SV: Re: [sdiy] Korg MS20 good deal?
Michael Bacich
weareas1 at earthlink.net
Sat Apr 15 04:12:13 CEST 2006
On Apr 14, 2006, at 6:04 PM, Charles Bisaillon wrote:
> The problem with soft synths though is that there isn't a single
> decent
> controller out there to be able to have real fun with them.
That certainly depends on your definition of "fun". Some people's
definition includes "making hit records", "scoring major motion
pictures and television programs", and "playing live on major tours
in front of thousands and thousands of people". So I'd say, yeah,
they are having a lot of fun with soft synths. My personal
definition of fun includes getting music made on the computer --
that's a LOT of fun for me. Soft synths put me square in the middle
of that kind of fun faster than all my old analog stuff (and digital
hardware) ever did.
Putting it another way: I own a lot of samplers. Akai S6000, S5000,
S3000xl, S2000, Roland S760 and S750, Kurzweil K2500, two Sequential
Prophet 2002's, and even a few others. Since I got the MOTU Mach
Five software sampler, I haven't used a single one of them. It
replaced them all, sounds just as good, consolidates my huge mass of
sample CD's and personal samples into one easy to access library --
and it is totally integrated into my primary recording environment
(MOTU Digital Performer). When I load my song, all the samples,
instrument setups and related effects automatically load with it. I
cannot begin to express how much this has improved my life and my
creative output. BTW, this soft sampler also cost me less than 0.25%
(!!!) of the combined initial cost of all those samplers. It, and
software like it, unfortunately, has also completely destroyed the
resale value of my expensive samplers, which is probably why I simply
hang onto them at this point.
Admittedly, I don't make "electronic" music. per se. More often than
not, I'm playing piano, Rhodes, Hammond, strings, brass, bass, drums,
and those kinds of standard sounds. I do own a Minimoog, two
MKS-80's, a Moog Source, a Prophet 600, an EX-8000, three Pro Ones,
three SEM's, an SH-101, and two ARP Axxes. They're lots of fun to
play with and to admire, but they don't really help me make music --
in fact, because of their finickyness and difficulty to set up and
integrate into my system, they actually hinder the making of music.
I do know what sounds good and what doesn't, and I get all the great
synth textures I need out of several modern ROMplers and from my
Roland JP-8080, all of which are awesome. I fully expect these
digital hardware pieces to gradually disappear from my setup over the
next few years, too. My story (and attitude) may be anathema to the
Analog Heaven crowd, but is certainly not unique among professional
musicians. Indeed, it is people like me whose desires and needs are
driving the marketing and R&D decisions of the major manufacturers --
like it or not.
Fortunately, if you don't like it, you can always fight back with
your soldering iron!
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://synth-diy.org/pipermail/synth-diy/attachments/20060414/70ec627c/attachment.htm>
More information about the Synth-diy
mailing list