Friday, 20 December 2019

The best software synthesizers, softsynths discussed...

In my spare time I enjoy using synthesizers to produce my owns sounds and musical compositions. So I wanted to write a little about my own favourite synths. I tend to use soft synths mainly because of the degree of automation and control that I can have over their synthesis parameters when I produce my music. Of course I love the sound of analogue synthesizers and some of the U-He synths are now getting very close to this analogue sound. It is still an open debate regarding which sounds best and rather than get involved in that side, I will say that as synth enthusiasts we can all agree the gap is definitely narrowing which is a great thing  for all.

So I will do a short list of my favourite software synthesis in 2019, they are not in a specific order as each has its strengths and weaknesses that I will write about. Personally speaking I tend to judge a synth based on its fundamental sound engine quality more so than having the widest range of functions and features. Of course functions and features are important and great to have on any synth but I feel that the end results produced often weigh quite heavily on the quality of the soft synths sound engine.











Sylenth1 - this is an old but great quality synth. Sylenth1 has a direct, powerful and potentially liquid sound. It has a real tangibility and can easily be mistaken for a quality hardware virtual analogue synth. It sits VERY well in a mix and has a classy sound. It has one of the best saw waves I have heard, rich, thick and powerful. It does not excel at all sounds, it does not do FM synthesis ( specifically, though some fast LFO modulations may get you close) yet probably has one of the most robust sounding engines for pure virtual analogue type sounds. It does not have 25 filter types but the ones it does have do well and it has very good, snappy, punchy envelopes. Modulation is limited but it can still produce great sounding results.







Massive X - this is a new favourite it has a quite warm sounding synth engine but also can produce very clear and glassy sounds. It does both very well. I have not been immensely impressed by its FM capabilities despite the fact it has a couple of modes of FM (PM) built in. It is a wavetable synth and has some great wavetables shipped and has some very unusual and interesting (unique) wavetable morphing effects built right into the oscillators. Routing can be slightly complex but this will not stop you from making great sounds easily with basic synthesis knowledge. It has a competent effects section and again unusual and quite good filters, a few odd ones that have potential and plenty of them. I think we will hear new sounds in tracks from this synth that will become staple in some genres.





Massive - I still have a lot of love for the original NI Massive an old synth but it has some solid character and whilst it may have a sound of a time when programmed that way it still has a solid sound to it. It was one of the most respected early softsynths that really took ITB synthesis up a notch. The filter can be a little less exciting and often feels like it has a narrow sweet spot compared to other synths, a slightly odd response at times. The sound is a little glassy and dirty so good for harder styles of dance music. You can get many thousands of presets for this synth because it is old and good. It is a classic IMO. As much as a classic for dance music as Sylenth1 and the hardware Virus, which incidentally brings us onto.............




Viper - This is a very cool emulation of the ACCESS VIRUS. Its functionality has recently been updated to include wavetable oscillators, though it still lacks the formant complex modes of operation with F-shift which can be responsible for a lot of very spaced out sounds. Viper is a little smoother and at times a little more metallic sounding (Maybe the reverbs a tad "zingy" in character). The original virus has a slight dirtyness to its sounds (probably from a little aliasing) and the filter has a very specific character. It has good envelopes that are very responsive. So think of Viper as a Virus with a slightly smoother tone to it. Viper has quite good effects and as a synth can make a very wide range of sounds, it is a very good value synth given the sonic power available.





Serum - Serum is a great synth, probably the most hi fi synth of them all. It has a wonderful and easy GUI to use, high quality wavetables, it has workman like filters and does some great FM sounds, super envelopes and modulation is a breeze. It has very a good effects section so at times you do not even have to use your own bespoke effects processing. It excells at brash sounding dance music sounds IMO but can work any genre well. Its strength is not as a classic analogue emulation. It can do "glassy but classy" very well, sounds clean and modern and has an exceptionally pure digital sound if that is what you need. It is almost a must have for modern dance music production genres. Sometimes you can read online that it sounds a little thin but this can be mitigated against with carefully selected processing.





Parawave Rapid - This is a really great synth, it has had regular updates and sounds very good.  A very hi fi sounding synth with a sound that could be somewhat compared to Sylenth1 despite the latter not being a wavetable synth, it has a very direct and slightly glassy sound to my ear. Very clear and always cuts through a mix nicely. It is a wavetable synth at heart but can do various FM forms. It has many good wavetables shipped with the synth and will keep you going for hours and hours making new sounds and has some nice presets shipped as well for various styles of music. I find the synths filters a little weak at times, though I must try its new ones as they have a few new analogue filter models. I previously found the synth to have quite narrow filter sweet spots with the LPF's that were available witha very harsh sound at high resonance settings. All in all it is one of the best soft synths on the market IMO. It simply cover so much ground well. It has a unique and power effects section and very comprehensive modulation capabilities.









U-He Repro-1 and Diva also need a mention, these are the analogue-a-likes, very good emulations of classic style analogue synths such as the Sequential Circuits Pro-1 and Diva being a blend of Moog, Roland Jupiter/Juno/ JP classics with its semi-modular filter and oscillator options. Both can use a lot of CPU processing power but in return you do get warmth and a certain authenticity to the sound that they produce. They can both produce very fat and thick sounding results that will fool many ears that they are the real thing.













 
I will give an honoury mention to RP Predator 2, it is an old synth now and yet somehow it will occasionally throw something up that you cannot resist. It is powerful and has a bit of a "sound of a time" associated with it. It has an abundance of presets, maybe positioning it sonically in the early 2000's. It has a lot going for it with many powerful features, modulations and envelopes, it is all there. Maybe the waveforms in the oscillators are a little lacklustre (it is afterall a very old synth) and have a character of what a soft synth used to be but there is something endearing about it. And if retro is your bag then it may just be perfect.

As synth enthusiast and a mastering engineer competent in mastering synth music I suggest you download and install the demo's test the presets make some of your own bread and butter genre sounds and see how they fit into your music and approach to sound design.

Wednesday, 14 August 2019

10 years of mastering excellence, a celebration and update !




Welcome to my first blog entry for quite some time. I have now been solely mastering audio for a living for 10 years, a full decade. It has been fantastic to be able to work with 1,000's of bands, musicians, mix engineers, record labels and producers.

There have been many updates to equipment over these years, I have a  hardware Manley Massive Passive equalizer in the rack and feel the need to write about the sonic attributes of this legendary mastering equalizer. The eq quality is sublime, it is a passive equalizer filled with high quality caps, inductors and PCB's, it has a Class A all tube output stage (3 valves per channel) with transformer balanced output stages.

When you pass a stereo signal through the Massive Passive you get a very subtle clarifying tone imparted to the audio, this is before any signal manipulation occurs, in fact there are times I pass a mix through just to provide this euphonic tone to the audio. The stereo image very subtly widens which is a probably a side effect from the output transformers and the very, very gentle opening up of the top end comes from the gentle valve harmonics driving the output amplifier.

Passive EQ works without electrical energy being applied to the filter circuits, thus the reason there is the tube amplifier in the output stage, it has to be high gain and operates at high voltages. The eq is fairly broad and umatched by any equalizer I have heard when you need a wide eq stroke to bring the mid range into focus. The top end is also very sweet and not something that is mentioned very much. It was one of the first aspects that I noticed personally along with the articulate mid range. It has the capability to bring all the important instrument fundamentals forward to enhance the musicality of the mastered end result.



The analogue rack at SafeandSound Online Mastering is filled with great gear,  a Summit Audio DCL-200 which I have nicknamed the "golden enveloper" just a small amount of gain reduction controls the mix and glues, it is fairly transparent but has a slight warmth which thickens and enriches the mixes that pass through it. It is fairly rare to compress heavily during mastering and so a light tough is all it takes.



A Sontec clone equalizer is great for clean eq boosts and cuts and it excels through the frequency ranges from lows through mids to the highs. A smooth sounding articulate equalizer capable of adding a "Je ne sais quoi." to mastering music.



One of the biggest upgrades recently is to use the Crane Song Solaris Quantum DAC which has the lowest published DAC jitter spec of any DAC in production. The sound is superb, the first thing of note was extra low mid clarity and definition. It is unusual to hear people speaking of clear lower mids but the definition of sound here is great. The soundstage is 3D yet accurate, not over done, or overly wide. It really helps me understand what is warmth and what is mud and allows very targetted equalization to be applied. This improves the translation of music on multiple sound systems.

I now have a Hypex amplifier running the PMC monitors (and the smaller Dynaudio speakers which I still enjoy using as I have become very accustomed to their presentation - they are useful in hearing the effect of compression as they are very punchy/fast speakers which reproduce transients very well. A perfect companion set of speakers to the PMC's) The Hypex amplifier is a technically perfect power house of an amplifier. No mercy is shown to problematic issues in a mix, the pure clarity of the amplifier informs me of what to do in order to improve your mastered audio. This model is a 500 wpc amplifier which runs very cool and efficient. (Which reminds me the studio is run on renewable electricity for the last 6 years since having changed to a wind based electric utility company.)
The amplifier has lots of headroom, I suspect I rarely use 100watts of energy in daily monitoring task so there is a complete absence of distortion.



The studio also has had a major update in terms of acoustics, there are now almost 30 bass traps in use with one of the traps almost 2 meters deep. In order to absorb the very deep low end in the studio and keep it flat down to 25Hz. I have a variety of 3 different types of broadband bass traps of various sizes. The vast majority of them are 1.2m x 100mm x 400mm deep. I use different densities of absorber (60kgs/45kgs and 28kgs/m3) to ensure that the correct gas flow resistivity is used to absorb the bass most effectively depending on the size of the bass trap. The stands have also been infilled with Rockwool RW3 so they further act as invisible bass traps. They are finished with a variety of cloths to keep the fibres intact and stop them from entering the air in the studio.

The level of detail I can hear from the sound system now is truly informative in the context of mastering and is helping me do my best ever work. In addition the newer digital software tools released in the last few years are also empowering mastering engineers by extending remedial possibilities allowing to correct problematic sonic issues ever more transparently, allowing even greater music masters to be produced.



Fortunately for all clients my pricing has largely remained the same. I like to provide affordable and consistent service all round and price point is no exception. In total I have 20 years of professional audio engineering experience ready to be deployed on music tracks from all and every genre. This is a work that I love and continue to enjoy and be satisifed with.

Mix appraisal is still inclusive for any client that asks for it, I appreciate not all will and will want me to just master their music without any further advice but it does remain a popular added value to the service. This is especially useful for people who are not sure about how their low frequency instrumental balances (kick and bass line) is sounding in their mixes as it is notoriously difficult to judge in a room that does not have good acoustic treatment.

So if you are looking to improve your music before its release whether on streaming services or for download, I am here ready to assist just get in contact. Bring on the next decade of mastering audio !




Thursday, 8 November 2012

November 2012 update:

So 2012 has been our busiest year so far, I have installed 2 wonderful items of equipment in the studio the HCL VaRiS Vari-mu compressor and the legendary MANLEY Massive Passive Hardware. Both items getting heavy use in the studio. I plan to update this blog with more regularity if at all possible. I have now put Facebook and Twitter Icons on the web pages so you can follow what is happening there too. I would like to thank all my clients for their patronage and helping the mastering studio grow in to what has to be the leading low cost, high end online mastering studio there is. Despite the new high end equipment there is no price raises planned for the foreseeable future, it's important that our services are affordable to musicians at every level. In fact there has been 1 price rise in 5 years of operation and that is 1 track pricing went up from £25.00 to £28.00 about 12 months ago. So when you want no compromise analogue mastering at almost the same rate as others plug in attempts SafeandSound Mastering remains the place to go ! Current gear list: PMC IB1S (large format speakers) Analogue equipment: MANLEY Massive Passive Hardware (there is at least one mastering studio which shows the hardware in their site header when they only own the UAD plug in in there plug in gear list, bad show chaps, tut tut) HCL Varis valve compressor Summit Audio DCL-200 compressor (valve) Sontec clone stereo custom mastering EQ TC Electronic 2240HS equalizer All the best with your musical pursuits. Barry

Friday, 2 March 2012

Sorry it's been a long while...

very busy in the studio these days which is great. Today rock, drum and bass and a singer songwriter album is on the go. All is ticking along nicely and there could be a nice equipment upgrade coming soon, just speaking with manufacturers now, more on that later in the spring I suspect. 1 Track price has increased by £3.00 to £28.00 which relates to the time taken to set up a project for a single song and also remain competitive.

All the Best.

Barry

mastering dance music

music mastering

Saturday, 9 July 2011

2 months of solid work running through the studio in almost every musical genre, Bhangra, Reggae, Rock Dubstep, Drum and Bass, House, Choral and Classical. Big thank you to all my regular clients. I have a the new Joe Meek compressor in the rack. For a long time I have been searching for a great optical compressor and now I have one. Optical compression can be charcteristically slow and smooth and a little unpredictable. In my opinion you need predictable in a compressor for mastering, either that or a great tone from the electronics itself. The Joe Meek when set in the right mode has both. I sent it to ted Fletcher it;s designer and he gave it a once over making sure it is perfectly lined up. Getting hold of the unit (which took a long time in itself) spurred my interest in the producer Joe Meek from the 1960's, if you get a moment check out some of the Youtube videos, a real audio engineering maverick who did what he wanted not what others wanted him to do, and in doing so broke some creative boundaries of the era.

All the best with the music.

SafeandSound Mastering service online

Thursday, 24 March 2011

So this week sees a compilation cd, some punk and lots and lots of Bhangra music ! I am enjoying this week very much and there seems to be plenty of new enquiries so we should be going from strngth to strength, all the best everyone.

http://www.masteringmastering.co.uk/onlinemastering.html

Sunday, 13 March 2011

Work this week...

So at SafeandSound this wek we have some nose bleed techno, world music and some dubstep tunes.Quite a mix up of styles which is the way I like it, new analogue eq should finally be delivered on Tuesday and
will be getting to grips with it Wednesday onwards, exciting times.

SafeandSound Mastering
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