A big oof. Bold claim that reeks of "I don't know what I am talking about but it sounds great while bigging my product up".planetearth wrote: Tue Mar 22, 2022 12:38 am Interesting. Here's what Gospelmusicians said about the library (from the Gospelmusician.com's site):
"Since the SY99 contained one of the most sophisticated and advanced FM engines (AFM and RCM) of any of the Yamaha keyboards, we could not replicate this. In fact no one really can. So in order to compensate, we have included a re-creation of the the original 128 factory presets from the actual hardware by using sampling, synthesis, and sophisticated UVI scripting techniques"
Let's see what Yamaha has to say about it:
We already knew that AWM2 was sample+synthesis i.e. the big upgrade to AWM (v1) was digital IIR filter in the signal path -- kind of like every sampler/rompler in the 90s and every software one ever.At that time, Yamaha had actually developed a digital filter capable of reproducing the behavior of an analog one, a feature that made its long awaited debut in our SY77 digital synthesizer in 1989. The SY77 was equipped with both an AWM tone generator and an FM tone generator, both of which could be used together with the digital filter to sculpt sound for remarkable levels of expression. These two new approaches to tone generation were christened Advanced Wave Memory 2 (AWM2) synthesis and Advanced Frequency Modulation (AFM) synthesis, respectively. The SY77 made it possible to create exciting sounds using a hybrid-like combination of sampling and FM, and also featured many other groundbreaking functions—for example, the PCM waves of the AWM2 engine could even be used as operator waves in the AFM tone generator.
The digital filter's cutoff frequency and resonance parameters could also be controlled using the keyboard's velocity and aftertouch, and the combination of all of these features together was referred to as the Realtime Convolution & Modulation (RCM) system. With its smooth digital filter and combination of both PCM and FM—the two giants of digital tone-generation of the time—the SY77 seemed almost too good to be true upon its release, and went on to epitomize the advanced state of synthesizer technology of the 1990s.
AFM was basically the ability to apply FM to samples or use samples as FM sources, and then route the results through a filter.
Finally, RCM, in the end, is the name for synthesis engine in which it's possible to control the filter cutoff and resonance with velocity and aftertouch, on top of AFM, and have PCM and/or AFM as parallel layers (i.e. "partials" in Roland/Korg/Yamaha parlance).
So kind of like these modern Wavetable synths like Serum, but with normal PCM instead of wavetable craziness (which is actually lacking in the market, as are multi-layer sample+synthesis ones that aren't preset jockey romplers).

