What about the Arturia MatrixBrute? It looks quite awesome... lots of modulation and analog sound?
Is it worth the price?
What about background noise? It should be quite noticeable...
Is there a background noise with modular systems?
I have a decent amount of Behringer gear and know enough people who have owned Behringer stuff. I can only talk about my personal anecdotal experiences. For what they are worth:chk071 wrote:Behringer have a certain "reputation", that's for sure.I think they quite upped their game with their more recent gear, though.
It sounds awesome to me. I considered getting one before I spotted the Abyss (they are very different). I understand Arturia are increasing the price next month to over £2,000 so now is the time to grab one.wurschtel wrote:Thanks a lot for those like!!!
What about the Arturia MatrixBrute? It looks quite awesome... lots of modulation and analog sound?
Is it worth the price?
Wow really? okay I need to go ahead and listen to both synthesizersthecontrolcentre wrote:It sounds awesome to me. I considered getting one before I spotted the Abyss (they are very different). I understand Arturia are increasing the price next month to over £2,000 so now is the time to grab one.wurschtel wrote:Thanks a lot for those like!!!
What about the Arturia MatrixBrute? It looks quite awesome... lots of modulation and analog sound?
Is it worth the price?
Just to add another anecdote, I'm still using my Behringer B2030A's from ~2005. You'd have expected them to blow a fuse by now (and I guess that could happen at any moment), but they still work and sound just fine. Also had a BCF2000 for several years before selling it, and a Behringer headphone amp that's probably at least 10 years old and still working fine. Not saying they haven't had quality problems, just that without actual statistics, it's hard to draw any conclusions from anecdotes.sjm wrote:I have a decent amount of Behringer gear and know enough people who have owned Behringer stuff. I can only talk about my personal anecdotal experiences. For what they are worth:chk071 wrote:Behringer have a certain "reputation", that's for sure.I think they quite upped their game with their more recent gear, though.
So my anecdotal evidence supports what chk071 says; Behringer had a reputation for cheap and unreliable that may well have been deserved 15 or so years ago. None of the gear I have used that was bought back then lasted very long. The more recent purchases are all going strong; never had any issues. I was wary because of their reputation, but at the prices I picked the gear up for, I figured it would be no big loss.
- A friend bought a Behringer mixer maybe 15 years ago. Didn't last long before there were issues.
- Behringer headphones bought around the same time lasted longer, but weren't brilliant and started disintegrating. The foam padding on the ears was first to go.
- The 19" rack stuff I have from them all works fine and is several years old. Most(all?) of it is quite a bit newer than the above gear.
- Their one guitar stomp box I have from them works fine and is also several years old.
I have played around with a DeepMind very briefly in a shop, it seemed to feel decent enough to me. I wouldn't (deep) mind one myself, despite not really having any need...
Thanks a lot! That was quite helpful!!!AdvancedFollower wrote: I used to own some hardware in the past, but I sold everything when I had my "slump" from 2014 - 2018. I think "professional sound" is the wrong reason to buy hardware. There might be a difference in sound, but that's highly subjective and as others have stated, probably masked in a mix anyway. Many actual professionals (who make millions on their music) seem to get on just fine with only VST's, so it seems odd that bedroom producers would need fancy hardware to achieve the same result.
The main thing for me with hardware was that it was just more fun to play around with. So I'd say the interface is the most important thing in a hardware synth, and the only real selling point vs software. Didn't actually use my hardware synths much on actual tracks, but I had a *lot* of fun creating patches and learning about synthesis on stuff like the MS2000R, MFB Synth II and Gaia, while my Blofeld and Virus TI Snow felt more like awkwardly packaged VST's.
Yes, for me at least, experimenting in real-time with a dedicated knob or button for nearly every function (while following the Sound on Sound Synth Secrets series) was a hugely rewarding learning experience, whether on a digital synth like the MS2000R or an analog one like the Synth II.wurschtel wrote: Thanks a lot! That was quite helpful!!!
So in the end it’s a question of interface, fun and learning?
So then my questions is: how to learn all the things about synths best? With a modular or a “normal” hardware one?
.
Thanks for the answer! Helps me a lot!AdvancedFollower wrote:Yes, for me at least, experimenting in real-time with a dedicated knob or button for nearly every function (while following the Sound on Sound Synth Secrets series) was a hugely rewarding learning experience, whether on a digital synth like the MS2000R or an analog one like the Synth II.wurschtel wrote: Thanks a lot! That was quite helpful!!!
So in the end it’s a question of interface, fun and learning?
So then my questions is: how to learn all the things about synths best? With a modular or a “normal” hardware one?
.
I've never used a modular, but I imagine it would be even more rewarding, with all the possibilities for routing stuff. That said, many "fixed" synths have pretty flexible modulation matrices these days. One thing I'd say is that at least for me, polyphony wasn't as important as I'd have thought. Usually, the sounds I came up with used LFO's and envelopes in such a way that polyphony just made them sound muddy and messy anyway.
One can buy A LOT of excellent soft synths for that kind of money. The best from U-He(analog), Xils(analog), Korg(analog), Waldorf(wavetable) and AAS(physical modelling) and a good quality weighted keyboard controller with a bunch of knobs and ribbons in my opinion is the most "professional" solution.so I could spend around 2000 €
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