They all sound very close indeed.
There's a give away, but it's not exactly a deficiency in the emulation...
OP-X PRO-II would win for these types of sounds since the old 1979 OB-X isn't the snappiest synth around - it's definitely a sweep and pad machine. But maybe I can post some of this stuff, let me see...olikana wrote:why these comparisons are always with slow modulated sweeps and pads and never with snappy or punchy sounds. that's how vst developers have been getting away with comparisons since 12 year to not unearth filter feedback lag.
compare a ressy bass, a filter zap, a self osc kick drum and 1/32 modulation...
then it may be a worthy comparison.
Good idea, I keep it in mind for the next timebraj wrote:Actually what I think would be the best demo would be to have the same basic song, including a bass, chord and melody track to be rendered with the hardware and software and then see what we think it the real vs the vst.
What if I already have both?Peter999 wrote:Thanks for your votes
Let's say, the best one gets a free OP-X PRO-II (also can be used stand alone on intel Macs), if you own it already a Stringer license.
I disagree. An isolated note may sound perfect, but how do the notes sound in real life? A sampled piano key strong can sound exactly like a recorded piano because it is, but it doesn't sound the same as a real piano when played. So the differences would become more apparent the more the sounds interact with eachother and you may hear the nuances of the synthesis more when you actually hear more.The unshushable Coktor wrote:I'd say it gets progressively difficult to hear the details, the more sounds play at the same time, so I'd vote against a whole demo song to tell the difference. Could be interesting to hear, of course, but as a comparison of the qualities, can't imagine it to be much use really. For me as a keyboard player, the sound of a single note counts the most.
That's down to the sympathetic resonance between hammered notes and any undamped strings. There's no equivalent effect with synths.braj wrote:A sampled piano key strong can sound exactly like a recorded piano because it is, but it doesn't sound the same as a real piano when played.
But the overall character may be heard more when more is played. The two example sounds each sound nearly identical, but how close would a sequenced song sound? That's what I'm getting at.hakey wrote:That's down to the sympathetic resonance between hammered notes and any undamped strings. There's no equivalent effect with synths.braj wrote:A sampled piano key strong can sound exactly like a recorded piano because it is, but it doesn't sound the same as a real piano when played.
Yes, I actually meant not just a single note, but also a single sound being played. One riff, one melody line, etc. Some subtleties get lost with fast playing too, so you gotta have it all in there, all the varieties of playing. But if it's buried under 10 other sounds, I wouldn't be able to tell anymore. Software "breaks" easier when you reach the boundaries. What part of the sound, would you say, gets more obvious if you pile on many different tracks of sounds? Believe me, it's all fine if you can really tell better in a whole song, I just wouldn't be, and I also can't think of a reason it would get easier in a whole arrangement.braj wrote:An isolated note may sound perfect, but how do the notes sound in real life?
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