The great producers -- and engineers--would effectively use track /region automation, EFX plugins either as inserts or on a bus, and some might even go as far as to use sampled synth sounds.EnGee wrote:Yes, it is difficult to tell between similar synths, but still there is a difference. This tiny differences are what we call "details". Sometimes, people forget the main idea and be obsessed with the details, and sometimes they ignore them. But, IMO, many of the great masterpieces (whatever they are) are in the details. So, that there is a good mixing/mastering engineer and a great mixing/mastering engineer. The great ones, always, care a lot about the details.wagtunes wrote:
No, not at all. They just like to have different synths for a variety of reasons, not all having to do with the sound itself. I'm not going to get into all the reasons here and now because I have a project to work on in order to prove my point, and I will prove my point.
And as I said, there are a handful of synths that nothing else sounds like. But you can't tell me that, in a mix, you could tell whether I used Monark for a bass line or Arturia's Mini V. With the majority of synths out there, the differences in sound can only be heard isolated and carefully analyzed.
That isn't how people listen to music, so as far as I'm concerned, those comparisons are meaningless. I don't care if XYZ's sawtooth wave is more "true" than ABC's sawtooth wave. So what? Meaningless in the context of music.
SoundToys, D16, HorNet, all the saturation/compression vendors, Altiverb, Lex, your DAWs convolution, Boz-- you name it all could add so much to so many different tracks that the details are in the eye of the beholder.
Point Blank just did an excellent tutorial on Granular Synthesis -- and they demonstrated the entire concept and process on tracks with audio clips, using Logic's Time Stretching Algo's, FlexPitch, Automation, and the like. Even Alchemy itself could be used as a glorified sample engine if one so chooses, similar to how Nexus functions, and some would too include Omnisphere.
