The Gifted
Joined: 08/03/08
Posts: 86
Loc: Sheffield, UK
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What synth can/should I get?
#990142 - 29/05/12 08:03 AM
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Hello I'm after some advice (as per usual) After gathering and
saving some cash together for new gear I've ended up with a bit leftover £120 to be
exact. Now I thought seeing as I have that I would maybe get a Korg Monotron; Nice simple
and fun. I borrowed one off a friend and really liked it and used it on a track on my last
album. However I don't think I would get much use out of it. It's great for
making those bleeps and bloops etc but I was after something more versatile. If it had a
midi in that would allow me to play it with an external midi keyboard it would be
perfect. So I thought maybe the Monotribe as I had somehow got the impression
that this did have a midi in but after looking into it I found it doesn't. So I
was after some advice as to what I could get for that kind of money that I can either
control with a keyboard or has a full size keyboard of its own. I already have a xiosynth
but don't like the menu based editing on that and really would prefer something that has
all its controls to be physical switches and knobs like the little korg units and are just
a nice and simple. Also it would be used for industrial music like nine inch nails and
other similar bands. So the budget is £120 plus maybe another £20 that I
could add to that at the most. I'm already thinking that I'm asking the impossible with
that budget. Thanks Andy
-------------------- www.the-gifted.co.uk
www.myspace.com/thegifted
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BJG145
Joined: 06/08/05
Posts: 2187
Loc: Norwich UK
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990148 - 29/05/12 08:22 AM
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Richie Royale
Joined: 12/09/06
Posts: 3456
Loc: Bristol, England.
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990162 - 29/05/12 09:11 AM
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The Monotron is fun but limited. If you want something a bit more usable, the Monotribe
looks like it is good fun as it can be synced using pulses from a DAW. It doesn't have
MIDI, but has an internal sequencer. Otherwise there are many softsynths you
can try that fall into your price range, including the very good free offerings from Tal
http://kunz.corrupt.ch/
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/richie-royale
http://www.mixcrate.com/richieroyale
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The Gifted
Joined: 08/03/08
Posts: 86
Loc: Sheffield, UK
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: BJG145]
#990188 - 29/05/12 11:42 AM
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Thanks for the tips BJG145: thanks for pointing out that Korg, I'm now watching
that on eBay. I forgot to mention in my original post that I fancied a software synth that
had a hardware controller like that. If I fail to get that Korg what similar options are
there? I remember looking at a Virus TI which I believe works the same way but is well
above my budget. Am I correct in thinking M-Audio do something similar? I
already have a controller keyboard (a carillon control 25) but I have such a hard time
configuring it to control my synth plugins. It has eight knobs that I'd intended to use
for my synth plugins but they just seem to want to control the mixer faders and compete
with my Behringer BF2000. So a sift synth that has it's own tailored controller would be
perfect.
-------------------- www.the-gifted.co.uk
www.myspace.com/thegifted
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BJG145
Joined: 06/08/05
Posts: 2187
Loc: Norwich UK
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990194 - 29/05/12 12:12 PM
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nathanscribe
Joined: 19/01/07
Posts: 722
Loc: Yorkshire, by gum.
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990227 - 29/05/12 01:46 PM
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On a budget of £120, and if you weren't too fussed about what you could get for the
money, and definitely wanted hardware, I'd be looking at a few things: 1) FM
synths like the Yamaha DX series (some are cheap, others rising, but you could score one
for your budget). Upsides: attainable, common, good for metallic and bass patches, as
well as other stuff if you know your onions. Downsides: often touted as difficult to
program, but mainly because FM is not immediately intuitive like knobs and sliders. You
will be dealing with a screen and a data slider arrangement, but depending on which synth
you find, it can be pretty easy to navigate. Also, plenty of patches available online for
free to get you started (presets are mostly awful). 2) Forgotten hybrids and
out-of-fashion has-beens like the Korg DW-6000 (the 8000 is better but prob out of your
budget), Akai AX-73, Korg Poly 800 (crummy, but might be useful), Roland D series (110,
etc), EMU Proteus, and others. Upsides: can be had for stupid cheap (you could even get
two or three old ROMplers for your budget, if that tickled your fancy) but certain things
might be more limited than others. The Roland U-110, for example, can be had for the
price of a takeaway, DVD and bottle of wine (that's not an offer...) but editing is
minimal. It does a decent fake mellotron if you bung a detuned and layered choir and
strings though a phaser and cheap compressor, mind. 3) Old hardware samplers,
such as the Akai stuff (S-3000XL I had was well under your budget), EMU, Ensoniq -
upsides, they're mostly bewilderingly cheap these days considering their flexibility, you
can put whatever sounds you like in there, including making your own - get a sampler with
resonant filters and sample in some basic synth waves and hey presto. Downsides: editing
can be fiddly compared to less complex things, and you might need to source obsolete disk
formats. 4) You can still get real knobby analogue for that money, but be
prepared to be lucky to achieve it. I sometimes get broken things and fix them up, and
sometimes trade up for things. You might find a cheap Yamaha CS-5 or something (maybe a
CS-01 too, though I think the 5 is better), or some random thing from Crumar etc., and if
you were up for it you could get some mileage from an old organ/stringer/electronic piano,
though they're more limited sonically. Just depends what kind of noises you want. 5) DIY. You can learn to make noise-making circuits by following simple
instructions, buying a few cheap parts from places like Maplin, and being prepared to blow
a couple of things up. Guitar pedals are plentiful, weird noise generators (a bit like
the Monotron I suppose) are too, and even simple drum synths can be made for little
outlay. The money lies in nice cases, knobs, switches, power supplies, etc. but if you're
OK with batteries and plastic tubs, the world's your shellfish. Hope that
helps. That'll be 2p, please!
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Richie Royale
Joined: 12/09/06
Posts: 3456
Loc: Bristol, England.
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990234 - 29/05/12 02:15 PM
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Martin Walker
Watcher Of The Skies
Joined: 28/02/01
Posts: 16478
Loc: Cornwall, UK
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990461 - 30/05/12 04:03 PM
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(by nathanscribe) Yes I agree - a very good post!  Martin
-------------------- YewTreeMagic
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BillB
member
Joined: 07/04/03
Posts: 82
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990468 - 30/05/12 04:43 PM
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Hi Andy It is good to know what your options are, for around the £120 mark,
but don't you think you should maybe try to decide first what you are trying to do and how
you would like to do it? You want a synth, but: - mono or polyphonic? - mono- or multi-timbral? - hands-on knobby control or not? - related to the
above, analog (or virtual-analog) or sample-based 'realism'? - hardware (take it
anywhere) or software (tied to a PC/laptop)? I just took a look at the SOS Xiosynth review and it
looks like a pretty good unit. Perhaps you could press your Behringer BCF2000 into
service to give you access to parameters which are otherwise buried in the xiosynth menus?
Let's face it, the Monotribe only has 5 actual twiddly knobs - that's 3 less than the
xiosynth! I recently bought a BCR2000 precisely to get better access to my
knob-challenged but otherwise lovely Yamaha AN1x, and also my VSTs. There are plenty of
capable soft-synths you could control with your BCF, well within budget. There is even
Reason Essentials to consider, at around £85, if you would like a rack full of
soft-synths! It all depends.... but ooh, it's fun choosing
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BillB
member
Joined: 07/04/03
Posts: 82
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990481 - 30/05/12 06:09 PM
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Ooops sorry, just re-read the xiosynth review - 14 knobs!
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Richie Royale
Joined: 12/09/06
Posts: 3456
Loc: Bristol, England.
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990483 - 30/05/12 06:29 PM
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Very basic options but something like a Freebass or Deep Bass Nine can be found on eBay
for around £100-£200. Maybe a Basstation, rack or keyboard, but the latter tends to be
more expensive.
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/richie-royale
http://www.mixcrate.com/richieroyale
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nathanscribe
Joined: 19/01/07
Posts: 722
Loc: Yorkshire, by gum.
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990504 - 30/05/12 08:15 PM
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Thanks for the compliments on my post, chaps.
I'll add that I've heard positive
things about the Yamaha TG-33 for the kind of music the OP mentions - AFAIK it's a desktop
module version of the SY-22 (and retains the joystick), so perhaps one of those would also
do. Both should be within budget.
I should also clarify that when I said
"electronic piano" I meant those cheap and cheesy things from the 70s, with four presets
and a chorus - models by Crumar, Elka, etc. - used intelligently, they can be
interesting.
In terms of the OP's stated preference for simplicity, I'd also
add that there are different kinds of simple - the simple that looks like a Juno 6 or
something, with all its controls visible and accessible, but might faze a beginner - and
the simple that comes from having one thing and knowing it inside out. Even my TX-81Z,
which I've had for 18 years, and looks like no fun at all with its up/down yes/no
interface for 90 parameters per patch - even that, once you draw up a patch sheet and
spend a little time tinkering, is actually logical and straightforward. Grabbing
something, using it a lot, and seeing what the heck you can make it do (especially at the
boundaries of its intended potential) is a great way to get interesting results. So don't
be put off by the lack of sliders/knobs.
And if you are put off by that,
something like the Behringer controller mentioned above would add a degree of immediacy to
proceedings.
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The Gifted
Joined: 08/03/08
Posts: 86
Loc: Sheffield, UK
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: BillB]
#990511 - 30/05/12 08:39 PM
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Quote BillB:
Hi Andy
It is good to know what your options are, for around the £120 mark, but don't you think
you should maybe try to decide first what you are trying to do and how you would like to
do it?
You want a synth, but: - mono or polyphonic? - mono- or
multi-timbral? - hands-on knobby control or not? - related to the above, analog
(or virtual-analog) or sample-based 'realism'? - hardware (take it anywhere) or
software (tied to a PC/laptop)?
I just took a look at the SOS <a
href="/sos/jan07/articles/novationxiosynth.htm" target="_blank">Xiosynth
review</a> and it looks like a pretty good unit. Perhaps you could press your
Behringer BCF2000 into service to give you access to parameters which are otherwise buried
in the xiosynth menus? Let's face it, the Monotribe only has 5 actual twiddly knobs -
that's 3 less than the xiosynth!
I recently bought a BCR2000 precisely to get
better access to my knob-challenged but otherwise lovely Yamaha AN1x, and also my VSTs.
There are plenty of capable soft-synths you could control with your BCF, well within
budget. There is even Reason Essentials to consider, at around £85, if you would like a
rack full of soft-synths!
It all depends.... but ooh, it's fun choosing
Well, this is what it all comes down
to. The whole purpose was to get something that was proper hands-on knobby control as you
put it. I've always been a fan of soft synths and bought the Carillon Control 25 to give
me knobby control of my soft synths but the knobs are completely un-cooperative when comes
to assigning them to anything other than mixer control. I have the Xiosynth for live
purposes and I just cannot get on with the menu based editing.
To give you an
idea of where I'm coming from I started with the Wasp synth in Fruity Loops with really
nice simple two osc setup. Nice and easy to get head round. I then used a friends Yamaha
CS-5 on a long term loan. The soft synths I tend to go for are emulations of classic
analogue synths such as Moogs and ARPs. Things that have all the controls on view and
working with the Xiosynth with so much hidden in menus just feels completely wrong to me.
I want to have all the controls available to me all the time with out have to scroll
through options on a tiny little screen.
But anyway that's all beside the
point, what I was originally after was a way to physically control my soft synths which at
first I thought was going to be hard to get after my experience with the Carillon which
was the reason I thought new hardware synth. However it seems that was all down to that
specific keyboard. I have now made a decision and I've picked up an M-Audio Axiom 25 used
on eBay. For all accounts it does just what I want and has the "Instrument Mode" function
which allows you to switch from transport and fader functions to plugin and soft synth
functions so I will see how I get on with that.
Thanks for all the tips and
advice.
-------------------- www.the-gifted.co.uk
www.myspace.com/thegifted
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johnny h
Joined: 24/07/06
Posts: 2298
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: BJG145]
#990544 - 31/05/12 01:23 AM
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Quote BJG145:
Yamaha CS1X...?
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Yamaha-CS1x-Classic-Synthesizer-/270986979433?pt
=UK_Musical_Instruments_Pro_Audio_Synthesisers_CV&hash=item3f18152869#ht_862wt_1095
<a href="/sos/1996_articles/aug96/yamahacsx1.html"
target="_blank">http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/1996_articles/aug96/yamahacsx1.html<
/a>
Be careful the cs1 is
a big piece of crap.
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Richie Royale
Joined: 12/09/06
Posts: 3456
Loc: Bristol, England.
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Re: What synth can/should I get?
[Re: The Gifted]
#990553 - 31/05/12 07:42 AM
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I have the AAS Tassman modular softsynth which has the benefit of being able to learn any
MIDI link. This makes syncing with any external controller very easy. Building a synth
from scratch isn't simple, but it comes with loads of set ups which are easily tweaked
into something beyond a preset. It is currently $199.
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/richie-royale
http://www.mixcrate.com/richieroyale
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