Davdud101 abacab Omnisphere. No trial version? Omnisphere will have to wait until I REALLY need it.
Re: 64 bits versions of Arturia Plugins « Reply #12 on: October 02, 2011, 12:29:41 pm » Just downloaded all the latest updates, and I am happy to report that, at least for me, the only plugin that didn't work with 64-bit Cubase 6 on Windows 7 64-bit Ultimate was Jupiter 8V. Arturia V Collection 2 Software Synth Collection; The complete solution for all your soft. For instance a modulation matrix with up to 6 connections (12 sources and 32. Windows: XP/VISTA/7; Mac OS X: 10.4 or higher and Universal Binary.
![Arturia Arturia](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125405587/343589739.jpg)
I haven't actually tried it ever (TIRED to install a trial ONCE if I remember correctly, mayyybe. Don't even remember.
It was like 5 years ago. Or maybe not. ) In fact I've never.heard. Omnishpere (edit- I'm sure I HAVE, but I can't say I explicitly know how it sounds or what's in it). Time to do some YouTube searching! Frankly, it sounds amazing and is probably in most tracks you hear on TV/Radio. I'll admit it hurt to buy in the first time, but the upgrades have been very reasonable and I have yet to hear every preset as of yet, and I've had it for years.
![Arturia v collection 6 windows torrent Arturia v collection 6 windows torrent](http://mottaweddings.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/f075b68.jpg)
Abacab Here's an interesting article from SOS back in 2011. 'Steinberg Halion Sonic' It seems that the predecessor of Halion was Steinberg's Hypersonic, developed by Wizoo (AIR Music Technology started as Wizoo Sound Design). However, by the time it came out, it was already clear that Hypersonic 2 was likely to be the final version, as Wizoo had been taken over by Steinberg's rivals Avid. Much of the original Hypersonic content would soon reappear as the free Xpand! Plug‑in bundled with Pro Tools, but that was the end as far as Cubase and other VST or AU‑format hosts were concerned. The current versions of HALion 6 and HALion Sonic 3 are Yamaha based. If you like the Yamaha Motif and Montage workstations, you'll like HALion Sonic.
HALion 6 certainly isn't cheap. But it includes a very broad range of good 'meat-and-potato' sounds. With the various synth engines. And advanced sample-playback (with custom scripting and GUIs), it's an instrument that can cover almost any scenario. Many folks have wanted a virtual instrument that offers sounds/features of a top-tier hardware workstation. H6 is like having Kontakt and Omnisphere (both surpassing hardware counterparts) rolled into a single virtual instrument.
Jim Roseberry abacab Here's an interesting article from SOS back in 2011. 'Steinberg Halion Sonic' It seems that the predecessor of Halion was Steinberg's Hypersonic, developed by Wizoo (AIR Music Technology started as Wizoo Sound Design). However, by the time it came out, it was already clear that Hypersonic 2 was likely to be the final version, as Wizoo had been taken over by Steinberg's rivals Avid. Much of the original Hypersonic content would soon reappear as the free Xpand! Plug‑in bundled with Pro Tools, but that was the end as far as Cubase and other VST or AU‑format hosts were concerned. The current versions of HALion 6 and HALion Sonic 3 are Yamaha based. If you like the Yamaha Motif and Montage workstations, you'll like HALion Sonic.
HALion 6 certainly isn't cheap. But it includes a very broad range of good 'meat-and-potato' sounds.
With the various synth engines. And advanced sample-playback (with custom scripting and GUIs), it's an instrument that can cover almost any scenario. Many folks have wanted a virtual instrument that offers sounds/features of a top-tier hardware workstation. H6 is like having Kontakt and Omnisphere (both surpassing hardware counterparts) rolled into a single virtual instrument.
Now that's a very good argument for getting Halion 6 ($350) as the starting point for a top-tier sound library. Especially considering that Kontakt and Omnisphere would run about $900 for both. And depending on what you want to do, you would probably need to buy a few additional Kontakt libaries to get all of your sounds. It's also good to hear that Halion is Yamaha based now. That's a great lineage. I only linked the legacy article about the origins of the original Halion, because I was amused to hear that the old Wizoo/Steinberg/Avid technology had trickled down to the AIR Xpand! Davdud101.In fact I've never.heard.
Omnishpere (edit- I'm sure I HAVE, but I can't say I explicitly know how it sounds or what's in it). Only if you've watched a movie or turned on the TV in the last 5 years.
I recognize factory patches in TV shows all the time. A compelling case can be made that Omnisphere is, if not the greatest, certainly one of the greatest synthesizers of all time, software or hardware. So you'd reasonably think that Omnisphere should be able to do anything and everything. But the truth is, it is most definitely not the 'all-in-one' solution the OP was asking for. Despite its amazing flexibility, it is still a sample-based synthesizer, not a sampler. Abacab I gather from watching the YouTube demos, that Omnisphere can make some amazing sounds.
Everyone that has it seems to like it a lot. But is it something that you should really start out with for building a sound collection, or after you have the basics covered? When Jim (Roseberry) built my DAW a few years back, he installed Omnisphere and Komplete 8. It was a couple of years before I felt like I needed to add to that because I was missing something, and the first things I added were organic instruments, like orchestral instruments, drums and specialty wind instruments.
Halion sounds nice too, but I don't have any experience with it, and I don't know how well supported it is as far as sound libraries goes. Regards, Dan. Omnisphere is like buying a synthesizer construction kit. It isn't so much that it is complicatedd to program, which I don't think it is.
It's more you have such a wide variety of similar sound sources so the old version 1.0 only gave you 5 types of oscillators. I would just stick with those and get cobalt vst freeware and then try to recreate the sound on that in Omnisphere. Because Cobalt VST only has 26 waveforms and they are really diverse. Omni has so many and it is hard for you to think through what you want until you get clear with enough attributes. But that is how I am learning what Omnisphere does.
It most of the time only has 2 layers an A and a B so its not that hard to understand its more you have so many sound sources. I am only playing around with the synth side of it now and it makes many kinds of sounds. It also has many filters and I would just use a 12 or a 24 one. But in terms of the architecture I don't think it is really that complicated. Not like UVI Falcon or Wusik 8000 or Wusik station or Arturia which is a history lesson in synths.
Methodman3000 I am trying to develop Humanistic Hymns that reflect University knowledge and conversations pertaining to science into music. It's hard to sing the vocabulary, Science and math use so many non one syllable words.
Is anyone else out there trying to do this? It doesn't seem to be reflecting itself in 'the voice' which has too much religious stuff for my taste. Please open your minds to a wider spread of knowledge.
Just curious what others think. I'm not sure, but here is a good example of science and music. Abacab I don't think you can include synthesizers and all-in-one sound libraries in the same sentence. That is what samplers are for. I like synthesizers and have quite a few of them, but they are not the same! Humorously enough, that's a distinction I totally forgot to make before making this post methodman3000 I am trying to develop Humanistic Hymns that reflect University knowledge and conversations pertaining to science into music.
It's hard to sing the vocabulary, Science and math use so many non one syllable words. Is anyone else out there trying to do this? It doesn't seem to be reflecting itself in 'the voice' which has too much religious stuff for my taste.
Please open your minds to a wider spread of knowledge. Just curious what others think.? This is the difference: UVI - ' No emulations here—all UVI vintage series instruments start with the real thing. Extensive sampling of the highest quality combined with the award-winning UVI Engine XT™ give you all the character and soul of real hardware instruments with the ease, efficiency and control provided by modern software.'
Arturia - 'V Collection 5 is your one-stop dream collection of the legendary keyboards behind many of the hits ranging from 60 years ago to 6 minutes ago. Our award-winning modeling technology faithfully reproduces the way the original components behaved, delivering the very soul of these instruments in a way that samples simply can’t.' Falcon is another deep synth. The only thing that kept me from getting it is the lack of multi-core optimization. HALion-6 and Kontakt-5 are optimized for multi-core CPUs. Kontakt (by far) has the broadest support from 3rd-party library developers. Kontakt has had custom scripting since what.
(someone correct me if I'm wrong on that) It'll take HALion-6 a while to reach that broad of a base. The potential is there. Omnisphere is super deep. Bit may be right, it may be the greatest synth ever created. Eric Persing is a genius sound designer (has been for decades). It's 'weakness' (ironic as it may be to say) is 'meat and potato' type sounds. Of course, if you have those sounds covered.
It's a moot point.