Actually that was built because he and some of his associates bought the former studios of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop in London. That was the home of Musique Concrete and other cool things they were doing with things like tape manipulation and huge modular Synths back in the 1950s and 1960s to make all kinds of cool sounds for Radio and TVSoftSynthLover99 wrote: Thu Jun 26, 2025 11:17 pm
He asked AJHSYNTH to build that modular system in 2024 not 2014. After LegendHZ was released btw so maybe LegendHZ didn't do everything he wanted it to do? https://mixmag.net/read/hans-zimmer-ajh ... honic-tech
He wanted to recreate the long gone huge modular system they were using 60 years ago, so he had that commissioned, it's for the BBC Studio that is basically going to be a time capsule and hands on museum of the past
Much of that article you linked to is from years ago however and says copyright 2014 at the bottom
You the same guy posting links to a manufacturers website to prove your point?And what do you expect him to say about software he is associated with? When talking about software he is gonna praise the software. When he is talking about his hardware setup he is gonna praise his hardware.
The proof really is in the final product. Hans has done all of his personal and commercial work over past years at his studio in Santa Monica, California. That huge modular system was not installed there, it's half a world away in London. He uses software there on computers with a custom MIDI Controller
Yep like you did with that big modular system he had built for a museumThat's just the nature of marketing and unfortunately many people can't read between the lines to find the truth that gets lost in the middle.
I agree like the huge modular system he had built for London"When Hans says that a particular synth sounds more engaging and fuller than others then he is speaking from a position of experience and authority,” the manufacturer continues.
[Quote,]Also you should look up the specs of the Moog One 16 voice as you are uninformed of the actual power. There are something like 14,000 components in the Moog One which together add up to 48 oscillators and 32 filters on no fewer than 16 printed circuit boards, plus three arpeggiators and three sequencers, five effects units, all comprising three separate polyphonic synthesizers[/quote]
What am I supposedly uniformed over? It's 3 Oscillators per voice x 16 voices for a total of 48, sorry 3 Oscillators going into a ladder filter is boring as hell
I want 6 per going into a ladder filter with MSEG and MPE. I also want unlimited polyphony. I get that with software, the $10,000 Moog One is a joke and doesn't come close. It's only powerful if you compare it to other weak hardware synths
Shall we compare the specs of that with HALion7. I can use it to make an analog style patch with 768 oscillators if I wanted with unlimited polyphony. Shall we then talk about Falcon?
Only it's not and you seem ignorant to basic factsI have yet to even utilize everything the synth can do and still learning it, but saying LegendHZ is better in sound or function is completely ridiculous even if we are talking purely specs. About to fire it up and create some patches just for you![]()
But no need to waste your time trying to impress anyone with 3 VCAs going into a ladder filter, a $300 Behringer Model D can do that if you want to stay in analog land
