I wish more content on youtube could have this level. Thank you so much! The way you do this is so easy to follow, even for a not tech person. And I think I will buy this beautiful instrument. ❤
Very nice synth. But with one big issue : the missing display. I fear it will get super complicated to organise patches and performances : Which patch was used in which performances...? And as you start to edit a patch and overwrite the patch, you may be ending "killing" your performances without knowing it. Example : you have a performance with a layer of patch A - for example a string pad type sound and patch B a bell type sound. In the next week you decide to change the patch that was the string pad (of your beloved performance/s) and overwrite it as a fast Sci fi sound. Another week later you find that all your performances that used the string type sound patch (in the beginning) are all sounding terrible wrong now...
Just press and hold the patch button you want to save (1-8) If you want to save for example in bank B and your patch are presently on bank A-5, just press bank B button before press and hold patch 1-8. Sorry for my english, do my best
It’s dual: overall architecture is YamahaCS80 based, individual layers resemble an advanced Roland Juno, while the oscillators remind Chris Huguett’s design
@@PsychologyAcademia Ive used a comination of hardware synths and VSTs extensively over the years, including omnisphere. Omnisphere is okay but compared to some hardware it cannot replicate the depth in sound, timbre, tonality and character you can achieve with some hardware based synths like this, it just doesn't even come close.
Omnisphere is a VST that runs on a computer, then would be controlled by a MIDI controller or mapping something. This is a self contained instrument. Both have their merits, but I like synths because each one is the sum of its parts and as a musician you interact with each synth differently. This synth isn’t for preset surfing. It’s for getting lost in and exploring.