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#1
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I'm considering the purchase of a Synclavier for its Timbre Frame
Resynthesis capability, which is a type of wavetable synthesis. (Crossfading over time between a succession of waves.) Before I plunk down the cash however, I'd like to make real sure, I'm not spending $$$ $ to buy a unit that's just a close copy (okay, original) of my Korg Legacy Wavestation's wave sequencing? (Which is also wavetable synthesis.) By itself, wavetable synthesis can be great or poor, depending on its implementation, I still remember how lifeless it sounded to me on a Waldorf MicroWave. (Your taste may differ). Its Legacy WaveStation incarnation works so well for me, that in spite of having all kinds of high-whiz newer synths from Chameleon to Metasynth, I still call most often upon my Legacy Wavestation for a new track (often layered with my Triton and EXS24, though.) All in all, my question is: does anyone have hands-on experience with the Synclavier's Timbre Frame Resynthesis AND the Korg Wavestation, to comment whether adding a Synclavier for its wavetable synthesis capability will expand my musically useful palette significantly? Or am I dangerously close to blow $$$$ on a machine that will turn out to be just an early version of my WaveStation? (If I could only find a CD where an artist really uses the Synclavier's wavetable synthesis capability to the max...) Thank you in advance for your help |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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no offence intended but..... if you spend so much cash (i guess a
synclavier does not come cheap, even today) it sounds a bit silly to me to trust other people's judgement if you buy this thing purely for one trick it does, without even knowing what it is or how it sounds.... ron George K. wrote: I'm considering the purchase of a Synclavier for its Timbre Frame Resynthesis capability, which is a type of wavetable synthesis. (Crossfading over time between a succession of waves.) Before I plunk down the cash however, I'd like to make real sure, I'm not spending $$$ $ to buy a unit that's just a close copy (okay, original) of my Korg Legacy Wavestation's wave sequencing? (Which is also wavetable synthesis.) By itself, wavetable synthesis can be great or poor, depending on its implementation, I still remember how lifeless it sounded to me on a Waldorf MicroWave. (Your taste may differ). Its Legacy WaveStation incarnation works so well for me, that in spite of having all kinds of high-whiz newer synths from Chameleon to Metasynth, I still call most often upon my Legacy Wavestation for a new track (often layered with my Triton and EXS24, though.) All in all, my question is: does anyone have hands-on experience with the Synclavier's Timbre Frame Resynthesis AND the Korg Wavestation, to comment whether adding a Synclavier for its wavetable synthesis capability will expand my musically useful palette significantly? Or am I dangerously close to blow $$$$ on a machine that will turn out to be just an early version of my WaveStation? (If I could only find a CD where an artist really uses the Synclavier's wavetable synthesis capability to the max...) Thank you in advance for your help |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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![]() "George K." wrote in message ... I'm considering the purchase of a Synclavier for its Timbre Frame Resynthesis capability, which is a type of wavetable synthesis. (Crossfading over time between a succession of waves.) Before I plunk down the cash however, I'd like to make real sure, I'm not spending $$$ $ to buy a unit that's just a close copy (okay, original) of my Korg Legacy Wavestation's wave sequencing? (Which is also wavetable synthesis.) By itself, wavetable synthesis can be great or poor, depending on its implementation, I still remember how lifeless it sounded to me on a Waldorf MicroWave. (Your taste may differ). Its Legacy WaveStation incarnation works so well for me, that in spite of having all kinds of high-whiz newer synths from Chameleon to Metasynth, I still call most often upon my Legacy Wavestation for a new track (often layered with my Triton and EXS24, though.) All in all, my question is: does anyone have hands-on experience with the Synclavier's Timbre Frame Resynthesis AND the Korg Wavestation, to comment whether adding a Synclavier for its wavetable synthesis capability will expand my musically useful palette significantly? Or am I dangerously close to blow $$$$ on a machine that will turn out to be just an early version of my WaveStation? (If I could only find a CD where an artist really uses the Synclavier's wavetable synthesis capability to the max...) The Synclavier was the absolute top line instrument you could buy back in those days. Though I deeply respect Dave Smith's design capability, (The originator of the Wavestation) and his keyboard is on the later synclaviers as the primary control interface for imputing notes, I can't imagine that the Wavestation would compare to what the Synclavier could do. For one thing, the synclavier has so many options for programming the thing that I suspect your options would be vastly greater in dealing with wave sequencing. You can probably define your own waves if you want to, their order, direction of the wave in the sequence, start and end points, relative volumes, place in the stereo field, and just about anything else you wanted to. And with that you get a powerful sampler, FM synthesis with a lot of operators, powerful sequencing capability, digital recording -- this is still one seriously powerful music production system even today My big concern is that they are a serious pain to get repaired. But if you can afford it, don't hesitate to get it, because it's way up on the food chain in the digital music realm, even today. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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Rick Massey wrote:
My big concern is that they are a serious pain to get repaired. But if you can afford it, don't hesitate to get it, because it's way up on the food chain in the digital music realm, even today. I don't know what the status of the Synclavier Users Group is these days, as a consortium of serious users bought most of NED's assets when the smoke cleared in court, some years ago. That brings into serious question what you would do if the proprietary Reciprocating Magic Wand Assembly blows out or you need a software patch in a specific area. Considering the other tools you use, why do you want to tackle such a vertiginous, elegant dinosaur now? There are many cheaper, easier ways to do wave sequencing or enact other types of digimagic now. Its especially true now that you can use any sound source as fuel, doing mirror-images, hand-drawing of waveforms or LFO fading between numerous elements. That said, it depends on WHY you really want a Synclavier. Its not easier or more accomodating to play than newer synths and it takes you into a bit of a modular realm, in that you gotta wrangle it all by hand. Start by looking into both the support aspect and what else is around that will let you define a wave or sequence by frames. -- HellPope Huey You'll gladly pay me Tuesday after some quickie rhinoplasty today "This film is apparently meaningless, but if it has any meaning, it is doubtless objectionable." ~ British Board of Film Censors, on banning Cocteau's "The Seashell and the Clergyman" in 1929. "An anarchist is anybody who don't need a cop to tell him what to do." ~ Amon, via Utah Phillips The late Utah Phillips speaks http://acksisofevil.org/audio/inner182.mp3 |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 01:57:51 -0700 (PDT), "George K."
wrote: I'm considering the purchase of a Synclavier for its Timbre Frame Resynthesis capability, which is a type of wavetable synthesis. (Crossfading over time between a succession of waves.) Before I plunk down the cash however, I'd like to make real sure, I'm not spending $$$ $ to buy a unit that's just a close copy (okay, original) of my Korg Legacy Wavestation's wave sequencing? (Which is also wavetable synthesis.) You realise of course you'd be buying an expensive, hard to maintain dinosaur? Is this a VERY special sound you're trying to reproduce? |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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![]() "George K." wrote in message ... I'm considering the purchase of a Synclavier for its Timbre Frame Resynthesis capability, which is a type of wavetable synthesis. (Crossfading over time between a succession of waves.) Before I plunk down the cash however, I'd like to make real sure, I'm not spending $$$ $ to buy a unit that's just a close copy (okay, original) of my Korg Legacy Wavestation's wave sequencing? (Which is also wavetable synthesis.) By itself, wavetable synthesis can be great or poor, depending on its implementation, I still remember how lifeless it sounded to me on a Waldorf MicroWave. (Your taste may differ). Its Legacy WaveStation incarnation works so well for me, that in spite of having all kinds of high-whiz newer synths from Chameleon to Metasynth, I still call most often upon my Legacy Wavestation for a new track (often layered with my Triton and EXS24, though.) All in all, my question is: does anyone have hands-on experience with the Synclavier's Timbre Frame Resynthesis AND the Korg Wavestation, to comment whether adding a Synclavier for its wavetable synthesis capability will expand my musically useful palette significantly? Or am I dangerously close to blow $$$$ on a machine that will turn out to be just an early version of my WaveStation? (If I could only find a CD where an artist really uses the Synclavier's wavetable synthesis capability to the max...) Thank you in advance for your help Frank Zappa's "$50,00 boat anchor" or a software synth? Tough call. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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![]() "SODDI the Terraformed" wrote in message ... Frank Zappa's "$50,00 boat anchor" or a software synth? Tough call. The only reason I'd probably pick one up is if I wanted to work in film composition. The Synclavier name is still pretty golden in that industry, and since it can do a lot of work specific to frame resolutions and has a very wide soundset as well as solid MIDI support, it might be worth owning it and paying the dues to the owner's group for repair if I was targeting that industry. Other than that, it's a huge time investment with limited return. Though not in one box, what it can do can be done elsewhere, especially in software, and in many cases, it's a lot cheaper and more flexible as well as higher in quality. |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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On Jun 20, 2:56 am, Ron wrote:
no offence intended but..... if you spend so much cash (i guess a synclavier does not come cheap, even today) it sounds a bit silly to me to trust other people's judgement if you buy this thing purely for one trick it does, without even knowing what it is or how it sounds.... To really know how similar or different the Synclavier and the Wavestation are when you drive both at 101% as well as to form an educated opinion takes someone with years and years of hands-on experience with both. Flying over to the seller's place and doodling with the Synclavier for a few hours is just a superficial scratch at the units outermost layer. Instead of being 100% in fog, I'll be only 95% in fog, then, at the cost of $1K in plane tickets, car rental, etc and I still won't have an educated answer. |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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On 2008-06-20 03:57:51 -0500, "George K." said:
I'm considering the purchase of a Synclavier for its Timbre Frame Resynthesis capability, which is a type of wavetable synthesis. (Crossfading over time between a succession of waves.) Before I plunk down the cash however, I'd like to make real sure, I'm not spending $$$ $ to buy a unit that's just a close copy (okay, original) of my Korg Legacy Wavestation's wave sequencing? (Which is also wavetable synthesis.) By itself, wavetable synthesis can be great or poor, depending on its implementation, I still remember how lifeless it sounded to me on a Waldorf MicroWave. (Your taste may differ). Its Legacy WaveStation incarnation works so well for me, that in spite of having all kinds of high-whiz newer synths from Chameleon to Metasynth, I still call most often upon my Legacy Wavestation for a new track (often layered with my Triton and EXS24, though.) All in all, my question is: does anyone have hands-on experience with the Synclavier's Timbre Frame Resynthesis AND the Korg Wavestation, to comment whether adding a Synclavier for its wavetable synthesis capability will expand my musically useful palette significantly? Or am I dangerously close to blow $$$$ on a machine that will turn out to be just an early version of my WaveStation? (If I could only find a CD where an artist really uses the Synclavier's wavetable synthesis capability to the max...) Thank you in advance for your help Kyma? I don't know offhand if it can do this, but it might. -- ----------------------------- I only talk like that in the movies |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,rec.music.makers.synth
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(Symbolic Sound) Kyma is a big mystery to me. It has almost every
synthesis method on Earth, so I'm pretty sure it offer many implementation of wavetable synthesis, too. The real question is, how many of those produce musically enjoyable timbres. Its web demo mp3's often remind me of a phrase I read once in Keyboard Magazine: "you might synthesize the sound of a tree growing, but we are looking for musically useful sounds here". (But then my Chameleon and Metasynth remind me of that too... :-) |
#11
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if you're adamant on getting either synth, get a synclavier first, if
u could find a very good condition one wavestation, u can get it anytime, it's 'quite' abundant. there's no 'rush' or 'urgency' wavestation is still my all time fav synth. On Jun 21, 2:54*am, "George K." wrote: On Jun 20, 2:56 am, Ron wrote: no offence intended but..... if you spend so much cash (i guess a synclavier does not come cheap, even today) it sounds a bit silly to me to trust other people's judgement if you buy this thing purely for one trick it does, without even knowing what it is or how it sounds.... To really know how similar or different the Synclavier and the Wavestation are when you drive both at 101% as well as to form an educated opinion takes someone with years and years of hands-on experience with both. Flying over to the seller's place and doodling with the Synclavier for a few hours is just a superficial scratch at the units outermost layer. Instead of being 100% in fog, I'll be only 95% in fog, then, at the cost of $1K in plane tickets, car rental, etc and I still won't have an educated answer. |
#12
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Start by looking into ... what else is around
that will let you define a wave or sequence by frames. An interesting discovery: Digidesign's quarter-a-century old program, Turbosynth 2.21x3 still works perfectly on my G5 ! I just tried it. I remembered it because I used it for this kind of "wave sequencing", to morph between sample snippets over time, in the early 80's. (On an Atari ST, no less) So the program still works perfectly, only my memory doesn't. I can't recall how I used it to morph two samples, even though I've been nagging it for the past hour. (The manual is gone.) Hmmm. |
#13
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I'm just curious is this the thing Frank Zappa raves about in his
autobiography? Been awhile since I read it but it was kind of a sad read because the kind of tools he dreamed of having we're just beginning when he died. |
#14
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yrret wrote:
I'm just curious is this the thing Frank Zappa raves about in his autobiography? Yes. Go read up on it. Its still a mainstay for a fair number of studio pros, especially in TV/film production. Possibly the most Boutique Instrument among synths, as it was both successful and way up there in the stratosphere in several ways. I think it edges out the Fairlight in that sense, even though more pop musicians embraced the Fairlight. The Synclavier's functions are 98% reproduceable with far less expense equipment now. If he was still alive, Frank would probably be using a big ol' Mac and several programs such as MOTU's Mach Five, or a similar PC and Emulator X. Those would let him do those razor edits and splices he loved so much. It haunts me to hear "Jazz from Hell" and have to accept that its the only virtually-all-Synclavier release we'll ever hear from Frank. I recommend that, too; it'll blow your mind right out of its housing and show in clear terms why some of us sigh and roll our eyes over trance. Frank wrote a piece that included carefully pitch-bent PIANO, making it sing like a guitar. He's one of the big reasons you should know what the Synclavier meant at the time and why its still sort of revered. BTW, IIRC, Travis Powers, who has done sound effects for "The Simpsons" for many years, uses it as a mainstay. The Synclavier has a good pedigree, but a speckled history. -- HellPope Huey Be at peace with the Universe? Aw hell, I can't even get through the libretto. "Welcome to the show America prefers 3-to-1 over pinkeye!" ~ "Ka-Blam!" Nice guys finish last, but we get to sleep in. ~ Evan Davis |
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