Seems like you are having a hard case of the "Nostalgia Flu"audiouser720 wrote: Wed Dec 20, 2023 11:05 amI get what you are saying, but I was wondering if the real OB-X is like that. I have never touched a real Oberheim and YouTube is meh. Once I saw an 8 voice in a freaking wild animals museum (can you imagine, how random), enclosed in a display. My partner was having to pull me away after I while. I was just standing there screaming, making weird noises, couldn’t believe my eyes. Everyone was watching us. I was out of my mind. Probably she got scared and thought I was going to have an orgasm or something but I couldn’t help myself. We haven’t returned to that museum ever since then lol. To ad to it, the museum is called the Horniman Museum in London. Lol. Can you imagine . I get why they call it horniman. Put an 8 voice in for the men… There you go.chk071 wrote: Wed Dec 20, 2023 10:50 am I don't know how well they emulate their analog counterparts, but, the Gforce sounds like a soft synth to me. Sorry for that well-worn phrase, but, I really can't describe it better. I miss the stuff the better emulations do to model the "flaws", or rather the pleasant stuff in analogs. I don't hear a lot of drift, I don't hear a lot of voice variation, I don't hear a lot of saturation (which, I understand, is pretty variating in analogs too), I don't hear a lot of volume drift. It sounds too clean/clinical to my golden ears.
U-he's stuff on the other hand, it does all that, so it sounds more lively to me. If anything, then Urs somehow seems to have a bit of an affinity for less warm analog sound. What I always notice is that u-he's plugins sound a bit cold compared to the real warm stuff (Moog, Oberheim etc.). Even when they model an Oberheim filter, like in Diva, it sounds kinda cold to me.
What type of audio rate modulation sound is it that the Repro 5 can't do that your Rev 4 does better?
