To be honest, in the past I wrote Fxpansion to my "to buy" list but I was never 100% satisfied while demo all the synths in this bundle because I only liked Strobe and than only for bass sounds
Diva vs Strobe (FXpansion)
- KVRAF
- 5913 posts since 17 Aug, 2004 from Berlin, Germany
As far as I know Strobe was modeled (soundwise) after the Juno 60. Has somebody with FXpansion stuff compared this to Diva?
To be honest, in the past I wrote Fxpansion to my "to buy" list but I was never 100% satisfied while demo all the synths in this bundle because I only liked Strobe and than only for bass sounds
To be honest, in the past I wrote Fxpansion to my "to buy" list but I was never 100% satisfied while demo all the synths in this bundle because I only liked Strobe and than only for bass sounds
| Links- u-he
- 30222 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Strobe has various filter types and multiple envelopes, the Juno 60 hasn't. Strobe is far, far more complex in pretty much every aspect
The only thing that's similar IMHO is the one-oscillator approach with multiple waveforms at once.
Urs
The only thing that's similar IMHO is the one-oscillator approach with multiple waveforms at once.
-
- KVRAF
- 2117 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from flint, michigan
I've been using Strobe for pad sounds a lot. The factory presets don't really do it much justice in the Juno 60-ish poly arena, but once you start making your own, it's just as easy to do as on the Juno 60.
At four voices of polyphony, Strobe also consumes less cpu than DIVA, and I don't know if the "within a mix" results are worth the extra cycles. If you have the processing power to spare though, DIVA gives you a lot more options for oscillator tonality and filter character, whereas Strobe has a set "one" oscillator section.
At four voices of polyphony, Strobe also consumes less cpu than DIVA, and I don't know if the "within a mix" results are worth the extra cycles. If you have the processing power to spare though, DIVA gives you a lot more options for oscillator tonality and filter character, whereas Strobe has a set "one" oscillator section.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5913 posts since 17 Aug, 2004 from Berlin, Germany
Jepp. The best stuff I remember was Unison and the very impressive modulation implementation. If binding Unison to the pan fader the stacked voices are spread in the panorama and stuff (nice for creating pads).
Diva has no Unison (the only thing to get a similar sound is IMO the Chorus with the Ensemble type?).
Anyway, for a more basic sound (no Unison and no "special" filters) Strobe should be sound very similar to Diva or are the filters of Strobe completely different and this makes a big difference?
Diva has no Unison (the only thing to get a similar sound is IMO the Chorus with the Ensemble type?).
Anyway, for a more basic sound (no Unison and no "special" filters) Strobe should be sound very similar to Diva or are the filters of Strobe completely different and this makes a big difference?
| Links- u-he
- 30222 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
-
- KVRAF
- 2117 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from flint, michigan
I am probably way off bass here, but I seem to recall Andy saying Strobe's LP filter is modeled off the MS-20, whereas DIVA has several different models to select from (Roland, Korg, etc. - correct me if I'm wrong Urs). In that aspect, it would seem that the point goes to DIVA. Maybe I'm getting Strobe's LP confused with the Drop, however.
I like both of them. Not gonna lie. They are both immediately easy to use, (which is a huge selling point for me) but can get complex if you start digging deeper. Coming from a hardware background, I like getting usable sounds with minimal fuss. Both excel in this department.
I like both of them. Not gonna lie. They are both immediately easy to use, (which is a huge selling point for me) but can get complex if you start digging deeper. Coming from a hardware background, I like getting usable sounds with minimal fuss. Both excel in this department.
-
penguinfromdeep penguinfromdeep https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=193898
- KVRAF
- 1994 posts since 18 Nov, 2008
It was modeled after Jupiter-6 afaik .. At least I saw video where Andy delved into the inner workings of that synth ..
circuit modeling and 0-dfb filters are cool
-
- KVRist
- 75 posts since 12 Mar, 2005
I feel a little the same way.ryandfl wrote:I really wanted to like Strobe, but after demoing it for a bit my impression was it sounds kind of cold.
- but i also find a real jupiter-6 cold-ish sounding IMHO (had one).
But for me its not a bad thing (sometimes its just what song need)
-
- KVRer
- 14 posts since 9 Feb, 2006
I've used Strobe and DCAM a lot since it was released.ryandfl wrote:I really wanted to like Strobe, but after demoing it for a bit my impression was it sounds kind of cold.
I do mostly electro stuff and Diva replaces DCAM for the "standard" bass stuff for me.
Diva is closer to analog to my ears.
Strobe is more "unique"-sounding generally whereas Diva sounds more like an hardware emulation.
They could very well compliment eachother so try them out for yourself.
Sometimes "Fat and Warm" and "Cold and Elegant" sounds good together
I would describe DCAM as sort of "elegant"-sounding with most patches rather than "cold", it can also be pretty aggressive.
-
- KVRAF
- 1724 posts since 10 Feb, 2008 from Berlin, Germany
The problem with the whole DCAM stuff for me are the GUIs. They're just too small. This is really destroying them for me. 
@pandashake
Could you post some examples of Juno'ish sounds from Strobe?
I've never considered Strobe to be a candidate for those kind of sounds.
@pandashake
Could you post some examples of Juno'ish sounds from Strobe?
I've never considered Strobe to be a candidate for those kind of sounds.
- u-he
- 30222 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
Well, there's various modifiers. The "Voice" modulator works on stacked voices, so if you e.g. stack 3 voices, each will have a different value in the Voice modulator, allowing you to craete parameter offsets among voices.JD Gaffe wrote:Will we also be able to modulate it different than the original oscillator? That would be ~amazing~Urs wrote:Diva will get unison
Then there's the Voice Map and the per-Voice slop parameters that have individual modifications for each physical voice (well 8 physical voices and 8 copies thereof).
On top of that you have the Random and Alternate modulators.
This should provide for a lot of depth in terms of unison variety.
Howard has btw. persuaded me that we'll do voice stacking in Diva, but only between 1 till 4 voices. This, and a proper Unison mode.
