mello der bilderklauvurt wrote:mello das picture thief!
... it's the singer, not the song

mello der bilderklauvurt wrote:mello das picture thief!

Here's a quick illustration: two clips - Oxium and a leading competitor. In both cases VCA and filter envelopes were set identically with attack, decay and release at their minimum settings and sustain at 100%. For Oxium the filter envelope was doubled using a mod matrix slot to allow the filter to be opened fully. A sawtooth was fed into the respective filters, which were set to self oscillate.Lotuzia wrote:You can get all sorts of snappy sounds. Besides that the ev times can be given in mms. Its very easy to get even some clicky sounds with the attack.hakey wrote:Envelope attack is soft - nowhere near as snappy as the competition.
the click on the oxium one sounds awful toohakey wrote: To my ears, the attack portion of the Oxium clip sounds soft and the 'leading competitor' much snappier. The loud clickiness in the Oxium clip is on the release!
Haha, yeah. Like you say, clicks aren't all that musically useful anyway.vurt wrote:the click on the oxium one sounds awful too
i know this is hardly a musical sound, but that click doesnt sound like it could be much use anywhere, sounds somewhat "plasticky"
Ill do the same with oxium and "another competitor" and well compare results in a while crocodilehakey wrote:Here's a quick illustration: two clips - Oxium and a leading competitor. In Oxiums case the VCA and filter envelopes were set identically with attack, decay and release at their minimum settings and sustain at 100%. For Oxium the filter envelope was doubled using a mod matrix slot to allow the filter to be opened fully. A sawtooth was fed into the respective filters, which were set to self oscillate.the filter on Oxium was the best sounding I had ever heard on a synthesizer,wow,it completely blew me awayLotuzia wrote:You can get all sorts of snappy sounds. Besides that the ev times can be given in mms. Its very easy to get even some clicky sounds with the attack.hakey wrote:Envelope attack is soft - nowhere near as snappy as the competition.
Oxium
A Leading Competitor
To my ears, the attack portion of the Oxium clip sounds punchy and the 'leading competitor' much slowwr. The loud clickiness in the other synth not the Oxium clip is on the release!
Edit: Also notice the obvious warmth in the Oxium clip. There's no added white noise. The open filter set into self oscillation gets that smooth creamy noise associated with analog synths, better than Divas in fact for 1/2 the processing power.
Crackbaby wrote:Bloody hell, can the comparisons stop?! Two great synths, you CAN own both. Good job, you found a setting that isn't musical to your ears. Great. How about trying to find something that sounds good and go on from there?
There has been no 'sneaky' marketing here.
For the record - no, Oxium's filter didn't blow me away (and my grammar isn't quite that bad).Trakstar wrote:not hakey wrote:the filter on Oxium was the best sounding I had ever heard on a synthesizer,wow,it completely blew me away
Maybe tomorrow. And maybe in a separate thread that folk can choose to ignore if it's all too tedious for them to bear. It might even be too tedious for me...vurt wrote:id like to hear something more musical on both synths first at least...
Seems he just said that to get the exact same click with the competitor, you should vary the envelope settings.vurt wrote:@ hakey, yeah i know that, click/fast nvelope can be used for drums/perc i guess, but that particular filter closing doesnt sound "realistic" at all.
the competitor, sounds a little more natural? does that make sense, on the competitor it sounds like its not out of place. id be interested in knowing what the competitor is at some point.
but i think id like to hear something more musical on both synths first at least...
even just a simple riffage with some filter sweeps, uing the same ettings on both synths of course. if possible.
Submit: News, Plugins, Hosts & Apps | Advertise @ KVR | Developer Account | About KVR / Contact Us | Privacy Statement
© KVR Audio, Inc. 2000-2026