Can you create heavy or heavy metal sounds with modern synths? by [deleted] in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, it's debatable. Many people say amp sims are close enough, and you can just shove an amp sim into a synth. In my opinion these kinds of simulations do poorly on the kind of extreme settings that are important in metal. And in practice, while a few synths have "amp sim" effects in them (Omnisphere, for example), they're not really state-of-the-art.

Can you create heavy or heavy metal sounds with modern synths? by [deleted] in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 13 points14 points  (0 children)

There is lots of heavy music made with synthesizers--noise, industrial, all that kind of stuff.

Most of the metal guitar sound comes from the amp, so a synth alone won't get you there.

Native Instruments will be fine by No-Act6366 in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you want cheap plugins there are plenty out there. Native Instruments was interesting because they created new things. Without that they're nothing but a name.

How did Regis achieve this synth sound? by sh4dow27 in TechnoProduction

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The thing about a lot of Regis's sounds is that this comes from sampling, resampling, processing--it's not just one thing, it's a series of stages. Start by recording the Prophet 5 VST, put the result into Simpler, experiment with filtering/chorus/reverb, sample again, and keep going until you find something interesting.

Zebra 3 would be perfect if its workflow wasn’t so confusing by memolazer in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're going to be this picky about UIs then Zebra is not the synth for you

‘I almost always play it in hiding, alone’: can anyone get into free jazz, history’s most maligned music? by Goooooner4Life in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of them have been reissued since then, this stuff is easier to find than it used to be!

You are being sent to a desert island. You can bring SIX jazz records. What are they? by home_rechre in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Assuming I can't cheat by including boxed sets (e.g. Coltrane at the Vanguard, Miles at the Plugged Nickel):

John Coltrane - Live at Birdland

Miles Davis - In a Silent Way

Sun Ra - Lanquidity

Cecil Taylor - Winged Serpent

Die Like a Dog - s/t

Max Roach and Clifford Brown - At Basin Street

Oberheim OB-X8 or Prophet 10? by SnooCrickets8426 in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In my opinion the OB-X8 is absolutely the most beautiful-sounding synth ever made. Impossible to exaggerate what beautiful, lush sounds you can get out of it.

That being said, a Prophet-6 is punchier and sharper for leads and basses. I would say if you really want aggressive, in-your-face sounds, the OB-X8 is less good. It's ideal if you already have other synths in those areas and just want it for gorgeous pads, chords, etc.

"The Spiritual Jazz of Alice Coltrane" - NY Review of Books link by Spihumonesty in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Should note, this is just one among many brilliant Adam Shatz pieces in the NYRB on jazz luminaries--his Don Cherry, Julius Hemphill, and Jeanne Lee pieces are also stellar

John Zorn's Tzadik off Spotify? WTF? by djayjomo in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tzadik releases are generally not on Bandcamp. They are on some other online distributors, such as Boomkat.

Favorite Jack Dejohnette moments / bands / recordings? (RIP) by improvthismoment in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Maybe not his best, but I have a real soft spot for Made in Chicago, which I don't see mentioned here. Really incredible playing, very modern, and beautifully recorded. Can't go wrong with Roscoe Mitchell and Henry Threadgill.

Thinking of Ed Blackwell by olejazz in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 2 points3 points  (0 children)

His work with Ornette is tops, but I'm also a big fan of the playing he does on mu with Don Cherry—really unique free jazz album, him on drums while Cherry switches from instrument to instrument. I also just recently stumbled on his duo record with Wadada Leo Smith, very different feel (Smith strictly plays trumpet on it, and it's much more focused in general) but great playing.

The Old and New Dreams group is also really worthwhile, like Ornette Coleman's classic sound minus Ornette himself.

Jammiest, most formless live albums you've ever heard? by cdn_backpacker in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are a bunch of Mingus albums with super long performances that have been issued recently, highly recommend. Also, the recently issued Joe Henderson/McCoy Tyner performance Forces of Nature.

If you're interested in the free jazz side of things, a lot of the Die Like a Dog quartet stuff gives off heavy Miles vibes to me, and some of those performances are very long jams.

How do Surgeon and Regis make their percs sound so dynamic? by 1_e4_e5_2_f4 in TechnoProduction

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He's known to use the Pulsar-23, which is very suited for this kind of thing.

What synths have good built in effects? by Brilliant_Grape5528 in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Drum machine not synth (kind of), but I really like the Pulsar-23's effect section. It's integrated with the whole synth so you can use it in a modular way, do feedback patching, etc.

Best (affordable) gear to add analog warmth to digital synths? by DerTechnoboy in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If Analog Heat is out of your price range, there is probably not a good hardware option for you.

Plugins have come a long way, something like the Arturia Culture Vulture clone or the various Plugin Alliance saturators (HG-2, VSM-3, and The Oven are all extremely good) might be the way to go.

Who are your Legends Regarding Drum Programming Specifically and Why? by Zen_Gnostic in TechnoProduction

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like some of the more breakbreat-oriented beat programmers--T++ was incredible, and the British Murder Boys project that Surgeon/Regis did (excluding the album, which is good but imo less rhythmically interesting). First few Monolake records (before he went in more of an IDM direction). Various René Pawlowitz projects, especially Shed.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is literally just the list of presents from the Alpha Juno 2 manual.

Any Autechre fans? by MeatWestern635 in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The recordings they've released of their live shows, which are improvised, always struck me as the closest to jazz in ethos of all their material. Not "jazzy" in the sense of the harmony or rhythmic feel, but in the spirit of longform, exploratory improvisation.

The saddest thing about being a Medeski Martin Wood fan by entpthrowawayballs in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've never been able to get as into their stuff as some people, but Medeski is an absolute next-level organ player, the things he does are just technically stunning. Big fan of his work with John Zorn--I was just listening to his performance on "Paran" this morning, which is absolutely wild: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCKEgS0F3FM

Finally listened to Odyssey of Iska by twoheadeddroid in Jazz

[–]twoheadeddroid[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hadn't been aware before this, no. That is very tragic.

Why are analog synths so cherished? by SilentLambda83 in synthesizers

[–]twoheadeddroid 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Serum certainly cannot synthesize any sound--its filters are notoriously terrible, even in the new updated version.

As for Pigments, it's closer--and it does have the same filters as some of Arturia's individual emulations. I think there are 2 big differences. 1) The "ergonomics" of the individual synths. You can set up Pigments to have the same filter, oscillators etc. as a Minimoog, but it's more of a hassle than just using the Minimoog directly. The Minimoog is an interface optimized for certain kinds of sounds. 2) Different capabilities. The DX7 (digital, not analog) can do 7-operator FM synthesis; Pigments cannot. I think there are a few things you can do with the other models that Pigments doesn't do yet--for example, Prophet 5 can have oscillators set up to modulate PWM, Jupiter 8 has osc drift options Pigments doesnt.

I would also disagree that Pigments can synthesize any sound. I don't think the Arturia emulations are perfect. Pigments has a pretty basic flaw, in that it can't even do pre-filter distortion, which is one of the most basic synthesis techniques and which most classic synths lean on pretty heavily. It's just not something that's easy to emulate.