Having had the A-120, the A-121 and the Synthi Filter, I would take the A-121. Further, for a small setup, perhaps a multimode filter (the A-121)is most appropriate. I have not tried the Polivoks or the Frequensteiner, unfortunately. Regarding great industrial sound, I can't recommend the A-196 PLL enough. What a great module that is. But I digress. Doug --- In Doepfer_a100@yahoogroups.com, "techmaster242" <techmaster@...> wrote: > > I've just about got the basic sound generation/modulation portion of > my synth completed, and now I need to start looking at subtraction. > My gut instinct would tell me to get the A-120, but I remember reading > somewhere that the A-120 is fairly weak as far as filters go, and > there are others that can do the same effects and more. For example, > you can get a low pass filter, high pass filter, or band pass filter. > Is there a Doepfer module that maybe has all 3 combined where it's > more flexible? Or are you better off buying the individual types of > filters one-by-one? FYI I'm doing industrial music, so I guess a > primary use of the modular will be using really gritty sounding > saw-waves for bass lines, with the added bonus of being able to use > the modular as an effects processor for other sounds as well. Of > course there's no limit on what I'm willing to do with it, if it > sounds good I'll use it. :) > > Also, I've heard mention of "sub-oscillators" somewhere. What exactly > constitutes a sub-oscillator? I'm guessing this would be a resonance > filter, like what you find on a LPF. There's an EMS Synthi clone from > Analogue Systems, Harvestman has the Polyvoks, and there's the > Livewire Dalek and Vulcan. As far as I know these all pretty much do > the same type of thing, just with slightly different characteristics. > Am I missing something, or does Doepfer not have any of these more > unique sounding modules? What I've heard of these things on youtube > is pretty impressive... just curious what options there are. Not that > I'm wanting to stray from Doepfer, so far everything in my rack is > Doepfer. :) I might at least pick up the EMS Synthi filter some day, > as I love what it does when you run drums through it. > > I appreciate you all putting up with my noob questions, just remember > you were all where I am, at one time. :) I've learned so much about > sound and synthesis already, and I'm still a VCA short of having a > "fully-functional traditional synth". Once that module comes in, I > think a lot of possibilities are going to open for me, so I really > need to start doing some homework and getting some advice/suggestions > on where to go next. I've seen a lot of people who have huge modular > setups, and do nothing but set up modular sequencers and play with > sound generation, but I'm more interested in integrating the > old-school modular with the new-school DAW software (Logic in my > case), so I'm doing a lot of midi work. My case is 6U, and from what > I gather, with probably about 1 row of modules you can pretty much > have the equivalent of a Minimoog, so that gives me another row to > just expand this thing and get some amazing sounds on top of what most > people would consider "normal". :) >
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Re: What is a good filter for someone that's just starting out?
2008-08-07 by Doug
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