Why do people here hate on cherry audio?
-
- KVRAF
- 3238 posts since 21 May, 2010
Probably just mad that the devs might have Bing Cherry trees in their back yards, and they themselves don't.
Possibly mentally hijacked by psychic Asian Carp in Lake Michigan who pine for muddled memories of sound production elsewhere.
Possibly mentally hijacked by psychic Asian Carp in Lake Michigan who pine for muddled memories of sound production elsewhere.
- KVRAF
- 18402 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
I've got an Asian plum tree in my front yard and it's a huge hassle. What a mess in the fall.havran wrote: Sun May 03, 2026 5:44 am Probably just mad that the devs might have Bing Cherry trees in their back yards, and they themselves don't.
Possibly mentally hijacked by psychic Asian Carp in Lake Michigan who pine for muddled memories of sound production elsewhere.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
- GRRRRRRR!
- 17747 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
I'd suggest that's a simplistic view, not "simple". Some of Cherry's synths are pretty ordinary but some sound f**king great. Atomika is one of my favourite sounding synths. It's absolutely brutal. I really like the tone of their ARP Soloist, too, although it's not something I have a lot of use for. I like what I've heard of SH-Max, too, but I haven't got around to buying it yet. I'm not an anal retentive wanker, so I don't care if they do or don't sound like the thing they are meant to sound like, I appreciate them for what they are.djb123 wrote: Sun May 03, 2026 5:03 amThere are much better plug-ins than what Cherry Audio makes. It's that simple.
To you, I don't really rate either. I have Hive and it's OK but it's only usable because of a third party skin I got for it. I've also got the RePros but I haven't used either for years. I have a few GForce synths but I don't think any of them stack up to other options. I want to love their SEM but I much prefer bx_oberhausen. Oddity sounds good but Korg's Odyssey sounds better. I don't like MiniMoogs at the best of times but I think The Legend is a more useful instrument than the GForce thing. I bought Accent and TVS Pro when they were cheap on release but I've not really found much use for either. I think my favourite GForce synth is probably OB-EZ but it is very limited (by design). Like the Cherry version, OB-E is just way too hard to work with.I'm a sucker for buying synth plugins and I have way too many. The ones I keep coming back to and use most often are U-he and GForce. Those are the best.
OTOH, we use Atomika all the time. I've got nothing else that sounds like it, I love it!
I did exactly the same and discovered the same thing. These days there are only one or two I bother installing and I never use them. It was ultimately a bit of a waste of money (like so many things I buy).Years ago I got the Arturia collection on a deeply discounted sale and it seemed like a really good deal just based on how much stuff was in it. But only a few of them are actually useful. Many are kind of bland, frankly.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
- KVRAF
- 14144 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
I think it's the if it's that cheap it must be bad syndrome. Same hate people had for Synthedit and Synthmaker stuff, some of which was quite good.
-
- KVRist
- 481 posts since 24 Dec, 2016
Sometimes, I wish we had more of that attitude around here.BONES wrote: Sun May 03, 2026 7:24 am .... so I don't care if they do or don't sound like the thing they are meant to sound like, I appreciate them for what they are.
-
- KVRist
- 442 posts since 18 May, 2020
Agreed, but I get why someone would be disappointed, as well. After all, it is much easier to market something based on a known entity than a fresh idea - double edged sword.
REAPER + Davinci Resolve Pro on Manjaro KDE. Neve 88m. Focusrite 18i20 2nd gen. Neumann NDH30 headphones. Mics: Telefunken TF39, AT4050, Miktek C7e, EV RE-15. VSTs: u-he Hive 2, F'em, Renoise Redux, Apisonic Speedrum 2.
- GRRRRRRR!
- 17747 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
Oh, I get why some people are disappointed but that's their problem, something they really should address in their own, sad lives.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
-
- KVRAF
- 2827 posts since 24 Nov, 2023
Thing is Cherry Audio gives you a 30 day window to demo their softwareTechHaus wrote: Mon May 04, 2026 2:34 amAgreed, but I get why someone would be disappointed, as well. After all, it is much easier to market something based on a known entity than a fresh idea - double edged sword.
https://cherryaudio.kayako.com/article/ ... purchasing
If you buy software you are unsure about without demoing it when you had 30 days to do so that's on you
Cherry Audio also tends to make plugins for hardware 99+% of potential customers have never even tried let alone owned
How many people here at KVR own a Crumar DS-2? How about SH-5, SH-7, and SH-3A all at the same time? How about a Jupiter 8? Trident? Crumar Sprit? Or an original Arp Odyssey? Original Wasp? Original Prophet 10, Polivoks? Chroma? Original Sem? Etc
I have none of those things, so if Cherry Audio comes out with something new I will try it and if I like he sound of it I will buy it. Doesn't matter if they sound exactly like the originals or not as I don't have the originals and I never will have the originals
-
- KVRAF
- 4237 posts since 1 Sep, 2016
I mean, if something is supposed to sound like a thing, and it doesn't sound like that thing, then criticism is justified. Doesn't mean it's not good in its own right. And if it doesn't sound like the thing, then why market it as an emulation of the thing? Just make it its own thing...
My complaint about Cherry Audio isn't the sound (apart from the naff effects drenched all over their presets) - it's the godawful UIs on some of their synths. They're fine when it comes to simple synths like Miniverse or Atomika, but I don't know how anyone can stand to look at Sines or Dreamsynth for more than a minute without bleeding from the eyes. Generally with their larger synths the UIs feel so cluttered and hard to look at.
My complaint about Cherry Audio isn't the sound (apart from the naff effects drenched all over their presets) - it's the godawful UIs on some of their synths. They're fine when it comes to simple synths like Miniverse or Atomika, but I don't know how anyone can stand to look at Sines or Dreamsynth for more than a minute without bleeding from the eyes. Generally with their larger synths the UIs feel so cluttered and hard to look at.
-
- KVRist
- 440 posts since 15 Oct, 2001 from Santa Fe, NM
I was just coming here to say it doesn't matter how good they sound to me, I just don't like their GUI style and don't enjoy looking at them, especially the weird exaggerated perspective on the keyboards, etc. I don't get why they think that looks good.Vortifex wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 1:40 pm I mean, if something is supposed to sound like a thing, and it doesn't sound like that thing, then criticism is justified. Doesn't mean it's not good in its own right. And if it doesn't sound like the thing, then why market it as an emulation of the thing? Just make it its own thing...
My complaint about Cherry Audio isn't the sound (apart from the naff effects drenched all over their presets) - it's the godawful UIs on some of their synths. They're fine when it comes to simple synths like Miniverse or Atomika, but I don't know how anyone can stand to look at Sines or Dreamsynth for more than a minute without bleeding from the eyes. Generally with their larger synths the UIs feel so cluttered and hard to look at.
- KVRAF
- 3038 posts since 6 Jul, 2013
I also *despise* that exaggerated faux-3D perspective, like you're sitting in the middle looking through a widescreen lens, with the controls over the left bending to the left, and the controls on the right bending to the right.
Apart from being ugly and giving an inconsistency to the controls making them harder to hit, you move the plugin interface over to the left side of your screen, and now you have the lovely unnatural affect of being off to the right of the "device", but the right-hand controls now over on your left are also bending to the right.
I know graphic guys think the 3D thing looks cool because it's somehow more "photorealistic" if you compare to photos from that position but a) photos from that position would actually need a wider angle than the eyes normally have to produce that affect, so it's already faked and overdone and b) our eyes don't work like a flat photo does. We don't perceive the controls in the same way as looking at a 2D flat image, we decode the control perspectives as a way of perceiving depth - it's just parsed completely differently to a flat faux-3D image.
Top down, head on (or front on for rack-style units etc) is the way these interfaces work best, it gives control consistency, doesn't give headaches to those sensitive to these kind of cues, and doesn't break the whole intended affect when you move the GUI on your screen to non-central positions. For some people, this doesn't seem to bother them, or they even like it - fair enough for you. For me, I dislike it so much it makes me not want to use the product.
I got Cherry's Mercury-8 recently, and it has the same problem (amongst other problems - it's super cluttered). If they'd made the UI more like their Mercury-6, which is top-down, clean and relatively uncluttered, it would be far more inviting to use for me.
Apart from being ugly and giving an inconsistency to the controls making them harder to hit, you move the plugin interface over to the left side of your screen, and now you have the lovely unnatural affect of being off to the right of the "device", but the right-hand controls now over on your left are also bending to the right.
I know graphic guys think the 3D thing looks cool because it's somehow more "photorealistic" if you compare to photos from that position but a) photos from that position would actually need a wider angle than the eyes normally have to produce that affect, so it's already faked and overdone and b) our eyes don't work like a flat photo does. We don't perceive the controls in the same way as looking at a 2D flat image, we decode the control perspectives as a way of perceiving depth - it's just parsed completely differently to a flat faux-3D image.
Top down, head on (or front on for rack-style units etc) is the way these interfaces work best, it gives control consistency, doesn't give headaches to those sensitive to these kind of cues, and doesn't break the whole intended affect when you move the GUI on your screen to non-central positions. For some people, this doesn't seem to bother them, or they even like it - fair enough for you. For me, I dislike it so much it makes me not want to use the product.
I got Cherry's Mercury-8 recently, and it has the same problem (amongst other problems - it's super cluttered). If they'd made the UI more like their Mercury-6, which is top-down, clean and relatively uncluttered, it would be far more inviting to use for me.
-
- KVRAF
- 2827 posts since 24 Nov, 2023
That's great but if you don't own the hardware and have never even tried the hardware, or if you did it was once or twice decades ago how can you actually know what a plugin emulating it is supposed to sound like?Vortifex wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 1:40 pm I mean, if something is supposed to sound like a thing, and it doesn't sound like that thing, then criticism is justified.
And before you say YouTube there are to many variables with YouTube demos to make any kind of conclusions as whatever signal path, gain staging, preamps, mixer, effects, EQ, limiter, and mastering was done before and during the video was made will have an effect that then gets compounded with the way YouTube will then compress the audio and the digital file itself
Even then you have no idea how representative the hardware synth in question in the YouTube video is to other Synths like it? Is it calibrated properly? Is it in good working condition? Has it been modified? Are all the capacitors functioning to spec? Is the power supply outputting the correct voltages or is it starving or overdriving the circuits? Was the synth in question ever modified or repaired using incorrect parts? We just don't know and even the guy who made the video has no idea because more than likely they are not the original owner and the synth in question is 40+ years old and has changed hands many many times
Because of that, it's very possible the plugin from any developer sounds exactly like the copy of the synth they have in their studio, but different from the one the guy on some YouTube video made, and different than someone on a Web forum remembers from the time they played it in a music shop on crappy headphone back in 1997, or has in their studio that is outputting 11 or 13 volts on the rail not 12
All you can do is try the demo for the plugin and see if you like the sound or not and if you do, and it is something useful for you consider buying it
As for the GUI Cherry Audio always has excellent Host Automation capabilities so I fold all of them I own into my own custom GUI so no problems there when doing sound design or performing
-
- KVRAF
- 4237 posts since 1 Sep, 2016
I would assume it's the people who own or have owned the hardware making that specific criticism.IvyBirds wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 6:30 pmThat's great but if you don't own the hardware and have never even tried the hardware, or if you did it was once or twice decades ago how can you actually know what a plugin emulating it is supposed to sound like?Vortifex wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 1:40 pm I mean, if something is supposed to sound like a thing, and it doesn't sound like that thing, then criticism is justified.
-
- KVRAF
- 2827 posts since 24 Nov, 2023
Only it's not, it's like you have never read a music production forumVortifex wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 6:56 pmI would assume it's the people who own or have owned the hardware making that specific criticism.IvyBirds wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 6:30 pmThat's great but if you don't own the hardware and have never even tried the hardware, or if you did it was once or twice decades ago how can you actually know what a plugin emulating it is supposed to sound like?Vortifex wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 1:40 pm I mean, if something is supposed to sound like a thing, and it doesn't sound like that thing, then criticism is justified.
And unless you currently own the actual hardware you can't make accurate A/B comparisons as you are relying on your memory, so "used to own" is pointless
Human auditory sensory memory (echoic memory) is extremely short-lived and extremely unreliable, beyond that if you owned that instrument and played it through a different signal chain, mixer, amp, speaker combo in a different room, and perhaps all at a different amplitude how can you make any comparison at all? You really can't
- KVRAF
- 8505 posts since 29 Sep, 2010 from Maui
To me they just seem very cookie-cutter. I have not tried a single one since they started the whole behringer of the SW world thing, so that assessment is probably out of date.
