Many (most?) users of synths are preset tweakers, so they will form impressions based on what's given to them. So whatcha gonna do?BONES wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2020 3:27 pm The real test is no more than hearing the sound and thinking "that sounds like Jump"
It depends how much Synapse want to push the "emulative" angle over "unique, but inspired by". Even if it's the later, it's probably in their sales interests to do a couple of "known" OBXA sounds well. Since only a small number have the hardware it's otherwise the only reference point people have - a way to satisfy themselves "Yes, this is recognizable as the instrument used", without involving others opinions / comparisons. Plus the familiar is something Youtube video demos etc will gravitate towards.
In terms of matching a mastered recording, you're not saying anything I'd really disagree with either. But the original tweaked preset sounds more than "close enough" to satisfy it's the instrument used, without having to mangle it to simulate tape with an EQ. Arturia have already proved that IMO. I just figured it was just a simple case of saying "here's the settings", someone punches them in, adjusts the reverb, makes sure detunes are in range, and churns out something from Obsession that's at least on par
Enough to say the synth sounds good? Certainly. In terms of figuring out certain specifics? Well...BONES wrote:surely there is enough to get an idea from the samples Anx has provided?
HmmmPAK wrote:Note the object is to extract detail, not sweep.
It's about trying to work out things like can the resonance produce the same high frequency sheen, or in what ways can you get the resonance to ring and produce additional harmonics, and do that with quicker attacks, but otherwise LONNNGGGG release times so you can hear the ways in which such ringing evolves etc. And, yeah, "sheen" is a subjective term, but if someone can't "grok" it from the video example used then there's not much hope
Likewise, similar long release settings could be used to demonstrate the voice tuning (assuming it allows individual filter / resonance control) to hear how that all blends together. OP-X Pro can actually sound great in this department, even though its filter can't go as bright as some newer methods allow.
