But if someone makes a sound with VOPM (or any reference synth x people think is awesome) that people agree has that "real" quality (whatever it is), and the replication of that sound in another synth sounds the same and has the same quality, doesn't that prove the point that it isn't about the intrinsic quality of the synth but about being able to program a synth? Or am I missing something?Aroused by JarJar wrote:Replicating a VOPM preset won't address the issue at all, but a completely different sound that has that firm, "real" quality to it would address the issue precisely.
That is, there's a reference sound that has qualities that some people are after, and some kind of recipe to get that sound programmed - and if the end result is like the reference sound, mission accomplished? And if it the end result doesn't sound the same, it proves that there's something in the signature sound that the reference synth has that the other one doesn't.
The problem with the "completely different sound" test is that there is no reference that people agree on. Someone can say "well, this sounds good" and someone "well, this doesn't have the quality I'm after". But if at first some people agree that some reference sound is what they're after, replicating it with another synth proves the point that the same sound is achievable on that synth.

