Learn To Make Hip Hop

...Learn to make hip hop music. become a true beatmaker today.

synth

...now browsing by tag

 
 

Rob papen releases Blade – Additive Synth

Friday, March 30th, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
Rob papen has released Blade, a new virtual synthesizer that uses “harmolator” synthesis to generate sound. At the heart of Blade, ready to twist and transform your musical mind, lies the Harmolator [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Roland Returns to Synth Roots on Jupiter; New JP-50, iPad Integration [Video]

Monday, March 26th, 2012

The name “Jupiter” evokes some strong feelings among synth aficionados. Little wonder, than, that when Roland introduced a modern successor, the response was impassioned. CDM was one of the first to look in detail at the Jupiter-80, and I was surprised – given the tendency of this readership away from massive flagship keyboards – to see it become one of our biggest stories of the year.

Roland faced some serious criticism when the story it told about the new Jupiter was less about synthesis and more about the instrument-emulating Supernatural engine. After all, since the days of the original Jupiter’s launch, we’ve come to think of the synthesizer as its own category of instrument – not an emulation of anything else. Then there was the fact that the JP-80′s weight and cost put it out of reach of many musicians.

If those were your criticisms, the news out of last week’s Musikmesse should be welcome news. First, the Jupiter-50 is a Jupiter keyboard for those of you without big budgets and road crews; it’s lighter and more affordable. The lack of the JP-80′s nifty touchscreen isn’t bad news, either – new iPad integration means you can get deep into programming right from your tablet.

Second, the JP-50 and a new second version of the JP-80 significantly refocus on synthesis features. I spent some time talking to Peter from Roland Europe at Messe about the synth stuff added to the JP. A lot of the effort went into behavioral modeling of classic analog filters. (See CDM’s hands-on video above.) Peter can’t say on camera the names, but you’ll get the trademark filters found on synthesizers from Sequential Circuits (Prophet) and Moog.

The new Jupiter-50, little sibling to the big JP-80 introduced last year.

Most notably, I got the sense from Peter that Roland not only heard but took seriously complaints from the synth-loving public that any new keyboard called “Jupiter” really needed to be a synth. Now, don’t get me wrong: I actually think the Supernatural stuff is pretty cool. I can easily imagine someone who needs versatility onstage or is programming film and TV scores or otherwise needs some great-sounding, wide-reaching instruments will really love it. It’s not anything you haven’t heard from big sample libraries on computers, but you get it in a keyboard you can turn on in a matter of seconds and tour with without needing a dedicated computer tech tailing you around. I think, ironically, those features will seem more appealing when you don’t have to choose between a keyboard that makes those sounds and a rich synthesizer. Now you get both of those things in one unit, and via the JP-50, one that can reach a wider audience.

New in the version 2 JP-80 and on the JP-50:

  • Three new low-pass filter models, for a total of four
  • New effects structures – yes, parallel routing as previously, but now a total of five structures including serial routing. This gives you the kind of semi-modular effects routing you’d normally expect on a soft synth.
  • Quicker access to playing a single sound (without all the zones) called Registration Play, and SONAR integration.

Jupiter-80 Version 2

On the JP-50:

  • Same sound engine as the JP-80
  • 76-note weighted keys. (This isn’t the same class of keybed as found on the JP-80, but it still feels like a premium keyboard; I gave it a try at Messe.)
  • Integrated USB audio/MIDI interface, and USB song player/recorder. This also includes, via an optional wireless dongle, the ability to wirelessly stream MIDI and audio to an iPad or iPhone – new functionality also demoed at Messe last week.

Jupiter-50

No official pricing yet, but word is it’ll be significantly less (of course) than the 80, and availability is planned for late spring.

My colleague Steve Fortner at Keyboard Magazine got an exclusive first look at the JP-50. There’s an extensive video series, but to get you started, here’s the sound programming vid:

See the full hands-on (and this, naturally, covers some of what’s new in the v2 firmware upgrade for the JP-80):
Roland Jupiter-50 Hands-on [Keyboard Magazine USA]

Previously:
First Look at Roland Jupiter-80, Images, and Reflections on the Jupiter Legacy

And little did I know how prescient the cooler in German words I uttered would become. Oops. (Hello from Berlin.)


AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

VirSyn updates Addictive Synth for iPad to v2.0

Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
VirSyn has announced the release of Addictive Synth Version 2. VirSyn says “The new spectral noise generator adds a new dimension to the already huge sound universe of Addictive Synth. This generator [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Rob Papen updates Punch Drum Synth to v1.0.3

Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
Rob Papen has updated Punch to version 1.0.3. Included are the Ian Body bank and the Davide Carbone bank plus some new features: User MIDI mapping system allowing you to use any MIDI keys to trigger [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Rhythmic Robot releases Hohner Bass 3 key bass synth for Kontakt

Sunday, March 11th, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
Rhythmic Robot has released Bass III, a Kontakt sampled version of the Hohner Bass 3 key bass. This compact analog bass monosynth featured three preset tones (Guitar, String and Tuba). Of these, Gui [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

DaSample releases Basslyne – Bass Synth that merges hybrid synthesis techniques and realistic sounds

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
DaSample has released Basslyne, a new Bass plugin VST instrument for Windows and Mac OS X dedicated to electronic music. Now you can easily create and shape your sound. Instant access to different p [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

MeeBlip SE: Making Our Open Synth Hardware Better, More Available, Starting Now

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012

The original vision of the MeeBlip was to make something affordable, something open and hackable, something anyone could get, something that could tell a story, and something we’d use to make some music. And since those are all goals of Create Digital Music, too, it’s a perfect physical compliment to what we do. For me, personally, it means putting my money where my (blogging) mouth is. It’s a chance to learn.

So that makes this a really special week. It hasn’t been easy getting here, but now the MeeBlip begins its second chapter.

This week, we’re announcing availability of the MeeBlip SE. US$ 139 (intro price) buys you a version you can put together in a few minutes with just a screwdriver, a complete, MIDI-capable digital hardware synth. (We ship most places worldwide – and we’re shipping now.) Through incredible work by the MeeBlip’s principal designer, Canadian James Grahame, the SE revises our original design:

  • It’s more playable. With lots of feedback from users (and extended chats with Francis Preve of Keyboard Magazine and Academik Records), we made the control layout more logical and more fun to play.
  • It’s got a greater sonic range. Anti-aliasing on/off, and a variable pulse width knob combine with more unusual features like its digital distortion and intentionally-quirky digital filter.
  • Everything responds to MIDI. If there’s a knob or switch on the front panel, there’s a MIDI parameter – and visa versa. Whether you use your hand or a MIDI message, everything is accessible.
  • It stores patches. 16 patch slots accessible from the front panel mean you can use your favorite sounds live, and you can store them somewhere other than your brain.

But, of course, as we learned how to make the synth better, we learned a lot more about how to make the business of making a synth better. Learning is wonderful: I’ve been floored by seeing what people have done with these instruments, by seeing them pop up in unexpected places and making brilliant, unexpected sounds. Learning is also painful. We made some mistakes, as demand for the MeeBlip went beyond what we expected, and the limitations of the chip we chose made developing our more ambitious ideas take longer than we wanted.

In other words, users have been incredibly inspiring – reality has sometimes been incredibly challenging – and those are the two things that have moved us forward.

So, it’s now a daily task to work on ways of making the MeeBlip more accessible, more available, and better.

While we work on that, you can now find all of our schematics and code – including many, many hours of James’ work, in particular – on GitHub. Axel Werner, a programmer in our community, has already contributed to making that code better, so when you play a MeeBlip, you’re playing some of his work, too. (The lesson of open source: if just one person does something with what you share, it’s already worth it. And Axel’s not alone.)

I’m working mainly on documentation – both for users just wanting to make music (even if this is their first synth), and developers who want to learn about code and sound.

You can learn about the MeeBlip, read those new docs as they’re added, keep up with the latest, and – if you like – buy the new MeeBlip SE as a kit or quick-build synth – at the synth’s site:

http://meeblip.com

Let’s Get Some Music in Here

I can’t talk about the MeeBlip nearly as well as its users can show it.

Case in point: we didn’t know one Jeremy Leaird-Koch until the video above popped in our inbox. It’s a demo video of the MeeBlip SE, and it shows off all the new sonic features of the instrument, and demonstrates the PWM width functionality, and shows how to make music, and does a timelapse of building the kit from scratch. Here’s the funny part: we didn’t ask him to do this. His demo video puts anything we’d make to shame.

Jeremy’s story behind this, and the reason there are two MeeBlips in there, was even more amazing. He wrote us about a month ago:

My boyfriend and I had put off exchanging Christmas gifts because I was waiting for the MeeBlip kit (his present) to arrive. Finally, about a week or so after XMAS, it came, I wrapped it up, and gave it to him. I unwrap his present to me, and it’s in a Canada Post box, too. Turns out we got each other the exact same thing. Two MeeBlip kits. Absolutely hilarious.

Anyways, the next day we built them up and played around with them. We also made this little video documenting one of the builds and our first explorations of what it could do. Damn, what a fun little box.

I nearly cried – well, for two reasons. One was, it was a clear explanation of why you go nuts trying to make a synth. The other was, we really screwed up shipping in 2011, and if anything told me to never let that happen again, this story did. We’ve changed the way we source parts, the way we assemble the MeeBlip, and the way we distribute it, and it’s one of the things I think about every morning when I wake up. But thanks, Jeremy and your boyfriend; you’ve absolutely inspired us.

And most importantly, I want to hear more music, made on whatever thing you choose, because I really enjoyed it. And that’s what this is all about.

Side note: if you like soldering, you want the MeeBlip Build Everything kit for intro US$ 119, which is what he has here. If you don’t, don’t let this scare you; you can get the Quick Build and just use a screwdriver, and it doesn’t take a whole lot longer than this does in fast-forward timelapse time.


AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Audio Mind Project releases Pure Energy for DCAM: Synth Squad with 48% Off Intro Offer

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
Audio Mind Project has released Pure Energy – a new soundset for Strobe and Fusor (included in FXPansion’s DCAM: Synth Squad). The Pure Energy soundset contains 177 expressive, high quality presets – [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

App Sound releases Synth Essentials for NLogSynth

Thursday, February 23rd, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
App Sound has released Synth Essentials, a sound collection for the NLog Synths by Tempo Rubato: NLogSynth PRO (iPad) and NLogPoly Synth (AU-Plug-in / Standalone). In addition you find some audio-loop [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

DaSample release CINEMATIX 1.1 – Hybrid Synth

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

Read the full story @ KVR Audio
DaSample has announced the release of CINEMATIX, a new ‘Synth’ that merges a new technology of hybrid realtime synthesis techniques, a Cinematic library of impressive and realistic sounds, and many i [Read More]
AudioProFeeds-1

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks