I disagree, I plugged in my Crumar Multiman.... inserted the audio signal into a Small Stone analog Phaser running at 7.5 Volts instead of 9 Volts to get the slower lfo rate. I then put it through a Roland Space echo and panned the dry signal hard left and the echo'd signal hard right......Instant OxygeneUrs wrote:You can't get these sounds with just analogue synths either. It's the whole production technique involved that provides for certain sounds, such as tape loops. If you're into stuff like Oxygene or Tangram, you'd be very disappointed trying this on just a bunch of analogue synths. You can get far closer with plugin synths that have a decent effects section and eq.ckatrun411 wrote:I been spending a lot of weeks now listening just to vinyl trying to rediscover the roots of electronica. Lots of different composers, from Germany and England throughout the 60s and 70s, and old movie soundtracks and what not. Its been quite a strange experience, cause I have spent a lot of time working with digital equipment.
But I do hear what you are saying, we are so used to hearing synths with fx on them that a dry as a bone analog synth can sound underwhelming to some people, but whack some fx on them and it's heaven
Love Zebra by the way...it's one of the best soft synths EVER made, sounds better at higher sample rates as well