Hey we should talk more about massive x
Sadowick saved me money I was going to buy it, now I am better off.
Hey we should talk more about massive x
Of course it is. I forgot to add aEvilDragon wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:38 pmNo Saturn is actually great, when you use it for things it's intended to. See Dan Worrall's video about it!

Did you download the file and play it in your DAW (without resampling) or a good player (like VLC)? As already mentioned above the web player of that download site introduces artifacts.McLilith wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:43 pmI really hate to say this. I have a huge amount of respect for you, but I definitely hear what sounds like "heterodyning" or "aliasing" in that WAV file. After the main frequency reaches a certain pitch, I can then hear spurious pitches for the rest of the frequency sweep. It's easy for me to hear on my modest studio speakers. It's not a tiny detail I need precise isolated headphones and careful listening to detect.EvilDragon wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:08 pm OK I must say I am confused now, Sadowick. I just set the Sin-Tri-Saw-SQ wavetable direct to output, WT position at max (so it's a square wave), bypassed filter and all, then did a 96 semitone pitch bend on it (because MX is crazy like that it allows you such huge bend ranges, pretty cool) and recorded the output. Here's the result:
https://app.box.com/s/z1vrk9p037ggh8nwlejz2iy6ir6ef0pt
It's a WAV file. Can ANYONE hear any aliasing here? Even SPAN doesn't show anything that's not at around -130 dB or so.
That said, I still like Massive X.
By the way, does Massive X have any sort of "HQ" or "perfect" mode that it uses when not rendering in real time?
This, the wav is in 48kHz. I tested it in a 48 kHz environment, and you'll hear nothing (by ear anyway). You're right, people are hearing the SR conversion.ghettosynth wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:43 pm You have to be careful to make sure that your observations aren't an artifact of your testing scenario. When I just run the sweep through iZotope insight on 44k the alisasing appears to be about 90 dB down from the fundamental, however, if I switch my system to 96k then they appear to be about 120 dB down. The wav file isn't changing, it's fixed at 48k so what's being observed is either a side effect of the measurement or dithering, or both. Without more testing, I can't know if even those results are also a side effect of measurement and that the aliasing is actually lower than that.
Some of us had a goal of this thread reaching 200 pages, preferably before Massive X was released.
hmmm. 200 pages. 200 dollars. maybe the goal should have been 79 pages??McLilith wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:46 pmSome of us had a goal of this thread reaching 200 pages, preferably before Massive X was released.
Actually I do hear aliasing (very soft and only when really focusing on it), but in a range where I do not hear the original pitch anymore. It must be way above any pitch you would want to compose as fundamental. But this was playing it in the browser, playing it back after a download I don't hear any aliasing... (SR mismatch and bad sample rate conversion in the browser...)EvilDragon wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:08 pm OK I must say I am confused now, Sadowick. I just set the Sin-Tri-Saw-SQ wavetable direct to output, WT position at max (so it's a square wave), bypassed filter and all, then did a 96 semitone pitch bend on it (because MX is crazy like that it allows you such huge bend ranges, pretty cool) and recorded the output. Here's the result:
https://app.box.com/s/z1vrk9p037ggh8nwlejz2iy6ir6ef0pt
It's a WAV file. Can ANYONE hear any aliasing here? Even SPAN doesn't show anything that's not at around -130 dB or so.
Ok. I just used the web player. I'll give it another listen in a bit, after downloading the WAV file, and using better software to play it.BlitBit wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:45 pmDid you download the file and play it in your DAW (without resampling) or a good player (like VLC)? As already mentioned above the web player of that download site introduces artifacts.McLilith wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:43 pmI really hate to say this. I have a huge amount of respect for you, but I definitely hear what sounds like "heterodyning" or "aliasing" in that WAV file. After the main frequency reaches a certain pitch, I can then hear spurious pitches for the rest of the frequency sweep. It's easy for me to hear on my modest studio speakers. It's not a tiny detail I need precise isolated headphones and careful listening to detect.EvilDragon wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:08 pm OK I must say I am confused now, Sadowick. I just set the Sin-Tri-Saw-SQ wavetable direct to output, WT position at max (so it's a square wave), bypassed filter and all, then did a 96 semitone pitch bend on it (because MX is crazy like that it allows you such huge bend ranges, pretty cool) and recorded the output. Here's the result:
https://app.box.com/s/z1vrk9p037ggh8nwlejz2iy6ir6ef0pt
It's a WAV file. Can ANYONE hear any aliasing here? Even SPAN doesn't show anything that's not at around -130 dB or so.
That said, I still like Massive X.
By the way, does Massive X have any sort of "HQ" or "perfect" mode that it uses when not rendering in real time?
You're starting to lose your credibility if you're using third party plugins to add something that isn't there in order to prove it. Up until this point the proposition "I like NI, I just think their standard should be higher" was reasonable although I'd call it still BS. But now, beyond any doubt, you're making a fool out of yourself with such intellectual dishonesty and at this point you're just proving that you have a mission which is to prove that Massive X has supposedly some design flaws just because you don't like the synth.sadowickproduction wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:21 pmBecause with processing these artifacts are accentuated. EQ, compression, saturation, ect bring these out.EvilDragon wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:08 pm OK I must say I am confused now, Sadowick. I just set the Sin-Tri-Saw-SQ wavetable direct to output, WT position at max (so it's a square wave), bypassed filter and all, then did a 96 semitone pitch bend on it (because MX is crazy like that it allows you such huge bend ranges, pretty cool) and recorded the output. Here's the result:
https://app.box.com/s/z1vrk9p037ggh8nwlejz2iy6ir6ef0pt
It's a WAV file. Can ANYONE hear any aliasing here? Even SPAN doesn't show anything that's not at around -130 dB or so.
Demonstration just for you using your audio sweep:
These things matter
By the way, this file has a sample rate of 48kHz. If the sampling rate of your DAW, audio player or operating system is set to something different the any of these components will have to resample the file to play it back. This will - you guessed it - introduce artifacts.EvilDragon wrote: Fri Jun 28, 2019 9:08 pm OK I must say I am confused now, Sadowick. I just set the Sin-Tri-Saw-SQ wavetable direct to output, WT position at max (so it's a square wave), bypassed filter and all, then did a 96 semitone pitch bend on it (because MX is crazy like that it allows you such huge bend ranges, pretty cool) and recorded the output. Here's the result:
https://app.box.com/s/z1vrk9p037ggh8nwlejz2iy6ir6ef0pt
It's a WAV file. Can ANYONE hear any aliasing here? Even SPAN doesn't show anything that's not at around -130 dB or so.
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