Making A Lot Of Synths: The Lore Of Korg’s Software Synthesizers - Page 3

Software Synthesizers Get Rhythmic

Those sonic techniques the M1 helped to pioneer remain popular to this day, but they’ve also been joined by more sophisticated programming that allows many of their rhythmic patches to adjust to tempo changes - and also to remain at the same speed as they’re played up and down the keyboard.

Many of the samples in the Wavestation synth recreated in the Digital Edition of Korg’s Legacy Collection (which streets for about $150) take advantage of this technology. On Korg’s software version of its Wavestation synth, each "zero patch" (the first patch in each bank) is a sort of sequenced self-contained mini-composition with numerous moving elements, and often a drum loop. Each of these patterns can be played in unison, or played separately. So it’s possible to record individual passes of each layer, allowing each element to be treated with its own individual EQ and effects.

While the Wavestation’s sounds are often more complex, the M1’s are more historically groundbreaking. When those sounds are layered together, the two synthesizers that Korg has bundled together complement each other nicely. The M1’s interface seems to make it a bit easier to find individual patches, but the Wavestation’s joystick GUI makes it fun to modify that device’s sounds.

While some of the patches in both synths that attempt to recreate actual instruments (such as the saxophone or guitar) now seem dated when compared to the astonishingly realistic samples in, say, Propellerhead’s Reason, many of the sounds that are indigenous to the two Legacy synthesizers are well worth exploring today, and are highly recommended for any home recordist’s sonic palette.

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  • 1 - duane

    Sep 08, 2006 at 2:03 pm

    Interesting stuff, Ed. I think Korg is currently leading the way with its Oasys. What do you say?

    My bedroom studio, still taking shape, has a Yamaha S90 ES that sits there glowering at me, since I am not a keyboardist.

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