I don't see how this relates in any way to anything I said, but if you feel better now,by all means go ahead.yessongs wrote:and in ten years it will be something else and guess what. Yes Genesis ELP Floyd Kansas and the prog rock generation of artists that originated the sound will still be more interesting and those timeless classics will sound better and as if they were written in the future still.ariston wrote:I was going to say: plenty of deep mod options, but that about sums it up. Oh, and don't forget swushswushes, ribbledibbles and bringgggg-boing-doing-doings.Sendy wrote:Plucks, wubs and yoys.SadPuppyBlues wrote:What does t his mean, exactly?ariston wrote:serious, modern sound design
Speaking seriously: it takes a good deal of effort to program patches that respond to your playing just as a "real" instrument would. This is not usually important for the sequencer musician who is heavily annoyed by patches that respond to velocity, but as a keyboard player, I like to play sounds that feel alive. Modulating the cutoff with an LFO won't accomplish that. I used the word "modern" in this context to mean: utilizing the wonderful options that our computers give us to create sound that live and breathe.
TAL U-NO-LX vs. DIVA
- KVRAF
- 3878 posts since 28 Jun, 2009 from Wherever I lay my hat
- KVRAF
- 2036 posts since 15 Mar, 2002 from Seattle, WA - USA
DIVA is wonderful and an easy recommendation across the board. It's like an analog synth history museum and can cover so many different kinds of sounds. The thing is, for a Juno owner such as myself, TAL's U-NO-LX is about as perfect an emulation as I've ever heard and totally endearing. If you're looking for something that's simple, easy to program, sounds great and totally nails that mid-80s Juno vibe, I can't recommend it highly enough. TAL even emulated that distinctive onboard chorus unit. But really, you can't go wrong with either one. If you can afford it, get them both. 
- KVRist
- 293 posts since 3 Mar, 2011
Not everybody is interested in sounding like somebody else from the seventies! That's your thing and that's fine but a lot of other people are looking to do other things with their synths.yessongs wrote:and in ten years it will be something else and guess what. Yes Genesis ELP Floyd Kansas and the prog rock generation of artists that originated the sound will still be more interesting and those timeless classics will sound better and as if they were written in the future still.ariston wrote:I was going to say: plenty of deep mod options, but that about sums it up. Oh, and don't forget swushswushes, ribbledibbles and bringgggg-boing-doing-doings.Sendy wrote:Plucks, wubs and yoys.SadPuppyBlues wrote:What does t his mean, exactly?ariston wrote:serious, modern sound design
Speaking seriously: it takes a good deal of effort to program patches that respond to your playing just as a "real" instrument would. This is not usually important for the sequencer musician who is heavily annoyed by patches that respond to velocity, but as a keyboard player, I like to play sounds that feel alive. Modulating the cutoff with an LFO won't accomplish that. I used the word "modern" in this context to mean: utilizing the wonderful options that our computers give us to create sound that live and breathe.
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- KVRer
- 25 posts since 23 Oct, 2013 from Inverness, Scotland
I've not tried TAL yet, but I played through Diva presets the other day at the highest quality level (which didn't seem to be as CPU hungry as the warnings suggest (though my i7 is relatively powerful still), and I think Diva sounds lush and lovely as well as seeming rather versatile.
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- KVRist
- 115 posts since 18 Jul, 2008
created sweet dreams on the TAL U-NO vst, it sounds quite close to the original juno-60fmr wrote:DIVA has the Juno oscillator, but that's it. It's not a perfect emulation. DIVA has modules from the Juno, the Jupiter-8, the Jupiter-6, the MS-10 and MS-20 and the Minimoog (and soon two others), but does not intend to be a perfect emulation of any of these.Caine123 wrote:as im narrowing down my shopping list i have to ask you who got more experiences than me, i like the TAL one but as i wanna get DIVA (too) i wanted to ask how those 2 are compared to each other?
if diva includes the TAL juno already or if TAL has some uniqueness?
TAL U-NO-LX is a perfect emulation of the Juno-60. So, if you want the Juno-60, go for it. If you want to have several variations on the "vintage analog" theme, go for DIVA.
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- KVRist
- 91 posts since 27 Oct, 2013
this is good adviseBDeep wrote:However, if you've used U-NO-LX and enjoyed playing with it, why not just get it, music is much more about inspiration. If a synth can give you that, I wouldn't care so much if it overlaps with other synths you might have.
