LuSH-101
- KVRist
- 293 posts since 3 Mar, 2011
It is kind of funny that in the thread for UNO-XL there are quite a few posts suggesting that TAL should have gone further than a pure emulation of a simple synth and created something more layered and complex. D16 has done that and here we have quite a few posts suggesting the exact oppposite. I guess we all want different things.
- KVRAF
- 2323 posts since 2 Feb, 2009 from Germany
Btw the first commercial soundset for LuSH-101 is out:
http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=363280
http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=363280
-
- KVRAF
- 5666 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
Does Lush-101 sound like SH-101?
SH-101 vs. Lush-101
You hear Lush-101 and SH-101 side by side. I'm using the Synthmania Funky Bass file there (hope it's ok to paste it like that). I will be able to set Lush101 against a real SH-101 next week, time permitting. In the meantime...is this close enough?
SH-101 vs. Lush-101
You hear Lush-101 and SH-101 side by side. I'm using the Synthmania Funky Bass file there (hope it's ok to paste it like that). I will be able to set Lush101 against a real SH-101 next week, time permitting. In the meantime...is this close enough?
- KVRist
- 293 posts since 3 Mar, 2011
That was quick! I'll definitely have to take a look at this one.Cyforce wrote:Btw the first commercial soundset for LuSH-101 is out
- KVRAF
- 12522 posts since 21 Mar, 2008 from Hannover, Germany
To be honest how many VA synth emulations really replicate the sound, interface and parameter ranges of the original synth it emulates exactly?dexterbella wrote:It is kind of funny that in the thread for UNO-XL there are quite a few posts suggesting that TAL should have gone further than a pure emulation of a simple synth and created something more layered and complex. D16 has done that and here we have quite a few posts suggesting the exact oppposite. I guess we all want different things.
In that respect U-NO-LX seems to have set a new "benchmark". Sometimes less is indeed more if the developer spends more time on the "core features" of a specific synth/emulation.
I still hope that TAL will update TAL Bassline based on the knowledge/technology behind U-NO-LX.
Ingo
Ingo Weidner
Win 10 Home 64-bit / mobile i7-7700HQ 2.8 GHz / 16GB RAM //
Live 10 Suite / Cubase Pro 9.5 / Pro Tools Ultimate 2021 // NI Komplete Kontrol S61 Mk1
Win 10 Home 64-bit / mobile i7-7700HQ 2.8 GHz / 16GB RAM //
Live 10 Suite / Cubase Pro 9.5 / Pro Tools Ultimate 2021 // NI Komplete Kontrol S61 Mk1
-
- KVRAF
- 5666 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
There you go. It's impossible to satisfy the mighty analog starved populous.dexterbella wrote:It is kind of funny that in the thread for UNO-XL there are quite a few posts suggesting that TAL should have gone further than a pure emulation of a simple synth and created something more layered and complex. D16 has done that and here we have quite a few posts suggesting the exact oppposite. I guess we all want different things.
I think what D16 did with this emulation is great. Anyone who wants an SH-101, can choose one layer and go for it. Anyone who wants a complex beast with layers, apreggios and fx coming down from heaven like space invaders, it's possible as well. Myself I'm interested in the middle ground, three layers max for some nice analog pads, simple arpeggios and such (any more and my CPU melts
However, it would be very nice of D16 to offer a bare bones Lush-101 included with the main synth purchase, one which would only have one layer ( no keyboard too).
-
- KVRist
- 83 posts since 30 Apr, 2004
Wow, I almost skipped checking this one out because of all the negativity. But I had an hour to kill this morning, so grabbed the demo and installed it. Definitely glad I did. I'm not really into dance music - which this is obviously very good at - but the pads! This thing is capable of some of the richest, most beautiful, most delicate pad sounds I've heard. How come a dance-oriented synth is so good at slow, evolving sounds?
Anyway, the overall sound quality is very good, the integrated effects are classy, as you'd expect, and it seems pretty deep. I'm 40, so my eyesight is not great, but the UI isn't a dealbreaker for me. Could be better, but I can still read it and work those little controls. A handful of the presets push the CPU a little on my 3-year-old PC, but most are perfectly playable.
I guess I would urge anyone who hasn't given it a try yet to go ahead and do so. I think I agree with other posters that it may have suffered from sky-high expectations due to the looooooong development cycle. It's very good, though. I should mention, also, that I'm not at all a synth purist, and wasn't looking for a dead-on SH-101 replica. More than anything, I'm after great sounds, and this succeeds on those terms.
Dan
Anyway, the overall sound quality is very good, the integrated effects are classy, as you'd expect, and it seems pretty deep. I'm 40, so my eyesight is not great, but the UI isn't a dealbreaker for me. Could be better, but I can still read it and work those little controls. A handful of the presets push the CPU a little on my 3-year-old PC, but most are perfectly playable.
I guess I would urge anyone who hasn't given it a try yet to go ahead and do so. I think I agree with other posters that it may have suffered from sky-high expectations due to the looooooong development cycle. It's very good, though. I should mention, also, that I'm not at all a synth purist, and wasn't looking for a dead-on SH-101 replica. More than anything, I'm after great sounds, and this succeeds on those terms.
Dan
- KVRAF
- 26963 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
I also like the extra features...Sendy wrote:Personally I'm liking the new features - sync for waveform variation, having three filter profiles and two different modes, the extra subosc and noise options. Little details like that make a synth more enjoyable to use I think.
Not really keen on the included supersaw, I think they did it wrong and while it's usable to me as it is, it'd have been a lot more usable if they'd gone for the proper Roland supersaw which really is gorgeous even if you don't like trance. The three main elements for that are nonlinear detune curve, keytracking highpass filter, and noisy aliasing in the treble end which doesn't leak down to low frequency mud thanks to the HPF. It was a clever little package.
And yes, the supersaw is underwhelming
- KVRAF
- 26963 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
himalaya wrote:ZenPunkHippy wrote:
There is a little bit more punch at note on with the real SH-101.
There is a trickwhich can bring some of that punch of the real SH-101 back into Lush-101.
SH-101 only has one envelope, but Lush-101 has two, so when matching the SH-101 sound two envelopes are not needed. However, the second envelope can be used to add that missing punch. It's all to do with a fine balance of Env2 amount slider, the envelope attack and decay and keyboard key tracking ( to a lesser degree as it is usually needed to emulate the key tracking on the SH itself so it can be pushed too much to help with Env2 as it will depart from the SH-101 sound).
Try that Andy, see how much extra punch you can squeeze out.
I also noticed, though haven't really tested it, that you can turn env1 on for the amp, and for the waveform volume which seems to give a different env slope... that might be worth exploring
- KVRAF
- 26963 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
indeed... would be nice to have a few more modulation sources like voice and random for adding variation across unison voicesBDeep wrote:But the unison on the other hand is very very yummy.
-
- KVRAF
- 2747 posts since 13 Feb, 2012 from Amsterdam
Absolutely. But more modulation options in general would be a good idea. Regardless of what you think of the supersaw, since it has a slider for the amount, I could think of some useful tricks modulating that. And I can't understand why, especially on a multi layer synth, there are no delays on the envelopes and LFO's.pdxindy wrote:indeed... would be nice to have a few more modulation sources like voice and random for adding variation across unison voicesBDeep wrote:But the unison on the other hand is very very yummy.
Then again, part of its charm is that it doesn't try to be everything.
- KVRAF
- 5223 posts since 20 Jul, 2010
In regards of modulation options, I was disappointed that you couldn't map keyfollow to the reduction rate effect, for consistent stairstep waveshaping across the keyboard. The whole midi-only matrix thing doesn't bother me a huge deal, because you can always create midi envelopes and LFO's in your DAW.
http://sendy.bandcamp.com/releases < My new album at Bandcamp! Now pay what you like!
- KVRAF
- 4083 posts since 29 Jun, 2011 from USA
Just to clarify, I've had the beta for a while, I did not make the set in just 2 days. Wish I was that productive!dexterbella wrote:That was quick! I'll definitely have to take a look at this one.Cyforce wrote:Btw the first commercial soundset for LuSH-101 is out
It's not just bashed together in other words.
Aiynzahev-sounds
Sound Designer - Soundsets for Pigments, Repro, Diva, Virus TI, Nord Lead 4, Serum, DUNE2, Spire, and others
Sound Designer - Soundsets for Pigments, Repro, Diva, Virus TI, Nord Lead 4, Serum, DUNE2, Spire, and others
