course that explains when to use each synth?

Discussion in 'Lounge' started by samsome, Apr 18, 2021.

  1. samsome

    samsome Guest

    they say some synths are better for bass some are better for leads etc...

    is there any course that explains this clearly as to the why

    thanks

     
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  3. 23322332

    23322332 Rock Star

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    There is really no such thing, but some come with more polished stock sounds (reverb, delay, eq, compression).
    Many old synths don't even have such effects section.
     
  4. samsome

    samsome Guest

    cause for example on massive website it says

    "MASSIVE is a sonic monster – the ultimate synth for basses and leads."

    i don't understand why they say that...is it something to do with oscillators?
     
  5. Adam Ford

    Adam Ford Producer

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    Best Answer
    I know the struggle, I learnt this when I got deep down into GAS for hardware synths and for how bad it can be, it helped me understand what are the benefits and cons of certain synths.

    My suggestion is to deep dive into the history of music since synthesizers were used to achieve certain sounds and you'll discover how (subtractive speaking) monophonic synths were popular for basses, leads and arpeggios or fx's (Model D comes to mind) in song arrangements and contexts, until the rise of polyphonic synths they were layered and treated like different parts taking into account the limits of multitracking through tapes and consoles.

    Long story short what I understood is that you can use a synth for whatever purpose, the sky is the limit, BUT... Some of them excels at some specific tasks.

    Moogs are popular for being good at punchy fat funky bass lines, flutey whispery leads, powerful stacked one note chords, fx's and arps, same as ARP Odyssey (duophonic tho) and Korg MS20 (even if this one being semi modular offers a ton of gnarlyness for being a single instrument).

    Then paraphony came (fake polyphony given by more voices through a single filter), Korg MonoPoly was the response to Moog Model D with a disco japanese twist, very useful for cutting basses, arps, quirky leads.

    Polyphonic synths shine at everything above but subjectively they're not in their best spot when it comes to tight punchy bass lines, Prophets are good for brasses, strings, pads, brassey or flutey leads, not so much for basses, while Oberheims take the same concept with a magnitude of character and fatness supplying the lack of bass goodness, even if the tone of it is very specific.

    Different story if we talk about other type of synthesis like FM or Wavetables synths.

    FM synthesizers like Yamaha DX and successors series were born in response to the price of analog synths which were expensive to produce and FM synthesis even if it was hard to understand, gave access to winterish cold tones and more natural / realistic organic sounds, they shine for being clean and transparent when it comes to plucks, bells, pads, electric pianos, without the sacrifice of voices and polyphony.

    Wavetables took the whole concepts and made it similar to the concept of convolution, a snapshot of all these kind of synthesis in an user friendly format that can produces tones similar to analog and FM synths with a personal take on them and expand those features way beyond the natural limits of that era (PPG, Waldorf Microwave 1/2, Ensoniq, Kawai, etc.)
    Usually wavetables synths are good at everything but masters of none, getting you closer to what you'd like without breaking the bank and giving you access to impossible features thanks to digital processing power.

    The list goes on and on, exploring the depth of Additive synthesis (Kawai if I'm not wrong), Wave Sequencing (Prophet VS, Korg Wavestation), Romplers (Korg M1), Phase Distortion (Casio), Virtual Analog (Access Virus, Novation), Analog Modeling (Mutable Instruments).

    Have fun and remember, every synth can do something impossible to imagine, you just need to tweak it beyond its limits and pair it with the right fx's which is as fun as frustrating an experience can be.
    Welcome to the club.
     
    Last edited: Apr 18, 2021
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  6. reliefsan

    reliefsan Audiosexual

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    from the experience you get by doing......
     
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  7. samsome

    samsome Guest

    600 is a low number actually ;p but i understand what u're saying and where u coming from, so all good...i indeed ask a lot
     
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  8. clone

    clone Audiosexual

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    You should rather start by figuring out what each synth you have *already* is good at. Like Adam Ford posted, certain ones are "known" to be good for certain things. Then figure out what you are missing to make the sounds you want.

    If you want to get further into it, you can start to look into each component and parameters of a specific synth. But babuk's opinion is somewhat valid, this is not paint-by-numbers. Understanding basic synthesis lets you look at a synth and have a reasonably good idea of what you could do with it.
     
  9. daddyjeff

    daddyjeff Member

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    They are good advice in this thread, but you have to remember, that the best bass synths are less than 20 models.

    Korg MS20 / Ms10, SH101, Pro-One, Minimoog, CS80, polivolcs, korg Monopoly, roland SH09, roland Promard, roland 100m, ARP Odyssey, roland alpha juno1, roland TB303.

    I have the Waldorf wave and the Waldorf blofeld, and I can do really good bass with both machines, but there is a big difference between having a fully digital machine and having a hybrid machine like the Waldorf wave (digital oscillators + analog filters and amplifiers ), in The output of the amplifier and filters is analog, it does not work with a digital to audio converter, this makes the output volume better assimilate the bass volumes, while a digital system if you set it too high, internally the channel is cracks.

    The DAC (digital audio converter) is the limit of a digital, if the DAC is better for the job the synthesizer is more expensive.

    for cheap digitals like microkorg, there are tricks to how to use good analog preamps for better volume if you need to put the machine to the extreme, then if you have the right equipment to reproduce a digital without problem, any digital machine that sounds good can sound just as good like an analog, for example. using pre-avalon or neve channels.

    :speaker:
    :break::boombox:
     
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  10. Ed Jachimowicz

    Ed Jachimowicz Producer

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    It's because they want you to buy their product.

    It's up to you to determine which synth you want to use for a specific sound.
    The only restriction is that say an analog (soft)synth (for example u-He Repro) will not give you the complex sounds of some other synths (for example Massive X, Pigments, Ana).

    The rest is personal taste (that you have to develop)
     
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  11. justwannadownload

    justwannadownload Audiosexual

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    So how are any of those in Neuro/IDM bass department?
     
  12. U-Kadian

    U-Kadian Kapellmeister

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    Use any synth and run it through auto-tune - this guarantees a HIT SONG. Just ask Cher and T-pain :guru:
     
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  13. Baxter

    Baxter Audiosexual

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    If you get a synth and learn it, you can do all sounds on it. Go make some music and tweak 'em knobs. This is how you learn.
    Edit: Needless to say, you also need to learn how to layer and process the sounds (with DSP) in order to get where you want to go. It's the salt, spices, color, plates, decoration and arrangement to your main ingrediences.
     
    Last edited: Jun 22, 2021
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  14. Stevie Dude

    Stevie Dude Audiosexual

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    even this is more like a sales pitch, Massive X is one of my favourite synth for hard crazy sound. It is probably because of the routing options, unique modulations and the oscillator's mode plus it is a wavetable synth to start with, it is quite complicated (nowhere near Bitwig Grid though IMO) but they are telling the truth, it is a sonic monster when you really understand all the modes, modulation and its full capability.

    I think the best way to start to learn what synth for what is by looking at your favourite artist (or band), see how they pick their synth. Then move on to another artist after awhile you'll realize some similarities among their choice, and you'll know how to make yours.

    Also learning the music making gears culture also important. Like all the old Akai samplers, EMU, TB303 etc and understand why they are legendary piece of gears and highly sought after. Doesn't mean you have to get them, but at least you acknowledge the gear's character and know how to replicate it to add some spice.

    I've just watched Sonic Academy Tech Tips Vol. 60 and 61 (if im not mistaken), they share some history of gears used (synth, sampler, drum machines) for the Techno and Trance early days that shaped the genre. Also they shared how to replicate the sound in the plugin land.
     
    Last edited: Jun 22, 2021
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  15. daddyjeff

    daddyjeff Member

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    The secret of these sounds is in the processing and manipulation of the source. :knock:

    a simple korg MS-20, it can sound like anything not modest kind of a funny serum, right? imagine anything else in the world.:speaker:



     
    Last edited: Jun 22, 2021
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  16. justwannadownload

    justwannadownload Audiosexual

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    You sound like a troll, honestly. Not sure if I want to spend more time arguing. Despite all the patching going on, it obviously can't even touch digital FM, even as simple as what Serum has to offer, let alone some *proper* FM/PM synth like Bazille, for example.
    I don't think any of your synths can do something like this:

    Or even something like this:

    Saying they're all that's need for basses only means you don't comprehend what bass could be.
     
  17. ArticStorm

    ArticStorm Moderator Staff Member

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    late here, but i guess it depends how you use it.

    i mean you can create any sound with any synth, it just depends what techniques you know and how familiar you are with the synth. Its really just that.

    I mean people came up with FM type sounds in sylenth1, where you just use the LFO in a clever way and it was damn close - in an arrangement not even recognizable. (I guess standalone always of course)

    So such a course wouldnt make sense for me.
     
  18. BuntyMcCunty

    BuntyMcCunty Rock Star

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    Goddammit, I'm trading in my Moog for a Brostep 2000 .vst immediately!
     
  19. naitguy

    naitguy Audiosexual

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    As harsh as this comes off, I have to say, yes.. stop over thinking it, Samsome.

    The answer though is Serum for everything. :) (Kidding)
     
  20. Smoove Grooves

    Smoove Grooves Audiosexual

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    They don't.
    It was big-up advertising, as someone has said.
     
    Last edited: Aug 29, 2021
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