New from UVI: UVX80 (AKAI AX80 re-imagining)
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- KVRist
- 355 posts since 3 Oct, 2009
Well no....lol
It's not possible to make your own sounds from scratch. That's where the distinction comes in.
Sampled waveforms aren't "generators" per se.
You're limited to the waveforms sampled from the AX80.
EDIT: after digging more I to the manual...it seems the cross modulation is capable in other ways, the oscs can be synced as well.
There's is no way to adjust the HPF of the LFO section however and the LFO delay, while not having a dedicated control can be done through the step modulator section.
Still no key follow for the filter unless this feature is hardcoded.
Lol sorry if I seem obsessed but the AX80 is a synth I'm extremely passionate about lol.
One if the most underrated synths the ever.
It's not possible to make your own sounds from scratch. That's where the distinction comes in.
Sampled waveforms aren't "generators" per se.
You're limited to the waveforms sampled from the AX80.
EDIT: after digging more I to the manual...it seems the cross modulation is capable in other ways, the oscs can be synced as well.
There's is no way to adjust the HPF of the LFO section however and the LFO delay, while not having a dedicated control can be done through the step modulator section.
Still no key follow for the filter unless this feature is hardcoded.
Lol sorry if I seem obsessed but the AX80 is a synth I'm extremely passionate about lol.
One if the most underrated synths the ever.
- KVRAF
- 7691 posts since 11 Jun, 2006
you are missing the fact that the AX80 makes powerful bass sounds out of its hardware output.woodsdenis wrote:Love the UVI stuff in general but why this ? Hardly a sought after or particularly nice sounding original synth. What am I missing here?
hardly recreated in this software thing. i know, i own one.
hardware AX80 bass used on this classic new order cover:
https://soundcloud.com/layzerkvr/blackmonday
HW SYNTHS [KORG T2EX - AKAI AX80 - YAMAHA SY77 - ENSONIQ VFX]
HW MODULES [OBi M1000 - ROLAND MKS-50 - ROLAND JV880 - KURZ 1000PX]
SW [CHARLATAN - OBXD - OXE - ELEKTRO - MICROTERA - M1 - SURGE - RMiV]
DAW [ENERGY XT2/1U RACK WINXP / MAUDIO 1010LT PCI]
HW MODULES [OBi M1000 - ROLAND MKS-50 - ROLAND JV880 - KURZ 1000PX]
SW [CHARLATAN - OBXD - OXE - ELEKTRO - MICROTERA - M1 - SURGE - RMiV]
DAW [ENERGY XT2/1U RACK WINXP / MAUDIO 1010LT PCI]
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- KVRian
- 595 posts since 8 May, 2006
so the UVI can't "make powerful bass sounds"? oh, that's right - you've never used any of their stuff, because it (gasp) costs money. get lost. how about next time you post something you first ask yourself "am i about to say something which is so easily refutable that i look like a complete jackass?"layzer wrote:... the AX80 makes powerful bass sounds out of its hardware output.
hardly recreated in this software thing. i know, i own one.
sampled or not, the UVI "emulations" put out PLENTY of bass.
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- KVRist
- 355 posts since 3 Oct, 2009
This isn't an emulation. Not even close.jbuonacc wrote:so the UVI can't "make powerful bass sounds"? oh, that's right - you've never used any of their stuff, because it (gasp) costs money. get lost. how about next time you post something you first ask yourself "am i about to say something which is so easily refutable that i look like a complete jackass?"layzer wrote:... the AX80 makes powerful bass sounds out of its hardware output.
hardly recreated in this software thing. i know, i own one.
sampled or not, the UVI "emulations" put out PLENTY of bass.
That being said, the UVX80 I'm sure can make "powerful bass sounds" even out of an audio interfaces output!!
Hard to believe!!
- KVRAF
- 43964 posts since 11 Aug, 2008 from clown world
If like me, you don't feel like spending right now, you can get some free 'nki' and 'exs' stuff here:
http://modularsamples.com/
Synths
Akai AX80
http://modularsamples.com/
Synths
Akai AX80
Anyone who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
- KVRAF
- 7691 posts since 11 Jun, 2006
oh you again. go F yourself, dude.jbuonacc wrote:so the UVI can't "make powerful bass sounds"? oh, that's right - you've never used any of their stuff, because it (gasp) costs money. get lost. how about next time you post something you first ask yourself "am i about to say something which is so easily refutable that i look like a complete jackass?"layzer wrote:... the AX80 makes powerful bass sounds out of its hardware output.
hardly recreated in this software thing. i know, i own one.
sampled or not, the UVI "emulations" put out PLENTY of bass.
HW SYNTHS [KORG T2EX - AKAI AX80 - YAMAHA SY77 - ENSONIQ VFX]
HW MODULES [OBi M1000 - ROLAND MKS-50 - ROLAND JV880 - KURZ 1000PX]
SW [CHARLATAN - OBXD - OXE - ELEKTRO - MICROTERA - M1 - SURGE - RMiV]
DAW [ENERGY XT2/1U RACK WINXP / MAUDIO 1010LT PCI]
HW MODULES [OBi M1000 - ROLAND MKS-50 - ROLAND JV880 - KURZ 1000PX]
SW [CHARLATAN - OBXD - OXE - ELEKTRO - MICROTERA - M1 - SURGE - RMiV]
DAW [ENERGY XT2/1U RACK WINXP / MAUDIO 1010LT PCI]
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- KVRAF
- 2648 posts since 20 Jun, 2012
Why do we get into those pointless discussion weather UVI libraries are synths or not every time? UVI libraries are not synths, end of story.
They are sample libraries with some very basic control over things like volume and filter envelopes, and tone like filter cutoff with the addition of some basic FX. A synth this does not make.
UVI libraries are not even romplers in the proper sense of the word. In a proper rompler a sound is still generated algorithmically even if the osc starting point is a PCM waveform. UVI libraries are just a collection of fully sampled sounds with some additional basic control over them. That they throw a nice GUI over them does not make them synths.
They are sample libraries with some very basic control over things like volume and filter envelopes, and tone like filter cutoff with the addition of some basic FX. A synth this does not make.
UVI libraries are not even romplers in the proper sense of the word. In a proper rompler a sound is still generated algorithmically even if the osc starting point is a PCM waveform. UVI libraries are just a collection of fully sampled sounds with some additional basic control over them. That they throw a nice GUI over them does not make them synths.
No signature here!
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- KVRist
- 355 posts since 3 Oct, 2009
Sorry, but those basic controls are 75% of what a synth is...the only discrepancy being whether there are actual generators or not.robotmonkey wrote:They are sample libraries with some very basic control over things like volume and filter envelopes, and tone like filter cutoff with the addition of some basic FX. A synth this does not make.
Oscillator, filter, envelope, amp = a synth.
- KVRist
- 394 posts since 26 Aug, 2011 from somewhere under the rainbow
But the type of oscillators, filters and envelopes determines, how the synth sounds.
UVI Workstation doesn't have the filters from AX80. You're limited to what was sampled and not much more.
UVI Workstation doesn't have the filters from AX80. You're limited to what was sampled and not much more.
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- KVRian
- 595 posts since 8 May, 2006
that doesn't make it any less of a "synth", at all (though i'm hesitant to pin the term synth or ROMpler onto them myself). you can still shape these sounds into something quite different than the base samples using the included synth components (filters, envelopes, etc). besides sampling full patches from the originals, a number of them offer more standard oscillator waveform samples from the originals. they don't do this nearly enough though, and either way i always find that the UVI stuff is somewhat less than they could be. it's like they only ever go 60% with it, there's so much more that they could do.Kumi_27 wrote:But the type of oscillators, filters and envelopes determines, how the synth sounds.
UVI Workstation doesn't have the filters from AX80. You're limited to what was sampled and not much more.
i haven't used it, and i've found almost zero examples of it being done, but loading these things into Falcon could really be the thing that makes them more of what they could/should be. if you can edit the samples to be looping single-cycle waveforms (for example), then you're in standard ROMpler/synth territory right there. i'd say they're already close enough to what anyone would consider a ROMpler anyway, and without splitting hairs i think a ROMpler like the Roland JV series certainly qualifies as a "synthesizer". could an Akai or E-mu sampler be considered a synth? in some ways, as long as they're doing more than straight playback of sampled sounds, i think they could.
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- KVRAF
- 2482 posts since 28 Mar, 2005
The issue with single cycle waveform is that you lose the vibe of the original analog hardware with its imperfection
which give a less static sound hence the sample base approach as opposed to wavetable.
In any case, this is clearly not a 100% reproduction of the hardware and this wasn't our goal.
You still get the vibe of the orignal though.
which give a less static sound hence the sample base approach as opposed to wavetable.
In any case, this is clearly not a 100% reproduction of the hardware and this wasn't our goal.
You still get the vibe of the orignal though.
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- KVRist
- 355 posts since 3 Oct, 2009
You should model the AX80 filter thoughotristan wrote:The issue with single cycle waveform is that you lose the vibe of the original analog hardware with its imperfection
which give a less static sound hence the sample base approach as opposed to wavetable.
In any case, this is clearly not a 100% reproduction of the hardware and this wasn't our goal.
You still get the vibe of the orignal though.
Nothing sounds like it
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- KVRAF
- 2648 posts since 20 Jun, 2012
Probably not. That's why they are called samplers and not synths.jbuonacc wrote:Could an Akai or E-mu sampler be considered a synth?
No signature here!
