Behringer are like Kakashi Hatake, can mimic really well. A company that's a hero for those of us that can't afford the real thing. Thank you Behringer, lots of love!
I really can't tell much difference. The Pro-800 filter seems to be a little grittier in the low range, but I like it. I also like the lower price of the P-800, extra voices, and the eurorack size is very convienient. Some of the original disadvantages of the Pro-600 seem to have been addressed, such as no noise generator.
Hey Pete. Thanks for the comparison. Let's be honest. For hobby musicians who don't (want to) "show off" their instruments live, the Pro800 is a blessing.
My test for whether the sound differences are significant is listening to these kinds of comparisons while doing something else. If I become actually consciously aware of when the switch happens and that two sound are different, then it becomes significant. In this case, that didn't happen.
Hi Pete. I think the big thing here is the Pro-800 sounds massively different when using the GliGli envelopes. You can really get it close to a Prophet 5 if you twek things well. It is hard to tell how you've setup your patches on the video - but you definitely got the sounds close!
What amazing tools we have available at affordable prices. The question I kept asking while listening was: "Can I make the sounds I want with this?" And, yes. I think I can! Thank you for the video.
I never understand this argument. So what if no one “asks” what synth you’re using? What synth sounds better and inspires YOU? I guess for people only concerned about selling out, hardware isn’t needed at ALL…just grab a VST, a software drum machine, make a few beats and then call yourself a trance DJ…
You’re both right. I have both a Pro 800 and a Prophet 10 (literally just arrived yesterday) - the Pro 800 definitely got me close enough sonically (the Prophet by no means sounds 10x better!) but I after reading the book, I grew obsessed with Sequential, and I just needed the real deal. Now that I have it, I’m so in love with it - it really draws me in and makes me want to play it. It has an incredibly bold, punchy quality and as an object it is hugely inspiring! I could have been happy with the Pro 800 forever but now that I have the Prophet 10, I’m not just happy - I’m ecstatic.
@@jeffc1753 I may react to a VST vs. a REAL "bubbly" analog synth, but may not notice a hardware difference, like here. I both making music for fun and listen to only electronica/synthwave. I can notice the thinner VST sound in a mix but I can't always tell what hardware analogue synth they use. As a casual listener you probably won't notice the BRAND of a hardware synth...I just say again that Behringer nailed this one, with a very analugue sound, which has a broader bandwith than a VST. I try to use a VST -set only for sketching...
1. Arp: Prophet more creamy - Pro more directly 2. 8oct + rev: Prophet more dreamy - Pro more clear 3. Glide: Prophet: more playful - Pro more precised 4. Blackhole: difference very subtle 5. Osc Sync: different charakter but both very nice 6. Filter: diffcult cauz different osc sound (prophet more release) 7. Chords: nearly no difference 8. Spacy Reverb: nearly no difference 9. Sync: Prophet more creamy - Pro more harsh 10. More chords like the chords before nearly no difference. .... Overall the raw Prophet sound is a bit more creamy/dimensional but really worth the additional costs? I do not think so, like you see with effects the sound is more or less the same. I am happy with my pro800
Wow, this is amazing. Thanks for this demo! Crazy, I actually like the way the low frequencies sound on Pro-800 better than the Prophet 5, plus its filter is a bit grittier. Amazing.
I think this is exactly right. The Prophet 600 / 800 always had a slightly gritty, dirtier sound. The P5 was and is brighter. I have both for a reason even if they share DNA.
It's funny that I had a running argument with someone who was convinced that the P5 and P800 are nothing alike. Page 4 of the P600 manual states that Sequential wanted to make a lower cost, more affordable synth based on the P5. That's why we are hearing very similar sounds from both. P5 is something that does what it does exceptionally well, but the P800 for most people who cannot afford a P5, will do what they need perfectly. There is room for both, but one doesn't better the other when you put things into context. Thx for the upload.
Amazing value, filter sweep sounds sick. I really couldnt do what I do with my Prophet 5 with it though. Within seconds of trying the envelope I was pretty dismayed they made such a slow envelope. But I guess it isnt even a P5 clone.
Ooh - those envelope comments remind me of one more thing that my Prophet 10 can do that my Pro 800 can’t - per voice vintage settings. Super helpful for filter envelope behavior!
I just received mine and let me tell you, it’s a GEM. Takes an hour or two to deep dive, but wow. I have experience w plenty of vintage synths, and this is really delivering on the 70s early 80s sound! Hope you enjoy
I want to say I hear a slightly polished character to the Prophet, like, as a "synthesizer instrument", which is very nice, and a slightly more raw sound to the Behringer, as, like, an "analog beast", which is also very nice.
@@SPAZZOID100 without the beautiful walnut case, it's probably not dramatically different. They both have simple metal chassis, reissue Curtis chips inside (made by Behringer I think)
People say you are paying for outstanding build quality but I have experienced a couple things that should have been caught in quality control with a couple of modern sequential synths. Never had an issue with Behringer.
Yes, I can confirm that DSI was not free from built quality issues. I had serious problems with the endless encoders of my DSI Evolver keyboard. After expiration of the warranty period the recommendation was to replace the encoders by usual pots ...
@@prizenex Yeah I agree. Maybe it sounds a little different, not necessarily worse though, and it has 8 voices and is affordable. I have no loyalty to Sequential either now, as it was bought by a soulless venture capital firm. I've been pleasantly surprised by Behringer's build quality too, it's no better or worse than Sequential. I had a DSI Prophet '08 when they came out, had a few issues with the encoders. But the only issues I ever had with Behringer was a faulty unit on arrival, which was refunded in full.
I have to say the Pro-800 will be saving me $3100 USD for now. After seeing this video, it is a no brainer to buy the Pro-800. It is touching most of the Prophet 5 sounds I need in my synth collection. The Pro-800 is on it's way to selling many units for Behringer. I'm on line for it. Great video and thank you for it. I just became a sub. 👍👍👍👍👍
@@apoclypse When that finally comes out, that I think is going to murder the industry. Right now everyone wants the Pro-800, so imagine that Pro-16. My God.
Great video! I think the Prophet 5 is a bit beefier? But the Pro 800 sounds fantastic, and anyone who goes with that should be stoked. Most of the slight difference in that beefiness could probably be quickly added tastefully with some plugins, like a LittleLabs VOG for example.
You haven't used these machines in a way that I would, so it's a bit vague for me, but I have to say as a Prophet 10 owner that I'm very impressed with the Pro 800 mostly holding its own. Might have to get one for use as a backup!
I think the heritage and importance of Sequential and Dave Smith certainly add to the cost but they also add the irriplacable value of both of these things, not to mention the quality of the hardware production. Both are great for very different reasons!
I have an OG Prophet 5,61 keys,walnut cabinet and it sounds rich as hell. This little guy sounds pretty good. I can leave my big boy at home and take the little guy to gigs ,studio anywhere without worrying if it's gonna take a beating!
While reading through the comments & listening, my ears can't tell when you've switched from one box to another. That's good enough for me. The wet/dry difference is probably greater than the difference between the two boxes anyway. Get my in the ballpark for $400 & I'll do the rest.
This was great, thanks for this comparison. (Mine finally arrives Tuesday and I will be getting a second as soon as I can) I have heard full sustain on the filter envelope will not completely open the filter from closed/nearly closed when the level attenuverter is set to max? If true I can bring in a second envelope to "Filter CV In" as needed, but hopefully they will address that in an update. A rev 2 filter instead of the 3320 would have been great, but then it would not have been a 600 clone. The "vintage" voicing modeling on Sequential synths sounds FANTASTIC. Round robin with 2 of these set a bit differently gets you partway there. That capability is why I am most excited for the 2-XM. I plan on at least 2 of them so ALL the voices can be set slightly different.
The newly released 1.27 brought update to the ranges for filter envelopes, some ranges for polymod and ranges for LFO to filter. Plus polyphonic aftertouch...
I wonder how much the new prophet 5 differs from the original? I think sound wise Behringer has done a great job . Other manufacturers would never come in at this price point.
Nice side-by-side comparison. Both sound great. I think the sub oscillator on the Prophet 5 is a little beefier, and the upper end of the filter on the Pro-800 seems a little constrained. But for the price, I think the Pro-800 is really hard to beat.
Back in the days of the Prophet 5, no one would have dared compare a $400 synth with one costing $3000 or more. It would have seemed so incongruous that no one even thought of it. Today, it's a comparison that makes sense and shows that the differences in sound are subtle. Finally, this kind of test teaches us less about synthesizers than about our consumer society, where prices no longer reflect quality at all, but just the name of a brand.
I love my 800 but I also own a Prophet 10 and to say that price doesn’t reflect quality doesn’t apply here at all - of course, with a linear increase in quality comes an exponential increase in price, but that said, the Prophet 10 is hand-built by a small team in the USA using traditional through-hole construction techniques (MUCH stronger and easier to maintain/repair than SMD), whereas the Pro 800 is built in a fucking CITY Behringer OWNS in China in poor labor conditions using cheap, SMD technology (if something happens, good luck finding a tech who is willing to fix it - it’s more worthwhile to just buy another).
They both sound remarkably close. I can't imagine being able to pick any of this out in a mix. If you're doing synth forward Carpenter-esque soundtracking it might make sense to go with the P5, but if you just need an analog Prophet sound palette the Pro 800 gets you there for a fraction of the price.
Behringer used the pro-1 clone with the SSM2044 filter that they cloned from the original SC Pro-One. (same filter as SSM2044 VCF's and the Prophet 5 (Rev. 1/2)) In the Pro-800 they decided to use this filter to sound more correct to the prophet 600 and have 2 onboard sequencers with 8 voices of polyphony and chord memory for 2 arpeggiators. That was it, then the Gli Gli mod is included in the machine, which you don't have to have additional catos to improve anything and now with firmware 1.2.7 it's much better. for less than 400 dollars or euros.
Prophet sounds better, but the 800 (which I actually own) is better value. I got an OB-6 and I do intend to get another Sequential at some point in the future. I don't want Behringer to bankrupt everyone else.
Sequential will not bankrupt. It's too difficult for people in countries like mine to afford a Sequential instrument. Synths are made for making music, people has the right to make music. This high prices on synths are madness. I have faith that Behringer will help lower a bit the market.
Well if other synth companies don't lower their prices, Behringer will be eating their lunches! It just goes to show how much a lot of us musicians have been taken advantage of over the years! All of these companies have been charging thousands of dollars more for basically the same thing Behringer is able to do for a fraction of the cost! It's about damn time we have a company come in and turn the synth community onto it's head! They've come in and are proving that you don't need to choose to either sleep in a 1 room apartment for the rest of our lives just to get some of these legendary synth sounds!
@@PeteMidi😮Was soll das jetzt eigentlich heißen? Du antwortest oft mit dem Smiley oder einem Dankeschön für das Feedback und das wars dann. Denke mal drüber nach mit zu diskutieren, manchmal zumindest l
The 800 does sound a bit flatter, a bit less warm & juicy … but I couldn’t say for sure it’s not just the settings 🤷🏻♂️, and in any case: it’s crazy how good the 800 is for the money …
To my ears, the prophet 5 has a tad more weight and authority to its sound signature. The pro 800 has a slightly grating/piercing sound at times. They’re definitely not worlds apart though, and the pro 800 is excellent value.
I'd love a Prophet 5 Rev 4 keyboard version though, it just oozes mojo, great looks and the pedigree.... But, I'm lucky enough to own a Prophet 6 and the Pro800 came a couple of weeks back so I guess I have all sonic bases covered? Great review!
The vintage knob is great - I have it on my P10, Trigon 6, and Take 5 (and a similar thing on my UB-Xa) and it really shines with the microvariations per voice in the filter envelopes. I had a Rev 2, and never got on with the slop knob - to me it just sounded shit unless it was planted at 0 (I did like the Rev 2 otherwise - I just sold it to get a Trigon 6. . .would gladly own another one, but I think I made a good call for a few reasons).
Shows very well how similar sonically they are. Behringer have a good product there. People will buy a genuine Sequential for more reasons than the sound - you can get that with a plug in. I find I'm attracted to these Behringer products because I'm their target market - those that wanted these tools back in the late 1970's early 80's but the cost was stratospheric. These days the prices have soared on these vintage synths so they are hard to justify when you can get the same sound with a better workflow in a plug in, but the yearning remains. I don't currently own any Behringer products - other than a Xtouch one to control Logic. I found the synth modules didn't fit in with my current workflow and the size was fiddly. The quality of the couple I owned was great (Neutron and K2). I think the Behringer synth clones in the module format are a great alternative to modular. They are affordable and require less patching and indeed can be eurorack mounted. Certainly a gateway drug to modular. I can't think of any reason to buy a Behringer synth for myself right now as I can't see how it would help me be more productive or offer something to enhance what I'm doing in the box. I do need a performance keyboard though with poly aftertouch. 4 octave or more. Something made of real metal so gig worthy. Maybe that could be something Behringer could add to their portfolio, but it would have to be decent quality...
Yes, that's a positive aspect, that more musicians are able to think about and try out a hardware-based workflow, which may work better or not for them - you usually do not know this before you tried it.
The P5 has a bit more chunkiness. But not that much more! I might have a hard time in a double-blind test knowing which was which each time (except sync which I’d probably guess right every time). I’ll bet i’d get it wrong sometimes on everything else. Anyway, surprising how little difference there is.
I was reading comments while watching the video and couldn't tell which synth was playing at any given time so effectively they sound the same. If you gave me one for free I'd want the sequential, if I have to pay for it I'm buying the behringer.
The behringer sounds a bit more lo-if to my ears. Almost thinner as well. I own the behringer and love it, but it can sound a bit too scratchy at times.
Curious does the Pro 800 have the latest firmware. There were big improvements to the Filter and Envelope. Seriously If I was playing these blind and I stepped away then someone switched them and dialed in the patches I probably wouldn’t notice the difference.
It sounds SO selling :D ! One thing I really would like that Behringer to add - the multitembrality! It will make this synth much cooler even without separate audio outputs per voice. Without it I'm really unsure if I want to buy it. Because the market will change after Behringer new synths. Not immediately... And probably somebody will "resurrect" MFB Synth Pro. It's a really capable synth, IMHO much more promising than Prophet-5 or Beh Pro 800.
The Prophet does sound slightly better. More body in the lower mids and more mellow sounding treble, the filter is a little more refined and so is the glide/portamento but other than that there is very little between them. Considering the price difference those minor shortcomings of the Behringer can absolutely be ignored. I’m amazed the sound was as close as it turned out to be, and you even have extra voices to add. Thank you for making this video, great method of comparison, but you have now made me want to buy one 😅
I have a Prophet 10 and two Pro 800's. The bottom line is the Prophet 5 (10) has a richness that the pro800 does not. I wish it did because I would love to sell the P10 and pocket all that money but I will never. It is pure magic. Is it worth the price difference?? That's the question....but I will never sell my P10. It's my desert island synth.
Fantastic comparison video, really great! Now my old and battered ears should never be used as any audio reference, but i'd still like to share my impression and knowledge about the electronics inside ... - It seems to me, as a constant throughout this video, the p-5 has a little more volume than the p-800. Easy to fix using any common mixer. - It seems to me, as a constant throughout this video, the p-5 has a little more low end and is a bit brighter on the high end, than the p-800. Also easy to fix using any common mixer. The differences are minute. In theory this is expected, since both companies use modern versions of the original CEM integrated circuits. Thanks to Dave Smith the heirs of Doug Curtis have started to reproduce the original line of CEM ICs. Other manufacturers like Oberheim, Roland and Korg, to name a few have also benefitted from that. Now Behringer took a somewhat different route. He set up mass-production lines for ICs similar to the original CEMs as well as for other analog components that had long been out of production, especially the LM13700 OTAs and some transistors. These components were intensively used in older synthesizers, even before the first CEM ICs appeared. And since Behringer specializes in recreating vintage synths from various original brands they require huge numbers of all of these components, making their manufacturing line profitable. The sound differences being minute, a choice between these two would, for me, depend on size and on features (e.g. polymod on p-5, 8 voices on p-800).
I saw a review that said the pro800 lacks the sharpness of attack of the P5, so I compared the two to focus on that point. It is true that the pro800 seems to have a weaker attack click, but whether you can tell the difference by mixing them in the mix, let alone if you are a performer... I don't know, I'm not sure. If you are a keyboardist who cares about the feel of your performance, P5 is the best choice, if you want to mix a little analog polysynth on your DAW track, Pro800 is enough, but for that purpose, I would choose a cheaper Softube or u-he plugin.
Thank you! Behringer did a very good job. It sounds very good and the original 600 has some issues I assume this one doesn't have. The old Prophet 5 was also a tad warmer to my ears, the 600 a bit colder, futuristic, sci fi something ( not a negative ). But they could do different jobs and shine in different "areas" ... That P5 rev4 does seem to have better control over It's sound. My B Pro-1 is the same when you do certain things, the original does them much better. But nothing one would care about. It can sound 5 percent prettier ... sometimes. :)
Thanks for the comparison! Behringer is almost always fantastic for the prices they charge. I much prefer the sound of the Prophet compared to what sounded to me to be the thinner, higher pitched, and seemingly faster modulation of the Behringer. The Prophet just sounds more musical and magical and open to me. Definitely being drawn more and more towards Prophets as my musical/synth journey continues. And what a journey! It’s a great time to be a creative musical nerd. 🫶
The difference is only a fantasy in my ears, and the influence of the once great star *Prophet 5* , and that people still cannot believe, that Beringer can make it possible with smd-technology right now, same they did it very well with the minimoog-clone "Model D" ;D
Thanks that's awesome. The P800 also POLY aftertouch since the latest update (1.2.7), which should make for a lot of fun when combined with a hydrasynth, for example. Now if only Behringer adds PWM as a destination for Polymod, i really see no reason to need a P5 anymore. Oh wait my P6 can do that ;)
A few months ago I had a pro800 and a prophet rev2 in my home studio and the prophet literally kicked the pro 800, perhaps because it was one of the first units the controls did not do things well, it sounded weak next to the propher rev2 which seemed like a Maybach and the other an Audi A4, maybe it was the firmware I don't know but I returned it I didn't like it at all, but in all the videos I see it sounds incredibly similar to a prophet but that was not my case
I’m glad that both exist. Both sound great to me. Maybe Moog Music’s recent acquisition by InMusic was accelerated by strong competition from Behringer? Still too soon to know the impact of the acquisition; there will be some positives; nevertheless a big change for the company
Unfortunately that’s true. Professor Moog would be concerned. Happens all the time when the original owner dies or retires. The partners who said ‘we’ll keep it all just like before,’ never do.
As I did with the Behringer Model D and Minimoog Model D Reissue, I have bought both the keyboard version for Moog and Sequential and the module for Behringer
Genius move of behringer for secureing their own chipset , the pro800 will foreshadow maybe a similar fate that had put american synthcompanies out of business in the 80s
Unless Behringer suddenly changed how their eurorack-form cases are manufactured, the side cheeks aren't plastic. Just wanted to point that out in your facts section. You can take them off and double check. They're just thin and precisely cut.
You did a very good job matching the sounds! I overall did like the Prophet 5’s sound slightly better, but this would probably be the same if you compared it to an original Pro600. The Prophet’s sound was a bit livelier and vintage sounding to me, particularly when using oscillator sync. The filter also sounds a bit smoother and more refined. But these aren’t big differences and maybe meaningless to the average person. However there’s no denying that the Behringer offers great value for money and has some additional features the Prophet doesn’t have.
@1:20 _"wood vs plastic"_ The end cheeks on the P800 are wood (the same for all these small Behringer desktop synths, they all have wood - not plastic - end cheeks).
@@PeteMidi The wood they used to use was that horrible red wood (no clue what it's called), but recently they've moved to something much nicer on the Solina and the P800, but yeah, it's real wood, it's always been real wood, they've never used plastic. I think their varnish / seal finish makes it look a little plastic ?
Just like the Berhringer Pro-1, the Pro-800 lacks the transient detail of the Sequential synths. Listen to the attack portion of every note played - it's fairly obvious to me.
Say and think what you will about Behringer, their biggest success is proving that good synths can be made more inexpensively and made affordable than the old guards Moog, Prophet, Roland and Oberheim were willing to admit or implement. Every market needs someone to shake it up from time to time.
Prophet 5's low-end impact and transient response are definitely better... listening to the comparison with my Genelec system, and the difference is noticeable!
Hello, I have one, I needed polyphony in Eurorack with adsr filters and so on, this one is perfect, but I had no idea that it is a clone of the prophet ahahahahahahahaha, they sound the same, my goodness Behringer, this is amazing, greetings
for a price difference of 6 times against the pro800 the minor [ prefered the portamento on the prophet 5 ] it is quite admirable for 1/6 of a reprduction of the prophet 5 ...
I think the P5-desktop sounds a bit richer in the low end. Personally I will go for the P5 since it has a history and comes from the original manufactor. For me when selecting between synths it's not only the sounds that matters, it's also the look and feel to use it.
The Behringer is 99% there. (with the vibe of the original). If it was 70-80% I would believe its close. But in my opinion the Behringer captures that "magic vibe" of the original.
I swear to god the Behringer sounds less alive somehow- more "2d" I guess? I really love some of their mono stuff, I thought their Poly D sounded pretty good too, but this falls into the same category of boring/just use digital as the Deepmind for me. Maybe it's different in person and while I highly doubt anyone would know the difference in a fully mixed song there's still a small something lacking. It's still a great option for the price, I wouldn't turn one down. Edit: so I just listened to a 600 v 800, and I could not distinguish. As a point of comparison, I do think that is more fair for obvious reasons- I don't think pricetag makes a thing good, and maybe my ears are bias against the edgelords at Behringer, but I would take the pure sound of the 5 over the 800. I would take the pure sound of the 5 over the 600. I would take the value of the 800 over either, lol.
The chords DRY section: The p5 sounds beefier and has more spread compared to the behringer sounding more thin and phase cancellation. Big deal breaker
Still the P800 sounds a lot more Brassy to me than the P5.... The P5 can do it all, it's techno all the way. Owing a P5 for over a long time now, I can say it sounds very high end and luxurious.. There is something beefy also noticeable in higher notes, a thickness and golden edge of presence on top of the sounds. It just blends into a mix without any treatment. The issue I have with most Behrs is that I had a hard time to get all of them properly in the mix compared to my other sound sources. At a first listen things sound great and similar maybe. That is not the point. From all Behringer, the Wasp was a keeper but still it required me to do a decent amount of additional treatment to let it sit in the mix. I found most oscillators from Behringer had a generic flavour. Not to mention the incredible harsh top end some of their gear has... Something that never pleased my ears. You can't expect from one factory to produce all sportscar and brands and have all the distinct differences and characters between them. The looks are the first thing, under the hood it's all just a lot of bread and butter is my impression. It's great that Behringer make the music scene somehow more democratic but I wonder if this is really their idealistic mission.. What if one day Ford decides to start producing Ferrari's, Lamborghini's and Lada's.... For sure a lot of synths have been way overpriced but you also thought twice before buying and wasting your creative time..
Thanks for this side by side breakdown. I contemplated selling my Synths to fund a Prophet 10 but I would not dream of that now. With Pro800, and prophet 16 /Ubxa in the pipeline, sequential products are not on my list.
I agree with you, although in my case I was never going to buy a new Prophet 5- I can't afford one unfortunately. But maybe I might have bought an old Pro600, I sure wouldn't now!
@@lundswedenI return to this video 1 month later and will save for a P10 desktop😅. I hope you get the Pro800, it's an excellent machine for sure. The P5/10 is a high ranking Synth for good reason and on my wish list for over 10 years, it's an organic Synth.
Thanks for the comparison. Out of curiosity, how do you have both synths connected via USB? Are you running the Arturia to a USB hub then the modules into the USB hub?
The P-800 is Poss Slightly thinner and more polished sounding Whereas the Prophet 5 Sounds Deeper Slightly Bigger and more lush with more Dimensionality....But I Don't Know if its possible to detune the P-800 Slightly or add some saturation to get a little closer.....or maybe poss even just a little more low end and low mid on the EQ might bring out the same Depth which may be slightly hidden within the P-800's slightly Brighter Sound although I'm Pretty Sure that it's the case that there is a little deeper Modulation very Subtly Going on Within the Prophet's innate Sound Signature....???? But were I not tuned in completely with highly tuned ears the difference would be slight & knowing what you're looking for there may be another way to exaggerate those same attributes in the P-800 to get even closer to the Prophet....But the Difference is def there especially in the first three sequences and although slight depending on how much you concentrate on it. But it appears to be innate to both units....But Synthesis done well is all about the complexity created by the modulations and micro modulations created in the sound that give a feeling of dimensionality and the ear, the attention and the mind Somewhere to go, almost like opening up another dimension or sound world we can enter through our ears which is why Big Reverbs Have the Same effect explaining our innate ability and innate need and instantaneous curiosity with which we enter and explore new sound worlds with our auditory senses as we have done using our ears to explore our physical world for millions and millions of years.... And is especially why 'traditonal or ethnic' and especially eastern instruments are so enchanting & appealing and sound so deeply transcendental and mesmerising and have the ability to really take you some where and allow yo auto go so deep within their mesmerising sound in addition to their deep and innate cultural significance because they have these resonances and complexities inherent within the sound giving the ear the mind and more importantly our consciousness and sense of being a whole new complex and constantly evolving sound world to inhabit to disappear into and explore.... or in this case with the Prophet and the P-800 Sequential are adding a subtle thickness lushness & richness to the sound of the Prophet So this may...??? open up more potential for this kind of deeper interest inherent within the sound.... Although shinny polished sounds psycoacoustically and semiotically and culturally take us into the the world of Chimes and Bells which is a whole different sonic world to explore and which has a very particular and innate effect on the human Psyche and the ability to employ and exploit these resonances and complexities in a more stable sound at much higher frequencies which has it's own special an innate effect on the Psyche all together.....And 8 Voices is a lot more harmonic potential especially the ability to echo harmonic structures and add transients and therefore greater depth of modulation and complexity from sub bass to the very highest frequencies depending on how many octaves and the frequency the instrument will generate could poss be another highly creative way to explore.....And there may be another way to detune or add saturation to the P-800 to get slightly closer to the Prophets Sound....But Fantastic Comparison Pete and Thanks So much for putting it Together for us man too....!!!!!!!! Chris :)
What people need to understand is that the P600 which the Pro-800 is based on, was always the budget version of the P5. It can sound very close on basic patches such as the ones showcased here but when you push poly-mod, the oscillators, the EG, voice allocation etc the differences becomes more apparent. Not to mention the Rev4 has vintage knob and two filter types. And then there is the night & day build quality..
Hmmmm, maybe. But 5 note poly v 8 note. The pro 800 also has extra modultion options than the 600 (same as prophet 5) and poly aftertouch. The 8 notes and poly aftertouch a pretty damming to the prophet, no question. but of course the prophet is higher quality build and components.
If you want the sound: Buy a VST. If you want hardware: Buy Behringer. If you want the joy of owning the real thing: Buy the reissues. None of that is wrong or right. It's about emotions. I own a Prophet 10 and a Behringer Pro 1. I love to play and touch the Prophet. But if I need another voice it's good to have the Pro 1. I also bought a minimoog reissue and an Behringer Model D. Both are fun. Now that I'm an old man I have the money to afford that luxury. Being a Bass player I spent most of my musical carrer playing just one bass: a 1973 Jazz-Bass: I made some money being a session player, played it for Rock, Jazz, Pop, ... style sessions. I wish that in my young years I had such a choice of good quality and cheap alternatives. But on the other hand: Overcoming restrictions makes you a better musician, not better equipment.
Behringer are like Kakashi Hatake, can mimic really well. A company that's a hero for those of us that can't afford the real thing. Thank you Behringer, lots of love!
I really can't tell much difference. The Pro-800 filter seems to be a little grittier in the low range, but I like it. I also like the lower price of the P-800, extra voices, and the eurorack size is very convienient. Some of the original disadvantages of the Pro-600 seem to have been addressed, such as no noise generator.
I think the low end is where you hear the major difference in the oscillators and of course the extreme ends of the filter.
Wow, if I close my eyes they sound practically undistinguishable, but with my eyes open the Prophet 5 alwaya sounds better. Incredible !
😄
Hey Pete. Thanks for the comparison. Let's be honest. For hobby musicians who don't (want to) "show off" their instruments live, the Pro800 is a blessing.
😄 Yes, thanks for the feedback!
I’d show it off anyway! Screw the snob hipsters! You’re not making music for them if you’re a hobbyist or goon in the biz.
Tja, wer hätte das gedacht! Super aufschlussreiches Video. Thanks a lot!
Many thanks for the feedback - vielen Dank! 😊
My test for whether the sound differences are significant is listening to these kinds of comparisons while doing something else. If I become actually consciously aware of when the switch happens and that two sound are different, then it becomes significant. In this case, that didn't happen.
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Doesn’t it make more sense to program sounds that cannot be matched? Like a very snappy bass drum?
Hi Pete. I think the big thing here is the Pro-800 sounds massively different when using the GliGli envelopes. You can really get it close to a Prophet 5 if you twek things well. It is hard to tell how you've setup your patches on the video - but you definitely got the sounds close!
Thanks a lot! 😊
What amazing tools we have available at affordable prices. The question I kept asking while listening was: "Can I make the sounds I want with this?" And, yes. I think I can! Thank you for the video.
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That's a really very well made comparison!
Thanks a lot! 😊
In a SynthWave song no listener will ask whether it's P5 or a Pro 800 synth was used, lol. Behringer really nailed this one...
I never understand this argument. So what if no one “asks” what synth you’re using? What synth sounds better and inspires YOU? I guess for people only concerned about selling out, hardware isn’t needed at ALL…just grab a VST, a software drum machine, make a few beats and then call yourself a trance DJ…
You’re both right. I have both a Pro 800 and a Prophet 10 (literally just arrived yesterday) - the Pro 800 definitely got me close enough sonically (the Prophet by no means sounds 10x better!) but I after reading the book, I grew obsessed with Sequential, and I just needed the real deal. Now that I have it, I’m so in love with it - it really draws me in and makes me want to play it. It has an incredibly bold, punchy quality and as an object it is hugely inspiring! I could have been happy with the Pro 800 forever but now that I have the Prophet 10, I’m not just happy - I’m ecstatic.
@@jeffc1753Selling out = Finding that computing synths to be more enjoyable. Ok buddy.
@@MrOuija-rr8kq Nah, more like VST elitists just suck. Same with hardware elitists.
@@jeffc1753
I may react to a VST vs. a REAL "bubbly" analog synth, but may not notice a hardware difference, like here. I both making music for fun and listen to only electronica/synthwave. I can notice the thinner VST sound in a mix but I can't always tell what hardware analogue synth they use. As a casual listener you probably won't notice the BRAND of a hardware synth...I just say again that Behringer nailed this one, with a very analugue sound, which has a broader bandwith than a VST. I try to use a VST -set only for sketching...
1. Arp: Prophet more creamy - Pro more directly
2. 8oct + rev: Prophet more dreamy - Pro more clear
3. Glide: Prophet: more playful - Pro more precised
4. Blackhole: difference very subtle
5. Osc Sync: different charakter but both very nice
6. Filter: diffcult cauz different osc sound (prophet more release)
7. Chords: nearly no difference
8. Spacy Reverb: nearly no difference
9. Sync: Prophet more creamy - Pro more harsh
10. More chords like the chords before nearly no difference.
....
Overall the raw Prophet sound is a bit more creamy/dimensional but really worth the additional costs? I do not think so, like you see with effects the sound is more or less the same. I am happy with my pro800
Exact same thing I heard. I also own the behringer, and am happy with it for the money.
Wow, this is amazing. Thanks for this demo! Crazy, I actually like the way the low frequencies sound on Pro-800 better than the Prophet 5, plus its filter is a bit grittier. Amazing.
Thanks for the feedback! 😊
yeah, the prophet 5 seems to have a bit more mid range punch, but some of the sounds a freakin identicle. amazing for the price too. #behringerpro800
I think this is exactly right. The Prophet 600 / 800 always had a slightly gritty, dirtier sound. The P5 was and is brighter. I have both for a reason even if they share DNA.
It's funny that I had a running argument with someone who was convinced that the P5 and P800 are nothing alike.
Page 4 of the P600 manual states that Sequential wanted to make a lower cost, more affordable synth based on the P5.
That's why we are hearing very similar sounds from both.
P5 is something that does what it does exceptionally well, but the P800 for most people who cannot afford a P5, will do what they need perfectly.
There is room for both, but one doesn't better the other when you put things into context.
Thx for the upload.
Thanks for the nice feedback! 😊
Amazing value, filter sweep sounds sick. I really couldnt do what I do with my Prophet 5 with it though. Within seconds of trying the envelope I was pretty dismayed they made such a slow envelope. But I guess it isnt even a P5 clone.
@@tenalockthey updated the envelopes. and now you can select between several curves.
dang, one of the best comparison videos out there! thanks.
Ooh - those envelope comments remind me of one more thing that my Prophet 10 can do that my Pro 800 can’t - per voice vintage settings. Super helpful for filter envelope behavior!
For just under double what I'd pay in taxes for the Prophet-5, I can have that Pro-800. The price is right and the sound quality is there.
I did the math, you're correct. The Pro-800 just went on sale $30% off so I got it for $329.
I just received mine and let me tell you, it’s a GEM. Takes an hour or two to deep dive, but wow. I have experience w plenty of vintage synths, and this is really delivering on the 70s early 80s sound! Hope you enjoy
I want to say I hear a slightly polished character to the Prophet, like, as a "synthesizer instrument", which is very nice, and a slightly more raw sound to the Behringer, as, like, an "analog beast", which is also very nice.
Thanks for the feedback!
Your music selection is straight up dope! Never miss an upload! 🎶❤
Thanks a lot! 😊
Excellent comparison! But for US2500 over the US400 I stay with the Pro-800! hands down. Thank you!!
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Thank you Pete for this comparison
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The sole fact that a new $400 synth doesn't fall much behind a new $3000 one says something alone.
Build quality?
@@SPAZZOID100 without the beautiful walnut case, it's probably not dramatically different. They both have simple metal chassis, reissue Curtis chips inside (made by Behringer I think)
you're a bot
Behringer beweist immer wieder dass die extrem hohen Preise anderer analog Synth Hersteller nur Mogelpackungen sind.
@@michaelgross9654so isses
People say you are paying for outstanding build quality but I have experienced a couple things that should have been caught in quality control with a couple of modern sequential synths. Never had an issue with Behringer.
Yes, I can confirm that DSI was not free from built quality issues. I had serious problems with the endless encoders of my DSI Evolver keyboard. After expiration of the warranty period the recommendation was to replace the encoders by usual pots ...
Wow, this is so cool! I'm not expecting the Pro-800 to sound the same, or even as good, but its nice to compare these too synths!
Thanks a lot! 😊
Actually, in this comparison Behringer holds up very well
@@prizenex Yeah I agree. Maybe it sounds a little different, not necessarily worse though, and it has 8 voices and is affordable. I have no loyalty to Sequential either now, as it was bought by a soulless venture capital firm. I've been pleasantly surprised by Behringer's build quality too, it's no better or worse than Sequential. I had a DSI Prophet '08 when they came out, had a few issues with the encoders. But the only issues I ever had with Behringer was a faulty unit on arrival, which was refunded in full.
Yes, I remember my DSI Evolver keyboard, where endless encoders stopped working some day, after warranty period...
@@lundswedenFocusrite is not a venture capital firm.
behringer is killing it, man. I love them
I have to say the Pro-800 will be saving me $3100 USD for now. After seeing this video, it is a no brainer to buy the Pro-800. It is touching most of the Prophet 5 sounds I need in my synth collection. The Pro-800 is on it's way to selling many units for Behringer. I'm on line for it. Great video and thank you for it. I just became a sub. 👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks for the feedback! 😊
Can you imagine what the Pro-16 will look like? It's going to be insane if the lower tier Pro-800 sounds this good already.
@@apoclypse When that finally comes out, that I think is going to murder the industry. Right now everyone wants the Pro-800, so imagine that Pro-16. My God.
@@PeteMidi Yes sir.
Oh for sure it is the most wanted synth right now. Wow, that Pro-16 will be another killer synth.
Great video! I think the Prophet 5 is a bit beefier? But the Pro 800 sounds fantastic, and anyone who goes with that should be stoked. Most of the slight difference in that beefiness could probably be quickly added tastefully with some plugins, like a LittleLabs VOG for example.
Many thanks! 😊
Beefy is in your head.
This confirms everything I thought I was hearing, what a great comparison.
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You haven't used these machines in a way that I would, so it's a bit vague for me, but I have to say as a Prophet 10 owner that I'm very impressed with the Pro 800 mostly holding its own. Might have to get one for use as a backup!
I think the heritage and importance of Sequential and Dave Smith certainly add to the cost but they also add the irriplacable value of both of these things, not to mention the quality of the hardware production. Both are great for very different reasons!
Thanks for the feedback!
The Prophet 5 is pretty much just another Novation product.
I have an OG Prophet 5,61 keys,walnut cabinet and it sounds rich as hell. This little guy sounds pretty good. I can leave my big boy at home and take the little guy to gigs ,studio anywhere without worrying if it's gonna take a beating!
While reading through the comments & listening, my ears can't tell when you've switched from one box to another. That's good enough for me. The wet/dry difference is probably greater than the difference between the two boxes anyway. Get my in the ballpark for $400 & I'll do the rest.
This was great, thanks for this comparison. (Mine finally arrives Tuesday and I will be getting a second as soon as I can) I have heard full sustain on the filter envelope will not completely open the filter from closed/nearly closed when the level attenuverter is set to max? If true I can bring in a second envelope to "Filter CV In" as needed, but hopefully they will address that in an update. A rev 2 filter instead of the 3320 would have been great, but then it would not have been a 600 clone. The "vintage" voicing modeling on Sequential synths sounds FANTASTIC. Round robin with 2 of these set a bit differently gets you partway there. That capability is why I am most excited for the 2-XM. I plan on at least 2 of them so ALL the voices can be set slightly different.
Thanks for the great feedback! 😊
The newly released 1.27 brought update to the ranges for filter envelopes, some ranges for polymod and ranges for LFO to filter. Plus polyphonic aftertouch...
Yes, the poly pressure option is great, I will check this out soon ...
I wonder how much the new prophet 5 differs from the original? I think sound wise Behringer has done a great job . Other manufacturers would never come in at this price point.
The 4 revisions differs not that slightly.
Nice side-by-side comparison. Both sound great. I think the sub oscillator on the Prophet 5 is a little beefier, and the upper end of the filter on the Pro-800 seems a little constrained. But for the price, I think the Pro-800 is really hard to beat.
Many thanks for the feedback! 😊
There is no sub oscillator on the P5. Anyway, the Pro-800 is amazing.
@@RayyMusik Sorry, I mis-typed. Should have been “sub-octaves” as mentioned in the video. Thanks for catching that.
You summarized the differences perfectly. Through my BigSky reverb the Pro-800 will sound heavenly.
Back in the days of the Prophet 5, no one would have dared compare a $400 synth with one costing $3000 or more. It would have seemed so incongruous that no one even thought of it.
Today, it's a comparison that makes sense and shows that the differences in sound are subtle. Finally, this kind of test teaches us less about synthesizers than about our consumer society, where prices no longer reflect quality at all, but just the name of a brand.
I love my 800 but I also own a Prophet 10 and to say that price doesn’t reflect quality doesn’t apply here at all - of course, with a linear increase in quality comes an exponential increase in price, but that said, the Prophet 10 is hand-built by a small team in the USA using traditional through-hole construction techniques (MUCH stronger and easier to maintain/repair than SMD), whereas the Pro 800 is built in a fucking CITY Behringer OWNS in China in poor labor conditions using cheap, SMD technology (if something happens, good luck finding a tech who is willing to fix it - it’s more worthwhile to just buy another).
They both sound remarkably close. I can't imagine being able to pick any of this out in a mix. If you're doing synth forward Carpenter-esque soundtracking it might make sense to go with the P5, but if you just need an analog Prophet sound palette the Pro 800 gets you there for a fraction of the price.
Thanks for the awesome demo!
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The one who can tell the difference with his eyes closed is an alien ! Good job and thanks !
Behringer used the pro-1 clone with the SSM2044 filter that they cloned from the original SC Pro-One. (same filter as SSM2044 VCF's and the Prophet 5 (Rev. 1/2))
In the Pro-800 they decided to use this filter to sound more correct to the prophet 600 and have 2 onboard sequencers with 8 voices of polyphony and chord memory for 2 arpeggiators.
That was it, then the Gli Gli mod is included in the machine, which you don't have to have additional catos to improve anything and now with firmware 1.2.7 it's much better. for less than 400 dollars or euros.
Thanks for the info!
Pro 800 has a CEM3320 clone ("reissue") filter set up with a ladder configuration, not a V2044A (SSM2044 clone).
by closing my eyes I'm unable to tell which is which. that was a good buy indeed !!
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Damn, the synth I've always dreamed about🥺
The pro800 sounds really close but the filter is a little different on the low end
In a track mix it would be really hard to tell, good demo
Prophet sounds better, but the 800 (which I actually own) is better value. I got an OB-6 and I do intend to get another Sequential at some point in the future. I don't want Behringer to bankrupt everyone else.
Sequential will not bankrupt. It's too difficult for people in countries like mine to afford a Sequential instrument. Synths are made for making music, people has the right to make music. This high prices on synths are madness. I have faith that Behringer will help lower a bit the market.
Well if other synth companies don't lower their prices, Behringer will be eating their lunches! It just goes to show how much a lot of us musicians have been taken advantage of over the years! All of these companies have been charging thousands of dollars more for basically the same thing Behringer is able to do for a fraction of the cost! It's about damn time we have a company come in and turn the synth community onto it's head! They've come in and are proving that you don't need to choose to either sleep in a 1 room apartment for the rest of our lives just to get some of these legendary synth sounds!
@@dez1989 exactly!
@@Horizontedesucesos_ I agree! I've been saying that for years!
This synth will get the Volkssynthesizer ❤ btw sync and modulated sounds will always different. Will Pete sell his Prophet 5 now🤣?
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@@PeteMidi😮Was soll das jetzt eigentlich heißen? Du antwortest oft mit dem Smiley oder einem Dankeschön für das Feedback und das wars dann. Denke mal drüber nach mit zu diskutieren, manchmal zumindest l
Sorry, hatte das nicht als einladung zur diskussion verstanden - doch ich denke auch, dass dieser synth in die geschichte eingehen wird. @@texacomann
Thanks for the feedback! 😊
The 800 does sound a bit flatter, a bit less warm & juicy … but I couldn’t say for sure it’s not just the settings 🤷🏻♂️, and in any case: it’s crazy how good the 800 is for the money …
To my ears, the prophet 5 has a tad more weight and authority to its sound signature. The pro 800 has a slightly grating/piercing sound at times. They’re definitely not worlds apart though, and the pro 800 is excellent value.
Great job matching the timbres.
Many thanks! 😊
I'd love a Prophet 5 Rev 4 keyboard version though, it just oozes mojo, great looks and the pedigree....
But, I'm lucky enough to own a Prophet 6 and the Pro800 came a couple of weeks back so I guess I have all sonic bases covered?
Great review!
Thanks a lot - I slso love my P5, cannot live without the vintage knob and the filter switch...
@@PeteMidi everyone raves about the vintage knob firmware upgrade on the Prophet 6 but to my ears I don't hear a huge amount of difference....?
The vintage knob is great - I have it on my P10, Trigon 6, and Take 5 (and a similar thing on my UB-Xa) and it really shines with the microvariations per voice in the filter envelopes. I had a Rev 2, and never got on with the slop knob - to me it just sounded shit unless it was planted at 0 (I did like the Rev 2 otherwise - I just sold it to get a Trigon 6. . .would gladly own another one, but I think I made a good call for a few reasons).
the prophet-5 sounds a bit tighter and bassier but it's super close
Shows very well how similar sonically they are. Behringer have a good product there. People will buy a genuine Sequential for more reasons than the sound - you can get that with a plug in. I find I'm attracted to these Behringer products because I'm their target market - those that wanted these tools back in the late 1970's early 80's but the cost was stratospheric. These days the prices have soared on these vintage synths so they are hard to justify when you can get the same sound with a better workflow in a plug in, but the yearning remains. I don't currently own any Behringer products - other than a Xtouch one to control Logic. I found the synth modules didn't fit in with my current workflow and the size was fiddly. The quality of the couple I owned was great (Neutron and K2). I think the Behringer synth clones in the module format are a great alternative to modular. They are affordable and require less patching and indeed can be eurorack mounted. Certainly a gateway drug to modular. I can't think of any reason to buy a Behringer synth for myself right now as I can't see how it would help me be more productive or offer something to enhance what I'm doing in the box. I do need a performance keyboard though with poly aftertouch. 4 octave or more. Something made of real metal so gig worthy. Maybe that could be something Behringer could add to their portfolio, but it would have to be decent quality...
Yes, that's a positive aspect, that more musicians are able to think about and try out a hardware-based workflow, which may work better or not for them - you usually do not know this before you tried it.
Get the niftykeyz to go with the pro-800
The P5 has a bit more chunkiness. But not that much more! I might have a hard time in a double-blind test knowing which was which each time (except sync which I’d probably guess right every time). I’ll bet i’d get it wrong sometimes on everything else. Anyway, surprising how little difference there is.
I was reading comments while watching the video and couldn't tell which synth was playing at any given time so effectively they sound the same. If you gave me one for free I'd want the sequential, if I have to pay for it I'm buying the behringer.
The behringer sounds a bit more lo-if to my ears. Almost thinner as well. I own the behringer and love it, but it can sound a bit too scratchy at times.
Curious does the Pro 800 have the latest firmware. There were big improvements to the Filter and Envelope. Seriously If I was playing these blind and I stepped away then someone switched them and dialed in the patches I probably wouldn’t notice the difference.
Yes, latest firmware - with the original first firmware the comparison would have been somewhat different ...
Thanks, by the way. I got mine a few weeks back and loving it.
Always a great time watching your vids !! thank you for your informative perspective
Thanks a lot! 😊
Hey thank you Pete this vid helped me to decide to buy the pro 800@@PeteMidi
It sounds SO selling :D !
One thing I really would like that Behringer to add - the multitembrality! It will make this synth much cooler even without separate audio outputs per voice. Without it I'm really unsure if I want to buy it. Because the market will change after Behringer new synths. Not immediately... And probably somebody will "resurrect" MFB Synth Pro. It's a really capable synth, IMHO much more promising than Prophet-5 or Beh Pro 800.
I love Behringer, but the Pro-800 reminded me to buy a Prophet-600 yesterday.
The Prophet does sound slightly better. More body in the lower mids and more mellow sounding treble, the filter is a little more refined and so is the glide/portamento but other than that there is very little between them. Considering the price difference those minor shortcomings of the Behringer can absolutely be ignored. I’m amazed the sound was as close as it turned out to be, and you even have extra voices to add.
Thank you for making this video, great method of comparison, but you have now made me want to buy one 😅
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I have a Prophet 10 and two Pro 800's. The bottom line is the Prophet 5 (10) has a richness that the pro800 does not. I wish it did because I would love to sell the P10 and pocket all that money but I will never. It is pure magic. Is it worth the price difference?? That's the question....but I will never sell my P10. It's my desert island synth.
Fantastic comparison video, really great!
Now my old and battered ears should never be used as any audio reference, but i'd still like to share my impression and knowledge about the electronics inside ...
- It seems to me, as a constant throughout this video, the p-5 has a little more volume than the p-800. Easy to fix using any common mixer.
- It seems to me, as a constant throughout this video, the p-5 has a little more low end and is a bit brighter on the high end, than the p-800. Also easy to fix using any common mixer.
The differences are minute. In theory this is expected, since both companies use modern versions of the original CEM integrated circuits. Thanks to Dave Smith the heirs of Doug Curtis have started to reproduce the original line of CEM ICs. Other manufacturers like Oberheim, Roland and Korg, to name a few have also benefitted from that.
Now Behringer took a somewhat different route. He set up mass-production lines for ICs similar to the original CEMs as well as for other analog components that had long been out of production, especially the LM13700 OTAs and some transistors. These components were intensively used in older synthesizers, even before the first CEM ICs appeared.
And since Behringer specializes in recreating vintage synths from various original brands they require huge numbers of all of these components, making their manufacturing line profitable.
The sound differences being minute, a choice between these two would, for me, depend on size and on features (e.g. polymod on p-5, 8 voices on p-800).
Many thanks for the feedback!
I saw a review that said the pro800 lacks the sharpness of attack of the P5, so I compared the two to focus on that point. It is true that the pro800 seems to have a weaker attack click, but whether you can tell the difference by mixing them in the mix, let alone if you are a performer... I don't know, I'm not sure.
If you are a keyboardist who cares about the feel of your performance, P5 is the best choice, if you want to mix a little analog polysynth on your DAW track, Pro800 is enough, but for that purpose, I would choose a cheaper Softube or u-he plugin.
Thank you! Behringer did a very good job. It sounds very good and the original 600 has some issues I assume this one doesn't have.
The old Prophet 5 was also a tad warmer to my ears, the 600 a bit colder, futuristic, sci fi something ( not a negative ).
But they could do different jobs and shine in different "areas" ... That P5 rev4 does seem to have better control over It's sound.
My B Pro-1 is the same when you do certain things, the original does them much better. But nothing one would care about.
It can sound 5 percent prettier ... sometimes. :)
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Excellent comparison. Both sound great and the PRO-800 packs a lot of value!
Thanks a lot! 😊
Yikes! That was scary! Amazing demo!
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Thanks for the comparison! Behringer is almost always fantastic for the prices they charge. I much prefer the sound of the Prophet compared to what sounded to me to be the thinner, higher pitched, and seemingly faster modulation of the Behringer. The Prophet just sounds more musical and magical and open to me. Definitely being drawn more and more towards Prophets as my musical/synth journey continues. And what a journey! It’s a great time to be a creative musical nerd. 🫶
Thanks for the nice feedback!
The difference is only a fantasy in my ears, and the influence of the once great star *Prophet 5* , and that people still cannot believe, that Beringer can make it possible with smd-technology right now, same they did it very well with the minimoog-clone "Model D" ;D
Thanks that's awesome. The P800 also POLY aftertouch since the latest update (1.2.7), which should make for a lot of fun when combined with a hydrasynth, for example. Now if only Behringer adds PWM as a destination for Polymod, i really see no reason to need a P5 anymore. Oh wait my P6 can do that ;)
😄Thanks for the feedback!
1.27 brought a lot of other things missing earlier. Much greater range for : filter env amount, LFO to filter, some polymod amounts etc.
A few months ago I had a pro800 and a prophet rev2 in my home studio and the prophet literally kicked the pro 800, perhaps because it was one of the first units the controls did not do things well, it sounded weak next to the propher rev2 which seemed like a Maybach and the other an Audi A4, maybe it was the firmware I don't know but I returned it I didn't like it at all, but in all the videos I see it sounds incredibly similar to a prophet but that was not my case
I’m glad that both exist. Both sound great to me.
Maybe Moog Music’s recent acquisition by InMusic was accelerated by strong competition from Behringer?
Still too soon to know the impact of the acquisition; there will be some positives; nevertheless a big change for the company
Thanks for the feedback, fully agree!
Moog Music's acquisition was accelerated to quash a unionzation effort by the employees.
Unfortunately that’s true. Professor Moog would be concerned. Happens all the time when the original owner dies or retires. The partners who said ‘we’ll keep it all just like before,’ never do.
As I did with the Behringer Model D and Minimoog Model D Reissue, I have bought both the keyboard version for Moog and Sequential and the module for Behringer
Genius move of behringer for secureing their own chipset , the pro800 will foreshadow maybe a similar fate that had put american synthcompanies out of business in the 80s
Man what a comparison! Thanks
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Unless Behringer suddenly changed how their eurorack-form cases are manufactured, the side cheeks aren't plastic. Just wanted to point that out in your facts section. You can take them off and double check. They're just thin and precisely cut.
Yes, my mistake, sorry - in comparison to the P5 wooden parts it feels and looks like plastic, but it isn't ...
You did a very good job matching the sounds! I overall did like the Prophet 5’s sound slightly better, but this would probably be the same if you compared it to an original Pro600. The Prophet’s sound was a bit livelier and vintage sounding to me, particularly when using oscillator sync. The filter also sounds a bit smoother and more refined. But these aren’t big differences and maybe meaningless to the average person. However there’s no denying that the Behringer offers great value for money and has some additional features the Prophet doesn’t have.
Thanks for the great feedback! 😊
You have a gorgeous set of presets ❤
Many thanks! 😊
@1:20 _"wood vs plastic"_
The end cheeks on the P800 are wood (the same for all these small Behringer desktop synths, they all have wood - not plastic - end cheeks).
Oh sorry, it looks and feels like a plastic wood imitation... 😄
@@PeteMidi The wood they used to use was that horrible red wood (no clue what it's called), but recently they've moved to something much nicer on the Solina and the P800, but yeah, it's real wood, it's always been real wood, they've never used plastic. I think their varnish / seal finish makes it look a little plastic ?
Yes, thanks for pointing this out!
Just like the Berhringer Pro-1, the Pro-800 lacks the transient detail of the Sequential synths. Listen to the attack portion of every note played - it's fairly obvious to me.
Say and think what you will about Behringer, their biggest success is proving that good synths can be made more inexpensively and made affordable than the old guards Moog, Prophet, Roland and Oberheim were willing to admit or implement. Every market needs someone to shake it up from time to time.
Almost the same. The slight differences could be fixed in a mix.
Behringer this is an amazing accomplishment.
Prophet 5's low-end impact and transient response are definitely better... listening to the comparison with my Genelec system, and the difference is noticeable!
Hello, I have one, I needed polyphony in Eurorack with adsr filters and so on, this one is perfect, but I had no idea that it is a clone of the prophet ahahahahahahahaha, they sound the same, my goodness Behringer, this is amazing, greetings
for a price difference of 6 times against the pro800 the minor [ prefered the portamento on the prophet 5 ] it is quite admirable for 1/6 of a reprduction of the prophet 5
...
I think the P5-desktop sounds a bit richer in the low end. Personally I will go for the P5 since it has a history and comes from the original manufactor. For me when selecting between synths it's not only the sounds that matters, it's also the look and feel to use it.
Great video
Thanks a lot! 😊
Nice comparison video…. I like the way you did the arpeggio demos and switching volume to clearly show the units producing the sounds. 👍
Thanks a lot! 😊
The Prophet 5 does sound better to my ears, but in terms of value-for-money it’s really no comparison at all.
The Behringer is 99% there. (with the vibe of the original). If it was 70-80% I would believe its close. But in my opinion the Behringer captures that "magic vibe" of the original.
Hello i was wandering if you have tried your 2 Pro 800s together to for 4 oscillator 8 voice distopian future past monster? 👾
Oh yes, sounds very impressive, in stereo! 👍
I swear to god the Behringer sounds less alive somehow- more "2d" I guess? I really love some of their mono stuff, I thought their Poly D sounded pretty good too, but this falls into the same category of boring/just use digital as the Deepmind for me. Maybe it's different in person and while I highly doubt anyone would know the difference in a fully mixed song there's still a small something lacking.
It's still a great option for the price, I wouldn't turn one down. Edit: so I just listened to a 600 v 800, and I could not distinguish. As a point of comparison, I do think that is more fair for obvious reasons- I don't think pricetag makes a thing good, and maybe my ears are bias against the edgelords at Behringer, but I would take the pure sound of the 5 over the 800. I would take the pure sound of the 5 over the 600. I would take the value of the 800 over either, lol.
The chords DRY section: The p5 sounds beefier and has more spread compared to the behringer sounding more thin and phase cancellation.
Big deal breaker
Still the P800 sounds a lot more Brassy to me than the P5.... The P5 can do it all, it's techno all the way. Owing a P5 for over a long time now, I can say it sounds very high end and luxurious.. There is something beefy also noticeable in higher notes, a thickness and golden edge of presence on top of the sounds. It just blends into a mix without any treatment. The issue I have with most Behrs is that I had a hard time to get all of them properly in the mix compared to my other sound sources. At a first listen things sound great and similar maybe. That is not the point. From all Behringer, the Wasp was a keeper but still it required me to do a decent amount of additional treatment to let it sit in the mix. I found most oscillators from Behringer had a generic flavour. Not to mention the incredible harsh top end some of their gear has... Something that never pleased my ears. You can't expect from one factory to produce all sportscar and brands and have all the distinct differences and characters between them. The looks are the first thing, under the hood it's all just a lot of bread and butter is my impression. It's great that Behringer make the music scene somehow more democratic but I wonder if this is really their idealistic mission.. What if one day Ford decides to start producing Ferrari's, Lamborghini's and Lada's.... For sure a lot of synths have been way overpriced but you also thought twice before buying and wasting your creative time..
Thanks for the detailed feedback!
Thanks for this side by side breakdown. I contemplated selling my Synths to fund a Prophet 10 but I would not dream of that now. With Pro800, and prophet 16 /Ubxa in the pipeline, sequential products are not on my list.
I agree with you, although in my case I was never going to buy a new Prophet 5- I can't afford one unfortunately. But maybe I might have bought an old Pro600, I sure wouldn't now!
@@lundswedenI return to this video 1 month later and will save for a P10 desktop😅. I hope you get the Pro800, it's an excellent machine for sure.
The P5/10 is a high ranking Synth for good reason and on my wish list for over 10 years, it's an organic Synth.
The Prophet-5 seems to have more low end bass body sound.
More like Uli vs Dave. ;)
Thanks for the comparison. Out of curiosity, how do you have both synths connected via USB? Are you running the Arturia to a USB hub then the modules into the USB hub?
😊 Yes, all devices connected via usb, routing in AUM on ipad, no problems in this case...
The P-800 is Poss Slightly thinner and more polished sounding Whereas the Prophet 5 Sounds Deeper Slightly Bigger and more lush with more Dimensionality....But I Don't Know if its possible to detune the P-800 Slightly or add some saturation to get a little closer.....or maybe poss even just a little more low end and low mid on the EQ might bring out the same Depth which may be slightly hidden within the P-800's slightly Brighter Sound although I'm Pretty Sure that it's the case that there is a little deeper Modulation very Subtly Going on Within the Prophet's innate Sound Signature....???? But were I not tuned in completely with highly tuned ears the difference would be slight & knowing what you're looking for there may be another way to exaggerate those same attributes in the P-800 to get even closer to the Prophet....But the Difference is def there especially in the first three sequences and although slight depending on how much you concentrate on it. But it appears to be innate to both units....But Synthesis done well is all about the complexity created by the modulations and micro modulations created in the sound that give a feeling of dimensionality and the ear, the attention and the mind Somewhere to go, almost like opening up another dimension or sound world we can enter through our ears which is why Big Reverbs Have the Same effect explaining our innate ability and innate need and instantaneous curiosity with which we enter and explore new sound worlds with our auditory senses as we have done using our ears to explore our physical world for millions and millions of years.... And is especially why 'traditonal or ethnic' and especially eastern instruments are so enchanting & appealing and sound so deeply transcendental and mesmerising and have the ability to really take you some where and allow yo auto go so deep within their mesmerising sound in addition to their deep and innate cultural significance because they have these resonances and complexities inherent within the sound giving the ear the mind and more importantly our consciousness and sense of being a whole new complex and constantly evolving sound world to inhabit to disappear into and explore.... or in this case with the Prophet and the P-800 Sequential are adding a subtle thickness lushness & richness to the sound of the Prophet So this may...??? open up more potential for this kind of deeper interest inherent within the sound.... Although shinny polished sounds psycoacoustically and semiotically and culturally take us into the the world of Chimes and Bells which is a whole different sonic world to explore and which has a very particular and innate effect on the human Psyche and the ability to employ and exploit these resonances and complexities in a more stable sound at much higher frequencies which has it's own special an innate effect on the Psyche all together.....And 8 Voices is a lot more harmonic potential especially the ability to echo harmonic structures and add transients and therefore greater depth of modulation and complexity from sub bass to the very highest frequencies depending on how many octaves and the frequency the instrument will generate could poss be another highly creative way to explore.....And there may be another way to detune or add saturation to the P-800 to get slightly closer to the Prophets Sound....But Fantastic Comparison Pete and Thanks So much for putting it Together for us man too....!!!!!!!! Chris :)
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What people need to understand is that the P600 which the Pro-800 is based on, was always the budget version of the P5. It can sound very close on basic patches such as the ones showcased here but when you push poly-mod, the oscillators, the EG, voice allocation etc the differences becomes more apparent. Not to mention the Rev4 has vintage knob and two filter types. And then there is the night & day build quality..
I agree 😉
Hmmmm, maybe. But 5 note poly v 8 note. The pro 800 also has extra modultion options than the 600 (same as prophet 5) and poly aftertouch. The 8 notes and poly aftertouch a pretty damming to the prophet, no question. but of course the prophet is higher quality build and components.
If you want the sound: Buy a VST. If you want hardware: Buy Behringer. If you want the joy of owning the real thing: Buy the reissues.
None of that is wrong or right. It's about emotions. I own a Prophet 10 and a Behringer Pro 1. I love to play and touch the Prophet. But if I need another voice it's good to have the Pro 1. I also bought a minimoog reissue and an Behringer Model D. Both are fun.
Now that I'm an old man I have the money to afford that luxury. Being a Bass player I spent most of my musical carrer playing just one bass: a 1973 Jazz-Bass: I made some money being a session player, played it for Rock, Jazz, Pop, ... style sessions. I wish that in my young years I had such a choice of good quality and cheap alternatives.
But on the other hand: Overcoming restrictions makes you a better musician, not better equipment.
There are tiny differences , but nothing worth 5-6x the price difference.