

With such a robust assortment of sampled synths, the Synth Legacy collection manages to offer every major method of classical synthesizer technology- analog, analog modeled, FM and formant, digital and wavetable, vector, additive and pcm are all accounted for. The included synths are a “who’s who” list of classic synths- Roland, Oberheim, Waldorf, Moog, Korg, Yamaha, etc. The result is an authentic sample that captures the resonance, depth, grind, and quirks that make each synthesizer’s sonic character. Once the synth is perfectly dialed in, the instrument is recorded using studio-quality analog recording devices. UVI’s proprietary sampling method starts with engineers acquiring an original synthesizer they want to recreate and thoroughly restoring it (when required) to original spec.
RETORING UVIWORKSTATION SOFTWARE
The software package (or download) includes fifty synthesizers, 1,000 presets, and a host of additional effects and modulators to recreate classic synth sounds or create something entirely new. Looking to capture the casual player (although there is nothing casual about the quality of the instruments), UVI has partnered with Guitar Center to celebrate Guitar Center’s 50th anniversary by packaging 50 of their most sought after synthesizers for $50. As a counter to that, UVI has been making a name for itself for some time now for its high-quality, sampled recreations of some of the most amazing synthesizers to paint their sonic hue on classic recordings. Current production models run the gamut from cheap and plastic-sounding to bank-bustingly expensive and other-worldly. Original units, however, are expensive and hard to come by… certainly too much for someone considering synth as a second (or third) instrument. Synthesizers have long been the go-to for trippier, “non-instrument” sounds for musicians, and most guitar and bass players have been caught at some point in their life falling for the allure of the synth sound as a compliment to the music or for background atmospherics. Test the new concert to see if the issue still exists.Chris Loeffler | Aug50 synths for $50.
RETORING UVIWORKSTATION PATCH
You might need to reorder sets and patches after dragging them into the patch list. Drag the patches from the original concert into the Patch List.Click Edit in the toolbar, select all the sets and patches in the Patch List, then press Delete to remove all the existing patches.Select the layout you saved from the original concert, then click Import. Click the Layout Action pop-up menu, then choose Import Layout.Import the layout, sets, and patches into the new concert:.Click Layout, press Command–A (or choose Edit > Select All) to select all elements in the Layout section, then press Delete to remove them.Create a new concert from any template.To export your sets and patches, click Edit in the toolbar, click in the Patch List, then press Command–A (or choose Edit > Select All) to select all sets and patches in the Patch List.Choose a location in which to save the layout, then click Export. Click Layout in the toolbar, click the Layout Action pop-up menu at the top of the Layout section, then choose Export Layout.Open the concert you're having issues with.When you rebuild a concert, you export the layout, sets, and patches from your concert, then import them into a new concert.
