Just wondered what others thought - if you had the choice would you go for an all-in-one synth/sampler like Omnisphere or instead a small hardware synth? I know it's kind of hard to compare them, but I'm struggling to make an either/or decision...



nowaysj wrote:Raising a girl in this jizz filled world is not the easiest thing.
If I ever get banned I'll come back as SpunkLo, just you mark my words.Phigure wrote:I haven't heard such a beautiful thing since that time Jesus sang Untrue
Speaking from personal experience?Today wrote:Omnisphere all day errday
nowaysj wrote:Raising a girl in this jizz filled world is not the easiest thing.
If I ever get banned I'll come back as SpunkLo, just you mark my words.Phigure wrote:I haven't heard such a beautiful thing since that time Jesus sang Untrue
nowaysj wrote:Raising a girl in this jizz filled world is not the easiest thing.
If I ever get banned I'll come back as SpunkLo, just you mark my words.Phigure wrote:I haven't heard such a beautiful thing since that time Jesus sang Untrue
SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.
I've had Absynth for about 2 years now and I demoed Alchemy recently. Personally I like Alchemy better too. Absynth has a thin tone to it to my ear (like a lot of NI products). I think Alchemy is easier to program and I love the ability to save variations of a patch and quickly switch between them.Mr 50 wrote:As an Alchemy user, I can definitely recommend it.
Take the time to learn it and you may never need another synth. Alchemy 2 can't be too far off now I wouldn't have thought and it looks like Camel have been quite good at listening to what people want from it, so expect it to be sick.
The only gripe I have with it is that it doesn’t feel as user friendly as something like Massive (for instance), but it’s a minor gripe to be honest and more of case of NI doing a really good job with Massive rather than Camel being bad at it.
I’m not sure if people would agree with me, but I’ve not been crazy impressed with the library Alchemy comes with (you can buy additional ones), so if presets are the key, then Omnisphere might be the one for you. The pads on Alchemy have been pretty awesome though.
SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.
yeah definitely. i guess it always depends on what you're after, but even though it's known for the preset library I can't recommend it enough just for the sound-sources alone, and general synthesis toomthrfnk wrote:Speaking from personal experience?Today wrote:Omnisphere all day errday
Sold haha, as posted above I really like the look and sound of Omnisphere and the library looks great. I'm actually really interested in score style stuff so even though it's not my main priority it's an area I want to explore.Today wrote:yeah definitely. i guess it always depends on what you're after, but even though it's known for the preset library I can't recommend it enough just for the sound-sources alone, and general synthesis toomthrfnk wrote:Speaking from personal experience?Today wrote:Omnisphere all day errday
if u think massive has cool wavetables, check out omni's soundsource library. so many samples, including raw waveforms from all the classic hard synths. And if u like massive's performer, how about envelopes that you can literally draw any point or curve on in whatever shape you want, synced or unsynced and assign to almost anything
if using the synth engine rather than a sound source, it makes a couple square/saw waveforms with symmetry, shape, and hardsync controls, as well as a sick waveshaper and unison/harmonizer which is easy to use. It doesn't actually synth a Sine, but you can always just use the soundsource library's many raw Sine's that are available -- any source u choose will just seve as your oscillator.
It's a deep deep synth, good filters, and not only all those features but you can make 8 patches in one instance with their own MIDI inputs, and it has multi-outs to track your work. You can also run it in "stack" mode where patch 1-8 (or however many you use) respond to the first midi input so it's just a quick way of layering multiple sounds, maybe for thick basses/leads, drones/pads, or just a keyboard stack (piano+synth or rhodes or something)
it also has great electric pianos and shit like that.
Seriously good investment, even if you're not scoring flicks or whatever. Though it does come with all those drones and impacts and hefty hits that you hear in trailers and that kinda stuff
so yeah, i like it a lot. inb4 i pitch for spectrasonics, i don't


nowaysj wrote:Raising a girl in this jizz filled world is not the easiest thing.
If I ever get banned I'll come back as SpunkLo, just you mark my words.Phigure wrote:I haven't heard such a beautiful thing since that time Jesus sang Untrue
Having a workflow that decreases the amount of thought work between you and your music increases creativity from my experience. This can be achieved through hardware OR a limited feature set, but those can also obstruct workflow. And a lot of new hardware is just as unlimited as most soft synths.alz wrote:Go for hardware, limiting yourself will inspire greater creativity.

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