Congratulations to the OP for a very fine soundset
And to Urs and company for a very fine software synth.
No, in "most interviews" people are not saying that it's all to impress. Artists with their own studios don't have client to impress to impress anyway. Trying to claim all analog stuff is just to impress is conspiracy theory territory.Cimbasso wrote:I did, and to me it's just the same thing as those gargantuan speakers in the famous engineers' studios - they impress the clients, but in many interviews, most of them (engineers) admitted that they are only there to impress the clients. The real work (95% of it) is done on the nearfields. And walls of synths do look more impressive than some window in your DAW...
bftucker wrote:Old man Sunshine hasn't posted yet...![]()
Congratulations to the OP for a very fine soundset
And to Urs and company for a very fine software synth.
~2:56Lotuzia wrote:
Another side of the OB-8
On another thought, I don't need to buy a used car. I mean, walking is good for health after all. Going downtown by buses is also a nice little social activity.Lotuzia wrote:
Another side of the OB-8
Well, now we're getting into my territory as well, and I'll say that after exhaustive testing that included blind a/b testing, I'll tell you that all modeling is not created equal. Could software amp modeling be as good as high end hardware amp modelers like the AxeFX or (my favorite) the Kemper? Maybe, but I never found it.ShawnG wrote:not sure why I'm weighing in here, I'm not really a synth guy (although thanks to GAS I own about 50+ soft synths, lol) 80 percent of the sounds in my songs come from my guitars and bass and my own voice, and the majority of the rest is straight multi sampled real instruments. I am an old school Prog and Pink Floyd fan so the vintage analog stuff does have some nostalgia with me. I am a guitarist and am well versed in the "real Tube Amp" vs software modeling argument, and really, when you realize that you are just going to end up with a digital waveform at 16/44.1 at the end of it anyway, as long as the modeling is done well enough it doesn't matter a damn for the recording in terms of sound. Now, If I were rich I would have a wonderful Marshall Stack and a VOX AC30 and a full pedalboard of analog goodies, I would have an ARP 2600 in the corner and a prophet 5. Theres nothing for me like moving air the way a hundred watt Marshall can move air, and no, Amplitube through my M-Audio BX5's is not even remotely the same thing. I imagine that if I were to play a real Analog synth live into a PA I would be similarly blown away. the thing is, the Marshall is not really that much better, once I stick a 57 in front of it and record it into my DAW. When I listen to the playback, I would be hard pressed to tell it from the Amplitube version.
There is a real reason to use the hardware though if you have it. Workflow. If you lay down a track through the Marshall, you aren't going to be forever fiddling around with re-amping the damn thing through every model you have in Amplitube, you are just going to get the best take and mix it. with a hardware synth, not only is it fun to program without staring at a screen and twiddling your mouse the whole time, but you likely are just going to get the best take and commit it to the recording. with the soft synth, you're gonna tweak settings forever, or maybe try the part on 15 other synths, until you've lost all your mojo. One advantage of Diva, I guess is that it's legendary CPU demands are such that you will be forced to render early, and you won't spend so much time tweaking, which is probably a good thing too.
one aspect of bias that is important deals with money. lets face it, If I had the dough, and just spent thousands on a Marshall Rig, you can bet that my opinion might be a little less charitable towards the Amplitube. musos who can't afford a room full of vintage analog synths will probably have the opinion that they don't need them, and musicians who have spent a ton of money on a vintage keyboard collection will probably be keen to defend the uniqueness of their purchases. one thing that is wonderful is that all of us can make good music with the tools we have now. It ALL can sound good, if you know how to work it.
Geez. Have no idea why anyone would want a synth that ugly. This blue pyjamas look would never make it into my collection no matter how magical the sound. You'd have to give it to me for free and a few minutes after it would be on sale at Ebay.Lotuzia wrote:
Another side of the OB-8
It comes from the era of the piano tie. What did you expect?Locus M wrote:Geez. Have no idea why anyone would want a synth that ugly. This blue pyjamas look would never make it into my collection no matter how magical the sound. You'd have to give it to me for free and a few minutes after it would be on sale at Ebay.
Any reference recording of what you're talking about, like the mentioned DSI feedback?zerocrossing wrote:Anyway, that's why I feel I don't have the bias that a lot of people talk about. I own software because I like what it is, and I own hardware because of what it is and I think there is a difference. You'll hit me, but I think the biggest differences (still even after this test) are in analog synths, and in those the biggest differences seem to be where things get a bit overdriven, like in filter overdrive, or even analog distortion. If someone can show me a synth that sounds like a DSI using it's feedback, I'd love to hear about it. Monark sounds great, but it's very simple. I like the way things sound when they're breaking.
Because it's done using C++ templates so the compiler can drop code that's never touched. Also, each filter has to be individually tuned for any combination of samplerate and oversampling factor if self oscillation is supposed to track perfectly. It would be a tedious job to set up all possible combinations. It's a tedious job to do what we do anywayZ1202 wrote:Such option would be nice. But why don't you provide an "advanced" access to the quality (oversampling and iteration convergence separately?)Urs wrote:So I think we've done a lot, but I admit, there's probably room for more. We've got an option planned for all our plug-ins where the internal sample rate does not scale with host sample rate. We just haven't gotten around to implementing it, also because it wasn't requested often. Diva would still run at 176,4khz internally though.
Thanks for watching anyway. Sure, I'm just providing some exemples of a guy who makes *something else* with an OB-8, just in case someone on the sw forum could be interested in such a thing. Here's another one with track making. The guy uses some fx when wanted, and dry when fx are not required. He also shows a way to escape this annoying hw synths polyphony/multiple instances problem ( I think it's called *a recorder*, not sure )EnGee wrote:On another thought, I don't need to buy a used car. I mean, walking is good for health after all. Going downtown by buses is also a nice little social activity.Lotuzia wrote:
Another side of the OB-8
This is an amazing video. I enjoyed it so much really "Kore!" as he said!Lotuzia wrote:
Then sometimes on this forum, I get the feeling that a guy making music with an hw analog synth older than 5 years is someone just inbetween the dinosaur and the alien. With added snobbery of course. This is wrong. In my book, it's simply ..... a musician.
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