To me that is a completely meaningless description. I can make a Roland synth do strings like an Oberheim and I can make an Oberheim do strings like a Roland. They don't have their own distinctive sound, it's just an association you have made in your brain. You've decided that this is an Oberheim string sound and that is a Roland string sound but it's completely arbitrary. Again, I could record a dozen different strings patches and you wouldn't have the first clue which was made by what.jamcat wrote: Mon Nov 07, 2022 12:18 amSometimes I want an Oberheim pad sound, or other times maybe I want a Roland HI STRINGS sound, or sometimes, it's a Solina I'm after.
Again, I don't even know what that means. What distinguishes a big Oberheim pad from a big Roland pad or a big Korg pad or a big Sequential Circuits pad or a big Yamaha pad?I'm not looking to reinvent the wheel. I'm just looking to get the sound I already have in my head, going in. So if I have a big Oberheim pad sound in my head...
By whom? In my experience, people used whatever synth(s) they could afford for every kind of sound they needed. Very few of us could afford to have a synth for just one specific sound, we had to get as much out of them as we possibly could. People like Rick Wakeman had a huge bank of synths on stage because they didn't have patch memory, so they were programmed with just a single patch in mind, maybe with a few variations that he could manage during a gig. It had f**k-all to do with them only being useful for that particular sound.Also, it should be noted, that when I was talking about each noteworthy synth being good at only one thing, I was talking about VCO and DCO hardware synths of the '70s and '80s. They were pretty limited because of size and cost, and every synth was known for a specific sound.
For myself, my ARP Axxe was my bass synth because it was connected to the sequencer that had all the bass parts programmed into it. That didn't mean it was only useful for bass parts, it was just a necessary limitation on how I could use it, imposed upon me by the limits of the technology I could afford at the time.
[quoter]Software synths don't have these physical limitations, so they can be designed to be jacks-of-all-trades.[/quote]
I think it's the opposite - because we can have 50+ VST synths, we can afford to use them for specialist things. It's a luxury I have today that I never had in my hardware days because the expense and set-up difficulty would never have allowed it.
Here again, I disagree completely. GR-8, for example, has more personality/character than any hardware synth I ever owned. Olga, Proclethya, even OB-Xtreme, are all bristling with their own character. If old hardware had personality, it was because of all the things it did badly, not the things it did well. e.g. The filter in a Minimoog may have given it a distinct personality but it also made it a very ordinary synth with serious limitations.But they also tend to lack unique personality and aren't as fun to use.
This makes no sense in the face of reality. A synth as simple as JP6K is capable of nailing a stupidly broad range of timbres, you don't need to go to complex synths that "do everything".There's a finite number of good synth sounds out there, so I'd rather use a limited synth that can do that sound and not much else, than try to find a needle in an infinitely vast haystack with a synth that does everything.
