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I especially like how well the MIDI CC learn works with the Digitakt. I went with factory, and it's perfect for what I want. Very oldschool, only the usual suspects when it comes to oscillators and filters, but the overall sound is pretty beefy and if you run out of ideas Spawn is pretty badass if you need some new ideas.Īnd both yonac synths have one of the best, easiest and most intuitive preset handling I have found on any iOS synth. Yonacs Kauldron is another synth I would recommend but it is somehow limited compared to Kaspar. And for me this synth is one of the few synths which is designed for a tablet. This and the xy pad for morphing them all together is pretty badass. This can result in some pretty complex sounds. And you can layer up to 8 synths with 3 Oscillators each in one instance. And programming it works like a charm for me. This one has a nice overall sound and a nice variety of waveforms and filter topologies. Though I really like to program stuff on it.Īnother synth which has not been mentioned yet is yonacs Kaspar. SugaryBytes Factory is pretty dope as well and a great choice though the matrix which is great is a little bit small for my big fingers. maybe a poor mans Diva with no disrespect. Both are great synths and Zeeon is one oft the best analog sounding synths I have ever heard on a computer (even on desktop). Zeeon and his older brother Sunrizer on the other hand are more intuitive and imho the knob handling is better. For my taste the knobs are way too small and I find the layout very unintuitive.at least for an iOS app. But I donˋt get the hang of it when it comes to programming. Synthmaster One indeed is a pretty nice sounding and feature wise synth. The importance of controlling filter saturation in nailing Moog style tones more broadly, exploring how a synth’s filter reacts to gain staging.) For this kind of hands on learning, something like DRC is hard to beat IMO. There are a lot of core ideas in using so many synthesizers that are easy to miss otherwise. Some synths with simple architectures have really well designed limitations that help a hands on first approach: to focus your learning on high reward tweaking points, and to bring your attention to important tweaking points you might otherwise not think about. One question that comes to mind, though: do you like to learn mostly hands on, by exploring the synth on your own? Or do you like to also use reading, videos, etc? I agree with Dendy: don’t worry about familiarity with wavetable as a synth technique. Hit: If you want superb quality, turn on "global oversampling" to 4x - you can found in in bottom navigation bar of synth. Just in oscillator section you can choose from a "little bit" bigger abount of oscillator shapes than just common saw/square/sine/triangle/noise
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That's wavetable, though, which I have very little experience with.ĭon't be afraid of that, from the point of view of architecture it's classic VA synth (oscilaltors -> filter -> effects, mod matrix, envelopes, lfos). You can modulate anything with anything in SynthMaster One too from Mod Matrix which exposes everything hidden/not exposed in the UI or just drag and drop some sections on other knobs and controls! Watch it’s tutorial videos from like the biggest recommendation is Synthmaster One.
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They should make it AU (even a scrolling window is fine) in their next update and make it robust - at the very least. There are reviews saying it is useless but maybe good for learning synthesis. The last update was more than a year ago. It is very beautiful but maintained infrequently with updates once in a year. Tapping on the built in keyboard has dropped notes on new iPad 2018 as per some 1 star reviews.
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Since OP prefers AU, Thor is not the one - it doesn’t even work with AB anymore as per some negative reviews. There are plenty of others I like but Thor is the deepest one i’ve tried that wasn’t painfully unwieldy, because of how thoughtfully organized it is. If you mastered Thor you would have mastered 98% of the analog/subtractive/traditional type synths out there. Some time based effects, and the real meat, a well thought out, utterly complete modulation matrix, where anything can modulate anything, and an analog style step sequencer to boot. Filters it has LP, BP, HP, as well as esoteric ones like formant and comb filter. For one deep synth to learn deeply, there’s one that comes to mind that has everything: Thor.įor oscillators it has analog, fm, phase mod (Casio), wavetable, noise. Traditional Synthesis has a few aspects to get the grasp of- oscillators, filters, effects, and the deepest, modulation. For a synth to learn deeply- that to me sounds like which one to invest in, that would end up having the side effects of understanding simpler synths.