But it's difficult to follow after 8000 V...
Airwave has an excellent GUI, it's got ridiculously low CPU usage, lower than 8000 V which is already quite low, and the inclusion of 32bit plugin is great, because this thing runs on old machines like Notepad. So I'm sure it will be used by many.
For me, however, playing it feels like a generic VSTi from 2005 - there's nothing unique about the sound (though I'm extremely picky). It sounds somewhat hollow, unreal.
I'd say math, oscilloscopes and similar tools get you only so far. In the end human ear is the final judge on the aesthetics of sound.
So wash your ears, improve your sleep, see an audiologist - if you can't feel any difference between HW JP, Sunriser, 8000 V or Airwave WHILE ACTUALLY PLAYING THE INSTRUMENT, you're doing something wrong. RME interface, a pair of Adams (not Szabos
Do I prefer TUS 1:1 emulator? No, not at all! I collect their emulators mainly for historical reasons. Most people can't hear that digital signal path also introduces subtle distortions to the sound, though different in character than analog. It's not only DAC, it's DSP chips, connectors, housing & everything. So running "dry" DSP code on a PC motherboard is not same as running it on dedicated hardware. On Korg Trinity VST, you can try DAC sim button, and I suspect Tirton also has this processor though you can't turn it off. That's why it sounds so realistic, convincing, like a hardware instrument.
It seems Arturia's version has everything I need, and much more... Someone paid attention to micro details in sound. And such people are rare today, because after all the junk food, alcohol, cigarettes, extremely loud music and so on, you can't really tell a difference between $10 kid's Casio and a Minimoog. It's all the same - just shut up make "music"
