I agree, these old string engines had been made out of lack of resources and happened to have some results which had been interesting, but not all of them. A divide down oscillator is the boring part, there is no life in the chords and they tend to be out of tune if you make them equal tempered. I could imagine to have still divide down oscillators, but let them produce subharmonics (remember the subharmonium?) controlled by aftertouch, but have one of those for each voice.HunterKiller wrote: Fri Sep 06, 2019 2:09 pmMake the synthesized strings come to life, like a real acoustic string orchestra of course!Angus_FX wrote: Fri Sep 06, 2019 1:58 pmPerhaps, but in any case it's not just about the filters. If you can tell me how to polyphonically pitch-bend a phase-locked divide-down oscillator model without breaking everything, I'm all ears.Paraphonic in MPE should not be a huge problem. If the filter is strictly linear, it should sound the same if you spend a filter per voice, if not you could still have one filter for all voices.
It's also a more fundamental question of what the synth should do.. Amber's sound is its divide down oscillator, formant filter and chorus unit. All of these are monophonic. What should they do in response to polyphonic pressure or slide gestures?
Synth strings are modeled on real strings, so go back to the original inspiration and draw from there!
Combine your results with an upgraded synth string engine (original Amber wasn't that great in terms of chorus), and you'll have something interesting which no one else has.
You might want to give such an Amber inspired instrument a new name though, it won’t be the same anymore...
Think in multiple monophonic Ambers, but with the option to move any paraphonic part past the mix of the voices...

