Hear hear!foosnark wrote: ↑Mon May 20, 2024 8:30 pm For everyone complaining that there's not enough "innovation" in the synth world: this is what innovation looks like.
It's unconventional! It's novel! It's actually something interesting and exciting!
Not your cup of tea, personally? That's OK. This is the risk taken when you make something that's not mainstream... whether it's music or a musical instrument. Randy didn't set out to make something that everyone on KVR would love.
But some of you are close to "this isn't useful for music", and pushing a false dichotomy between "sound designers" and "musicians." And that's the kind of thing I expect to see over at TalkBass from the 75-year-olds who only play "Mustang Sally" and "Brown Eyed Girl" and "Margaritaville" on a Fender P with tortoiseshell pickguard and who just can't understand these young whippersnappers with their 5+ strings and their jazz solos and their djent and their pedalboards.
[edit: I want to make sure I don't come off too ageist there, don't mean to imply that all Boomers are like this. Some of them are worse! But some of them are very cool. My dad's in that age range and is the one who got me hooked on synths and weird music in the first place.]
Personally I'll take Sumu, and Myth (another one to get similar treatment but the thread is much more... septic) over any and all emulations of 70s synths and yet another wavetable-with-27-filter-models and so on.
And what I'll make with these two weird cousins is music.
There's a lot of "we want something different" and then when we get something different there's a lot of "why does it not have wavetables, MSEGs and vintage filters" going on.
I find a lot of things are often judged on what they aren't as opposed to what they are.
The Myth thread is a trainwreck with a lot of contributors decrying it for reasons best known to themselves. Myth is a phenomenal synth. Dawesome's best, imho.
I'm very into the idea of something being an instrument. ie. Something that is greater than the sum of its parts. Something that has a distinct workflow, feature set and its own identity.
I think Sumu has the identity but I still feel it lacks some ways to tame the unbelievable sounds into something a little more manageable.
That's probably me contradicting myself there but in my defense I'm not looking for wavetable, fancy filter or arps etc. just more basic shaping.