My 2 cents: Beautiful synth that's fun to work with and capable of generating a lot of different sound flavours. Its sound tends to be a bit more on the aggressive side, but you can also go soft with it by not using too much gain; Well, that trick works with most of the synths out there. Initially I planned to include 20 presets, but I simply forgot to empty the storage of my camera beforehand. Struggling also with my light setup, I eventually ended up being super annoyed by myself. So I decided to keep the video as it is instead of giving it a second shot. I hope that it still serves some of you as an inspiration for your own patches. And yes, it should be possible to recreate them on your Behringer 2600 or software pendants, although they might not sound exactly the same.
I love the aggressive sounds it can make. Patching into the feedback creates this pleasant doom metal style distortion for instant heavy crunchy 3osc basses, and massive distorted kicks.
@@limbicbits so the trance song I think you heard was PPK’s Zagruzka (not sure what that translates to in English. I don’t have a way of easily typing Cyrillic into a translator, so that is the western letter equivalent. Came out in 2002
I love my 2600m… Behringer is doing an outlet sale right now and you can get their grey and blue special editions for hella cheap. Thinking of picking one up because I love the arp 2600 sound so much. How do you feel the behringer compares sound wise to the 2600m?
The 2600 is a great synth but I liked the ARP 2600M sound overall a bit better. Would I pay the extra? I guess not. But I haven't kept any of both, so what do I know ;).