Aack! Keep the Nova! Sorry, I used to pine after their "liquid audio" sound. I was just perusing the new catalogue and happily noticed that Sweetwater was still selling the Andromeda. Comparitively, I auditioned the lowpass only Prophet 8, and found it very "basic". (I like the digital Virus TI much more.) I've always dreamed of getting a Prophet, but I think my expectations were too high. That Andromeda has high pass and a lot more features. I only played it once and it seems to need coaxing to get to the "meat". There is plenty of it, though. I wish I had extra dough.sirCombatWombat wrote:I'm thinking of exchanging my Supernova II ProX to the Andromeda A6
Well, we know the non-aliasing oscillators are "big", and I tend to agree with what Keyboard magazine said:The OASYS does quite nice analog stuff, but can't compete with a real analog, or can it?
Though the VAs are capable, I have to make a bit of a blasphemous statement and say that many of the thickest sounds come from the rompler. I posted examples at Harmony Central and people kept commenting on how good the VA sounds were, even though most were HD-1 samples."The filter sound is just plain wicked. Very very fat, creamy and convincing..............The filters sound really lovely - quite analog, actually.
I totally disagree with anyone who compares the OASYS rom engine to any other rompler synth, including Korg's own. The lossless compression and the reinterpolated oscillators, with their E-MU style pitch transposition give the sound a big, full smoothness, which gives it the kind of presence that some of the big, old analogues had.
Some examples of what I'm talking about:
Flashlight Wave Pad
Filter Rhythm
Slow Dual filters
Super Saw
eXposure
....not a VA in the bunch, yet I had a hard time getting that kind of "thickness", just a few short years ago.
As an example, I was just listening to the Silva CD, "Tangerine Dream: Dream Music 2". Music was performed by John Beal, Mark Ayres and Daniel Caine, using digital instruments from 1995. The actual synth sound quality is so cheap! I'm not knocking the composers, but the equipment quality was a sign of the times.
Digital has since narrowed the gap with analogue.
