![]() My point to all of this is that a Take 5 is not a Prophet 5 just because it has the same number of voices and one of the filters. If you played a note or two it sounded mostly like the same sound, but when you played outside a very narrow octave range it became obvious that the plugin could not sound the same. What's more, I reproduced the sound using Repro-1 (analog modeling plugin). Yet there was still a subtle difference in the AS-1 (probably the fact that it is gain staged for a different voice count) that is very noticable. I recently posted a comparison of a bass sound in the P6 forum of a patch-comparison between the Toraiz AS-1 and the P6, which actually have the exact same circuitry, supposedly. However, it's important to keep in perspective that just because a synth has the ability to sound the same under certain conditions, does not mean that it always sounds the same, or even that it sounds the same most of the time. ![]() Then there are videos with sound matching between the P6 and the P5 where you can hardly tell the difference. ![]() Then go to Alex Balls website where he demonstrates the P10 sounding indistinguishable from a Jupiter 8. in another video, he makes it sound like a Jupiter6. For proof of that, listen to Starsky Carr push a Super6 (which has digital oscillators) to sound like a P5. Most synthesizers have the abilty to sound like each other if that's what the designer is going for. Beyond that, there are many other factors that influence the sound of a synthesizer. Once again though, they are not the same oscillators.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |