24 sampler for Logic Audio, or the Halion (or something like that) sampler for Cubase. I personally use EXS24 and I think it's amazing. There are other samples too, but I don't know their names. Yeah, and there's Giga Sampler.

You could also get one of Roland's Grooveboxes. They have a lot of cool drum samples which you can make some fat beats on. I have the MC-303 and it's ok. You can get the MC-303 REALLY cheap second hand. You can get them for �200 I think.

I agree with DJ Pete that you have to check out and try the gear in the stores before you buy. I think it's important to know 100% what you are buying. Even though everybody says the virus is the best synth you can get, it's not sure it's the best you.

For $2000 you can get a killer setup. I'd get a cracked version of Logic Audio with EXS24 (just remember to buy the software when you get signed to Black Hole ) and a virtual analog. But, you have to find the gear that works with you.

I've learned a LOT of websites like www.dancetech.com & www.sospubs.co.uk . Check out their forums. The guys at these sites basicly knows everything about gear and making music

Take my advice: know what you are buying!

I hope this helped.


Posted by Ayianapa on Nov-04-2001 18:15:

Jester

Yeah, I'd like to add one thing.

With all the great software which is available today there's really no need for hardware gear. But it's easier to impress your friends with hardware.. hehe


Posted by Pjotr G on Nov-05-2001 10:25:

quote:
Originally posted by Ayianapa
Yeah, I'd like to add one thing.

With all the great software which is available today there's really no need for hardware gear. But it's easier to impress your friends with hardware.. hehe


Uhuhhhh
I guess that's why ALL the big producers have a $200000 setup. To impress their friends and all.

Plus I'd like to add that for drums you can also get a drumbox which Ayianapa forgot to mention (?). the 909 and 808 are way cool but not something for the beginning producer (hiiiigh price, low on features). But technology has moved on and for $500 you should be able to get a box that can only bang out beats, but serious ones...Boss and the likes.
And some wavetable synths (like roland jv-series) do have drumkits me thinks (pcm sample based)


Posted by Synergy on Nov-08-2001 05:59:

Does anyone have any opinions about the

Novation SuperNova 2

vs

Waldorf XT

?


Posted by Andrew K on Nov-12-2001 14:35:

I bought Yamaha CS2x some months ago but didn't help me at all.
Anyone who has it or anyone who can advise me what to do with it? (Expept of selling it :P)


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