I just bought your Perfourmer from a guy in Hastings 😂 I had one before and have had too much regret about selling so re-bought. I personally think it’s the nicest sounding synth I’ve ever owned and I’ve had a few!
i sold my perfourmer probably 4-5 years ago, and have owned a great deal of very impressive synths (many costing many times what the vermona did), but will admit i too regret selling it- it really is a special machine, which from a purely sonic standpoint far outperforms many much more expensive synths. i will be looking for another soon. terrific synth.
I adressed a critic to your last video, and explained why. This time I want to congratulate the very good work here: immersive and interesting walkthrough of the P4, with very good accurency and relevance. In my opinion, you mentioned the most important thing with the Perfourmer : while being a marvel of sounds at some points, it may not match the expectations of some users. Not for a sound consideration, but for a workflow conception. Taking the most profit of this synth involves a very different sense of read, and definitely a live/jam approach in most cases, what you explained very well. As an owner of the P4, I will say that in a world where the machines of this range take on the appearance of yachts that compete in technology, comfort, design, power, Vermona has decided to take a certain form of the opposite by offering a magnificent old-fashioned sailboat through the Perfourmer. A 4 masts built in the purest of the maritime traditions of sailing ships: a crazy charm, a sublime finish in the service of an obvious know-how, and beyond, another way of approaching the sea, a unique experience apart whole. On a side technical note, I would just add some points that I’m not sure they were mentioned (I could be wrong), and that could bring some useful informations to some functions for those who are interested in the P4 details: - All the LFO can be synched to the midi clock, or to internal clock - You can change the shape of each LFO waves independently / square, saw, sin or Sample&hold - You can setup and modulate the width of the square wave of the LFOs - You can activate Pitch bend and modulation wheel for each voice independently (which creates pretty cool modulation opportunities) - You wan modulate the width of the shape for square waves in the VCO with the modulation wheel when activated - There is an auto-glide activable function - There is a version of the P4 inclunding all the CV interface for modular synth usages - You can use the Vermona as a filter bank as each voice is able to treat external audio signal with the VCF. By the way, you can switch off individualy each VCO. - Each dedicated voice jack plug has 2 different functions of IN and 2 fdifferent functions of OUT. No button to switch, the only way is to use different audio cable (which could be surprising). With a TR cable, the IN allow you to make enter an external audio signal, and the Out let just extract the sound of the voice. With a TRS audio cable, you can plug as IN an insert directly in each strip, and as a Out, you can extract the sound of the raw VCO without passing through the VCF which is useful if you want to use another external filter for treatment … as a Sherman or a moog ladder performant filter in example ;) Note that there is a global main out plus 1 individual out per voice and when you extract 1 voice individualy, it automatically diactivated it in the global main. Great & very enjoyable video
The per voice jack feature is definitely one I use a ton to effect individual voices with pedal chains via TRS/insert cable; even more so on my Verrmona DRM. Great adds with your comment, thank you.
One thing often overlooked. Vermona will repair your synth fast and good even 10 years after you bought it and it's quite cheap! I bought a drm1mk3 10 years ago in used condition and had it repaired two years ago... it's like new again. If they build it they will fix it.
The Perfourmer feels like an instrument more than any other synth I own. That's why it can only be played live and once. Its particularly good for people that don't play keys or come from a guitar background like me. Two sequences and a drone from a sequencer, some shimmer, and there you are losing yourself for hours, just tweaking the knobs, swimming in a sea of musicality. If I should compare it, I would say it's a melodic Lyra8. Apart from Oora, who is great, check also Mika Forsling's stuff. Tim, it seems the Perfourmer was not made for your workflow. Thanks for this great and honest review.
@@ThanasisPapathanasiou1963 Hiya! Most of the time I bury Lyra as a mystery source in recordings. When placed just below the surface it adds colour and depth like nothing else. Here's something from a Game soundtrack. Bit of everything really and a lot of verb, more Lyra only a little Vermona but you can hear how Lyra adds to a soundscape. sonickitchenaudio.bandcamp.com/track/mystic-redemption
Here's something from a Game soundtrack. Bit of everything really and a lot of verb, more Lyra than Vermona but you can hear how Lyra adds to a soundscape. sonickitchenaudio.bandcamp.com/track/mystic-redemption
I absolutely love the PerFourmer. I can play it for hours, making different sequences, and then switching modes finding something amazing. I have no ambitions of playing live, but I find this synth very inspiring and beautiful.
Beautiful ending! Nice emotional track. The Perfourmer has its challenges, but it seems it’s a real real instrument you can fall in love with… and complicated love stories are always the most intense ones… ;)
Another outstanding and thorough review Mr. Shoebridge. Thank you for adding another YT channel to check out, I was not familiar with Oora before, but I am glad I am now. You continue to provide insights into not only the equipment, but how to properly and effectively use it. I appreciate you taking the time to figure out exactly how best to approach discussing this synth. The peak behind the scenes of how you set up these wonderful videos was simply brilliant, such a great idea for signing off. I swear I learn more tips and tricks from one of your videos than any synth or recording magazine I have ever read!
Definitive review and showing all aspects of the synth at it's best and a really lovely ending piece. Definitely one that gets under your skin. Thanks!
Masterful demonstration of this niche analog polysynth. I hope Vermona take notice of the many subtle points you raise and addresses them in a long-overdue Mark-iii It would also be lovely to see your take on their ‘14 monosynth, if you get your hands on one. (decades in executive meetings…your storytelling skills are really up-there 😉)
Great musicality. Tastefully arranged. This one gem right for and from the Vermona guys. A 50 min. product presentation covering advanced subjects. Many thanks for this thorough examination. Very well executed and I'd hope that more channels take note of your approach.
@Tim Shoebridge I never thought I would want a synth more than when I've watched your demo. This was a sleeping giant synth that I never realised its versatility until your video.
This was excellent! I’ve had a Perfourmer for a while, and I still learnt a few things from this video. And I would love to see the horror film that has Nightmare as a soundtrack.
Credit where credits due. Great review of a modern classic synth. I didn’t think much of your original “personal statement” but hope you took all comments on board as constructive feedback :)
Thank you for producing the video, Tim. Excellent sharing of thoughts and impressions. I also have an MC-707, and that seems like a potentially fun pair for live brainstorming or performing, along with something like the Typhon (which I also have). Imagine a collaboration between Vermona and Dreadbox, a Mediterranean melange, combined with boutique-quality effects by Sinevibes, and with 3 switchable/selectable filters for each voice, including the 4-pole on the Typhon, the current PerFourMer filter, and a Moog-style ladder filter. And, while I’m dreaming, imagine an integrated Conductive Labs NDLR-type capability, with drone, melody, and chords option combinations, depending on how you choose to allocate the use of the 4 voices. Ah, my impractical, futile daydreaming. Lol Anyway, thanks again, Tim. Again, we have very similar sensibilities and aesthetic tastes. Thank you for your efforts, and for sharing the synth journey with us all, in this place in time space. ☺️👊🏼💥✊🏼
Amazing review Tim, thank you. Your sound examples were lovely (that especially creepy one was quite something), and helping to demystify the workflow/configuration was a really comprehensive section. Loved the montage at the end, a good reminder of all the work which goes into these.
And here I am, 8 months later, with one in my studio. LOL. While it is a performance instrument, and I hardly use it out of the studio, it allows me to focus on performance while recording, evolving the sounds and actually making the entire progression somehow "manual".
Very well done demo! Great information, lovely musical examples, and your nice voice and handsome leading man looks make for a pleasant viewing that goes by quickly. 👌😎👍 I've had a Perfourmer MkII for a couple years now but I haven't spent enough quality time with it yet to learn it well so your video was helpful.
Selling my PerFOURmer last year has been one of my biggest regrets. I ignorantly thought the Matriarch would replace the use cases, but I was wrong... I miss that lush sound of Vermona.
I bought a perfourmer when I couldn't stomach the cost of the Matriarch only to find a really good deal a few months later on a second hand Matriarch, I can't let go of the perfourmer though it's a great workflow synth with a lot of hidden complexity under it's disarming simplicity.
So in terms of alternatives (in or out of production) here's a very unpopular but relevant one: the Akai Timbre Wolf. It was simpler in every respect and the price reflected it but had four identical voices, and three play modes (round robin mono, unison, and poly). To me it sounded great, in fact very similar to the Perfourmer even though it had only two wave forms. Somehow I wasn't bothered by the lack of LFO but hated the fact the Timbre Wolf didn't have an arpeggiator to complement its keyboard and that the pitch bend was fixed to a whole step. If it weren't for these two flaws I would have kept it for sure in spite of all its limitations because of its sheer sound, and it would have been my main live synth. That thing actually felt like an instrument to improvise on, not something you constantly have to look at and program. It would be cool for a keyboard synth to be released that's half way between the Timbre Wolf and Perfourmer in terms of complexity and price, but with that same identical voice concept. I think that identical voices concept goes back to ancient Oberheim synths.
Hey Tim - love your videos - your opinion and thoughts make them really valuable, more so than a straight review :-) This has informed me about whether or not this will be on my wishlidst 😉 Love the outro, particularly the spoken words. I think they give music such as this a certain frisson. At least that's what I'm going for when I do it 😀
Another alternative, elektron's Analog Four / Analog Keys. Four independent voices, MIDI-addressable, can do configurable voice allocations for polyphony.
Brian Rowe - I'm leaning towards the Analog Four because of patch memories and the amazing sequencer. I know it's not as hands on but I also know myself, patch memories allow me to work on three or four things at once. The VP may be a luxury synth in the future, I've always admired it a lot.
@@leftmono1016 I hear that! Instruments have come and gone in my setup, but the Analog Keys has remained. It does take some exploring, but the sounds are so full of character! And yes, the sequencer is now even better than when I got it years ago thanks to OS updates.
Very helpful and some great music as well.:-) First real how-to video on the Perfourmer MkII I've seen. Only critique is that you recorded your voice to loudly compared to the synth, so that I was constantly changing the volume. Your comment about getting a copyright strike was funny because it's true.
Hi Tim, Today I found your review on Waldorf Kyra and then now watched Venmona Perfourmer MKII. Nice video and I know you took quite a long time to film this "Thoughts" and not to mention the editing. Nice Job and just Sub'ed
Very interesting walk-through, thanks Tim. Interested in the MIDI Sequencing capabilities upon Live Performance. I'll learn a touch more. Seems an ideal Tool thus far. Appreciated.
Fantastic intro. Great review. I will say this. There’s a few Guys who have this piece of gear and man do they make some of the nose beautiful music. Well dune.
Elektron Analogue 4 is for sure an alternative that actually outperforms Perfourmer in terms of features, control and value for money in general. But this thing seems to have a really wonderful sound...
I'm really curious how the mk1 compares to the mk2.. since it's impossible to verify which revision of the mk2 you may be getting.. if buying used I've also been admiring OoraMusic's usage of the mk2 recently, though..
Mk1 which was discontinued many years ago was completely different sounding, I would say more metallic kinda, more alive/mechanical even, while mk2 is more on the warm , round side..you can still find the former used, I miss mine :)
the perfourmer is inside four completed independant synth. 4 independant cards + à control one . The name: perfourmer , say it all: four synth concentrated to perform live . It is a unique synth for that , compact with symmetric switch. The sound is unbelievable deep and so unique. You have it in front of you and you play … this is not a keyboard synth , not a euro rack synth, this is a perfourmer for performance. Thanks for your point of view, allways appreciate.
Do you have the midi files for this track and would be willing to share it? I would like to do a remix of it when my perfourmer arrives + add a dash of Vermona '14
Love your channel, but must say (i own a Perfourmer MK2) that the audio demos don't do justice to this synthesizer. I didn't hear a lot of the filter action, which is stunning. Most of the demo's were using sine/triangle/square waves whereas i feel this synth sounds exceptionally beautiful with saw oscillators. Last but not least: i didn't hear the sound that melts hearts: a 4 voice saw pad sound with a slow filter envelope, voices panned apart and all 4 osc pitch modulated every so slightly by the lfo. That sound. Is. So. Unbelievable gorgeous!
Great video and strong influence on my decision to buy a Perfourmer which I'm running through an MC- 707 BUT I just can't get the 707 to control the volume of the Perfourmer as you seem to do in this video. Can I ask please if you do this through Midi and if so how its setup. Thanks.
Hi, I'm controlling the perfourmer via MIDI but then feeding the audio outputs back into the 707. You can assign tracks in the 707 as audio tracks, and to take their input from the 4 available external inputs. This then allows me to pan the audio, adjust levels and also to apply effects from within the 707.
Thank you for this insight. Would you consider the Syntrx I/II direct equivalents? I am not sure if you have a review on the Syntrx or the recently released Syntrx II, but I’ll go check. Your reasoning gives me much to think about.
Here is the thing with this synth - it sounds very "German" - clean, discrete filter, i love all these different options. But, it is focused on live performance (duh!). I would love to add it to my collection, but I cannot see the financial justification in this - I have Pro 2, Pro 3 and Subsequent 37, plus some other stuff, and I am well covered on mono-front. Also, for the price of this synth you can get A4 which in the end does the same thing, but sports Elektron sequencer and effects. I understand the difference, but i think that voice quality goes just a little bit in favour of Perfourmer (it is very basic architecture and sound). I just think there are so many great synths out there - for that pricetag, you can get used Pro 2, for instance, or add two hundred and get a Pro 3. Again, Perfourmer sound is beautiful, had it for a while and loved hands on control and mode switches - i am a sucker for FM pluck going through spring delay. It sounds even more beautiful when you run it through effects because the base sound is as i said, "German" (if you know what i mean by that when it comes to synth sound:) . I would love to have kept it but i just couldn't justify this.
As usual, that's a great explanation of a2 piece of gear . Congratulations , i still don't know if you are a good seller or professor ...🤔🙂 both of them ,i'm sure , and also a nice musician 🤗
Your video looks kind of raw with a gray pall over it. I think with this camera setting it is intended that you need to do post-production to this raw video.
Great review! I wonder how you would compare the PERfourMER to four Model Ds with MIDI-CV module (like you had in an older video) in terms of sound & flexibility?
Behringer Model D's? Well 3 VCO's, 2 envelopes and a wonderful filter will make for an amazing synth voice, and they have poly-chaining built in if you want to use that, but those more complex voices need more hands-on control and you don't have the voice-linking capabilities of the Perfourmer. I think for live use the Perfourmer would be the better choice but in the studio, with time and patience, the Model D's would give you the greatest flexibility and sonic depth, but that's just my opinion.
Dear Tim, hello, I hope you are doing just fine!! I was wondering if you still own the behringer deepmind. I have seen a lot of videos on that synth, but I just really love your reviews lol I know it isn´t a new piece of gear, but it would really nice if you did a video on it u.u
Excellent showcase, thank you! ...hey couldn't help but notice that mc707 beside the Vermona. What's up with that? Wouldn't have thought you're into grooveboxes. (:
Say what you will about the resonance issue, it sounds amazing. DSI tetra is similar too, though needs a hardware controller to make the most of it. I'm already subbed to Oora. Love his content.
I just realised something about Tim. He is the synthworlds equivalent to Tony Stark/Iron Man😁 Like Tony Stark he has all the cool gadgets around him and like Iron Man he delivers hardpunching lessons using the gadgets to those needing it👍 Whenever I see a new video from Tim is availible I always crack a smile and look forward to watching it once I can make sure I have plenty of time to just sit and enjoy to the fullest.
Not sure it would be a very relevant comparison: these 2 engine have only 4 voices feature in common. Everything else, from the sounds to the workflows, define an opposite conception and usage. To compare the both would look like to compare golf to football, not really a learnings centric dynamic imo
I've owned an analog4 and a couple of analog keys over the years. Really love the concept but it took me a long time to get into the workflow and for it to not "get in the way" if you know what I mean. The first 6 months I spent scratching my head, I started to think there was something wrong with me! I think an A4 is comparable to a perfourmer in some ways - four analog voices, flexibility in terms of voice allocation, both definitely built with live performance in mind. To my ears each voice of an A4 sounds not very analogue, a bit bland TBH, but it is the bringing together of those voices, the sequenced automation plus the effects all combining so that the raw sound of each voice is not actually important. You can say the same about the perfourmer in that each voice is basic, but it is how they combine that matters to the result. The workflow of the perfourmer is simple, but that is of course because it has no presets, no projects, no sequencer, no effects, no ability to output CV, etc etc. For the price, picking up a used A4 is a steal given all those capabilities you get in the box.
Curious: did you delete the comment from the girl who complained about being "washed out" or did she delete it herself? I guess she was referencing your grey blacks rather than the synth
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I'm wondering how it compares sonically to the Elektron Analog 4. I've been shopping for a 4 voice analog synth with individual outs. Elektron's Analog Keys and A4mkii are at the top of the list so far, but this also looks like a good contender.
The comparison with elektron A4 would make no sense in my opinion, because they are radically opposite engines. So it fully depends what you want to achieve with these 4 voices, what your workflow is and what the setup in which you want to include them is. In example, one of the A4 assets is to propose one of the best sequencer on the market, large memory and file management, crazy effects etc ... P4 has only midi note with no effect, neither pattern nor preset management. No keyboard or any way to play the p4 directly. And this is just the top of the iceberg.if you talk about raw sound, for me the Vermona Is much better, but what you can do with your raw sound with an A4 is stellar so here the comparison does not make anymore sense to me:
Quite similar to the analog four, it sounds a bit better and fatter, but for the money the a4 offers so much more with the built in sequencing features
you don't really have to destroy a patch, lol, there's ways to save it, but I'm doing what Junkie XL does, and not telling the whole world how to do it
“Sometime you want simplicity…” just get a piano then don’t put down a synth because it has a dedicated knob for each function. You’re a negative elitist reviewer time to retire old man.
Great vid, thanks for posting I've had one for a while now, I'm almost tempted to get a second one and polychain though a midi them together for a big old 8 voice, simple but super organic. Could be a pain to dial in a patch but that'd be a lovely sound
I just bought your Perfourmer from a guy in Hastings 😂 I had one before and have had too much regret about selling so re-bought. I personally think it’s the nicest sounding synth I’ve ever owned and I’ve had a few!
i sold my perfourmer probably 4-5 years ago, and have owned a great deal of very impressive synths (many costing many times what the vermona did), but will admit i too regret selling it- it really is a special machine, which from a purely sonic standpoint far outperforms many much more expensive synths. i will be looking for another soon. terrific synth.
I adressed a critic to your last video, and explained why. This time I want to congratulate the very good work here: immersive and interesting walkthrough of the P4, with very good accurency and relevance. In my opinion, you mentioned the most important thing with the Perfourmer : while being a marvel of sounds at some points, it may not match the expectations of some users. Not for a sound consideration, but for a workflow conception. Taking the most profit of this synth involves a very different sense of read, and definitely a live/jam approach in most cases, what you explained very well.
As an owner of the P4, I will say that in a world where the machines of this range take on the appearance of yachts that compete in technology, comfort, design, power, Vermona has decided to take a certain form of the opposite by offering a magnificent old-fashioned sailboat through the Perfourmer. A 4 masts built in the purest of the maritime traditions of sailing ships: a crazy charm, a sublime finish in the service of an obvious know-how, and beyond, another way of approaching the sea, a unique experience apart whole.
On a side technical note, I would just add some points that I’m not sure they were mentioned (I could be wrong), and that could bring some useful informations to some functions for those who are interested in the P4 details:
- All the LFO can be synched to the midi clock, or to internal clock
- You can change the shape of each LFO waves independently / square, saw, sin or Sample&hold
- You can setup and modulate the width of the square wave of the LFOs
- You can activate Pitch bend and modulation wheel for each voice independently (which creates pretty cool modulation opportunities)
- You wan modulate the width of the shape for square waves in the VCO with the modulation wheel when activated
- There is an auto-glide activable function
- There is a version of the P4 inclunding all the CV interface for modular synth usages
- You can use the Vermona as a filter bank as each voice is able to treat external audio signal with the VCF. By the way, you can switch off individualy each VCO.
- Each dedicated voice jack plug has 2 different functions of IN and 2 fdifferent functions of OUT. No button to switch, the only way is to use different audio cable (which could be surprising). With a TR cable, the IN allow you to make enter an external audio signal, and the Out let just extract the sound of the voice. With a TRS audio cable, you can plug as IN an insert directly in each strip, and as a Out, you can extract the sound of the raw VCO without passing through the VCF which is useful if you want to use another external filter for treatment … as a Sherman or a moog ladder performant filter in example ;) Note that there is a global main out plus 1 individual out per voice and when you extract 1 voice individualy, it automatically diactivated it in the global main.
Great & very enjoyable video
very rich comment. thank you!
The per voice jack feature is definitely one I use a ton to effect individual voices with pedal chains via TRS/insert cable; even more so on my Verrmona DRM. Great adds with your comment, thank you.
Nice shoutout to Oora. Thanks for your continued support of the community and excellent videos!
One thing often overlooked. Vermona will repair your synth fast and good even 10 years after you bought it and it's quite cheap! I bought a drm1mk3 10 years ago in used condition and had it repaired two years ago... it's like new again. If they build it they will fix it.
I really love the mood of your videos. Thank you Tim
The Perfourmer feels like an instrument more than any other synth I own. That's why it can only be played live and once. Its particularly good for people that don't play keys or come from a guitar background like me. Two sequences and a drone from a sequencer, some shimmer, and there you are losing yourself for hours, just tweaking the knobs, swimming in a sea of musicality. If I should compare it, I would say it's a melodic Lyra8. Apart from Oora, who is great, check also Mika Forsling's stuff. Tim, it seems the Perfourmer was not made for your workflow. Thanks for this great and honest review.
I've got a Lyra and if you can get it all tuned up, the two together are something else.
@@sonickitchen I ve been thinking for a while to get a Lyra. Have you got anything recorded I’d them playing together?
@@ThanasisPapathanasiou1963 Hiya! Most of the time I bury Lyra as a mystery source in recordings. When placed just below the surface it adds colour and depth like nothing else. Here's something from a Game soundtrack. Bit of everything really and a lot of verb, more Lyra only a little Vermona but you can hear how Lyra adds to a soundscape.
sonickitchenaudio.bandcamp.com/track/mystic-redemption
Here's something from a Game soundtrack. Bit of everything really and a lot of verb, more Lyra than Vermona but you can hear how Lyra adds to a soundscape.
sonickitchenaudio.bandcamp.com/track/mystic-redemption
I absolutely love the PerFourmer. I can play it for hours, making different sequences, and then switching modes finding something amazing. I have no ambitions of playing live, but I find this synth very inspiring and beautiful.
Beautiful ending! Nice emotional track. The Perfourmer has its challenges, but it seems it’s a real real instrument you can fall in love with… and complicated love stories are always the most intense ones… ;)
Another outstanding and thorough review Mr. Shoebridge. Thank you for adding another YT channel to check out, I was not familiar with Oora before, but I am glad I am now. You continue to provide insights into not only the equipment, but how to properly and effectively use it. I appreciate you taking the time to figure out exactly how best to approach discussing this synth. The peak behind the scenes of how you set up these wonderful videos was simply brilliant, such a great idea for signing off. I swear I learn more tips and tricks from one of your videos than any synth or recording magazine I have ever read!
Definitive review and showing all aspects of the synth at it's best and a really lovely ending piece. Definitely one that gets under your skin. Thanks!
Masterful demonstration of this niche analog polysynth.
I hope Vermona take notice of the many subtle points you raise and addresses them in a long-overdue Mark-iii
It would also be lovely to see your take on their ‘14 monosynth, if you get your hands on one.
(decades in executive meetings…your storytelling skills are really up-there 😉)
Great musicality. Tastefully arranged. This one gem right for and from the Vermona guys. A 50 min. product presentation covering advanced subjects. Many thanks for this thorough examination. Very well executed and I'd hope that more channels take note of your approach.
I con not get enough of your videos and sweet sweet voice! BRAVO 🥂🥂🥂🥂❤❤❤❤
@Tim Shoebridge I never thought I would want a synth more than when I've watched your demo. This was a sleeping giant synth that I never realised its versatility until your video.
This was excellent! I’ve had a Perfourmer for a while, and I still learnt a few things from this video. And I would love to see the horror film that has Nightmare as a soundtrack.
Credit where credits due. Great review of a modern classic synth. I didn’t think much of your original “personal statement” but hope you took all comments on board as constructive feedback :)
Thank you for producing the video, Tim. Excellent sharing of thoughts and impressions. I also have an MC-707, and that seems like a potentially fun pair for live brainstorming or performing, along with something like the Typhon (which I also have).
Imagine a collaboration between Vermona and Dreadbox, a Mediterranean melange, combined with boutique-quality effects by Sinevibes, and with 3 switchable/selectable filters for each voice, including the 4-pole on the Typhon, the current PerFourMer filter, and a Moog-style ladder filter. And, while I’m dreaming, imagine an integrated Conductive Labs NDLR-type capability, with drone, melody, and chords option combinations, depending on how you choose to allocate the use of the 4 voices. Ah, my impractical, futile daydreaming. Lol
Anyway, thanks again, Tim. Again, we have very similar sensibilities and aesthetic tastes. Thank you for your efforts, and for sharing the synth journey with us all, in this place in time space. ☺️👊🏼💥✊🏼
Amazing review Tim, thank you. Your sound examples were lovely (that especially creepy one was quite something), and helping to demystify the workflow/configuration was a really comprehensive section. Loved the montage at the end, a good reminder of all the work which goes into these.
Ahhhhh the piece at the end…wow!! I love it! Wonderful video. Oora is so good! His last ambient album is super magical. Cheers Tim!! ♥️
shoebridge thanks for your videos...always great to watch.
I honestly think that your "little video" at the end is one of your finest yet Absolutely loved it. Thank you for yet another fine review.
Got one of these a month ago or so and will definitely be saving this video!!!!! Nice work!!
Brilliant walkthrough, thank you.
Both of you guys have really deep lovely music on this video well done.
Ha, I loved the "Nightmare" jam - the "screams" you got out of it made me want to buy this.
And here I am, 8 months later, with one in my studio. LOL. While it is a performance instrument, and I hardly use it out of the studio, it allows me to focus on performance while recording, evolving the sounds and actually making the entire progression somehow "manual".
wonderful ! found some hidden gems here thanks Tim
Very well done demo! Great information, lovely musical examples, and your nice voice and handsome leading man looks make for a pleasant viewing that goes by quickly. 👌😎👍 I've had a Perfourmer MkII for a couple years now but I haven't spent enough quality time with it yet to learn it well so your video was helpful.
Selling my PerFOURmer last year has been one of my biggest regrets. I ignorantly thought the Matriarch would replace the use cases, but I was wrong... I miss that lush sound of Vermona.
I bought a perfourmer when I couldn't stomach the cost of the Matriarch only to find a really good deal a few months later on a second hand Matriarch, I can't let go of the perfourmer though it's a great workflow synth with a lot of hidden complexity under it's disarming simplicity.
Thanks for this, good review!
wonderful music and thorough review
Again, mr.Shoebridge cement his role as an elite member of the very top of great reviewers,-
So in terms of alternatives (in or out of production) here's a very unpopular but relevant one: the Akai Timbre Wolf. It was simpler in every respect and the price reflected it but had four identical voices, and three play modes (round robin mono, unison, and poly). To me it sounded great, in fact very similar to the Perfourmer even though it had only two wave forms. Somehow I wasn't bothered by the lack of LFO but hated the fact the Timbre Wolf didn't have an arpeggiator to complement its keyboard and that the pitch bend was fixed to a whole step. If it weren't for these two flaws I would have kept it for sure in spite of all its limitations because of its sheer sound, and it would have been my main live synth. That thing actually felt like an instrument to improvise on, not something you constantly have to look at and program. It would be cool for a keyboard synth to be released that's half way between the Timbre Wolf and Perfourmer in terms of complexity and price, but with that same identical voice concept. I think that identical voices concept goes back to ancient Oberheim synths.
Hey Tim - love your videos - your opinion and thoughts make them really valuable, more so than a straight review :-) This has informed me about whether or not this will be on my wishlidst 😉 Love the outro, particularly the spoken words. I think they give music such as this a certain frisson. At least that's what I'm going for when I do it 😀
16:10 in love with this sound! just amazing! Such a relaxing vibe
Another alternative, elektron's Analog Four / Analog Keys. Four independent voices, MIDI-addressable, can do configurable voice allocations for polyphony.
Four voices? Don't forget the glorious Akai TIMBRE WOLF!!!!!!!!!!11
I have friends who are very much fans of the Timbre Wolf and get some crazy good sounds out of it!
Brian Rowe - I'm leaning towards the Analog Four because of patch memories and the amazing sequencer. I know it's not as hands on but I also know myself, patch memories allow me to work on three or four things at once. The VP may be a luxury synth in the future, I've always admired it a lot.
@@leftmono1016 I hear that! Instruments have come and gone in my setup, but the Analog Keys has remained. It does take some exploring, but the sounds are so full of character! And yes, the sequencer is now even better than when I got it years ago thanks to OS updates.
@@leftmono1016 Electron products have a lot of features but sound like crap compared to Vermona. No Comparison.
Tim. Watching your videos is like watching a movie. Thanks so much for the time, care and beauty you put into each video. It is very much appreciated!
LFOs can run in phase as well as in sync and I really love this feature. Apologies if this was mentioned, but I didn’t notice.
This synth sounds better than I expected
Very helpful and some great music as well.:-) First real how-to video on the Perfourmer MkII I've seen. Only critique is that you recorded your voice to loudly compared to the synth, so that I was constantly changing the volume. Your comment about getting a copyright strike was funny because it's true.
Hi Tim, Today I found your review on Waldorf Kyra and then now watched Venmona Perfourmer MKII. Nice video and I know you took quite a long time to film this "Thoughts" and not to mention the editing. Nice Job and just Sub'ed
The sections of this video on experimentation and variation: awesome.
Would love a review of the DRM1 MK4
Very interesting walk-through, thanks Tim. Interested in the MIDI Sequencing capabilities upon Live Performance. I'll learn a touch more. Seems an ideal Tool thus far. Appreciated.
Fantastic intro. Great review. I will say this. There’s a few Guys who have this piece of gear and man do they make some of the nose beautiful music. Well dune.
A fascinating piece of kit. Too bad I'm down to my last kidney...
Sound examples are beautiful as always.
Great review / opinion , thanks for this
Great stuff!
lovely music, as always. thx.
"my many lethargic and at some points incomprehensible thoughts" quite clear for the most part, Tim! :D
Smooth like butter sound
Elektron Analogue 4 is for sure an alternative that actually outperforms Perfourmer in terms of features, control and value for money in general. But this thing seems to have a really wonderful sound...
30:10 i could listen to that all day, beautiful!!
I'm really curious how the mk1 compares to the mk2.. since it's impossible to verify which revision of the mk2 you may be getting.. if buying used
I've also been admiring OoraMusic's usage of the mk2 recently, though..
Mk1 which was discontinued many years ago was completely different sounding, I would say more metallic kinda, more alive/mechanical even, while mk2 is more on the warm , round side..you can still find the former used, I miss mine :)
@A R do those visual differences correlate with the filter choices then? ie. is there any way to tell the mk2s mentioned in this video apart?
the perfourmer is inside four completed independant synth. 4 independant cards + à control one .
The name: perfourmer , say it all: four synth concentrated to perform live . It is a unique synth for that , compact with symmetric switch.
The sound is unbelievable deep and so unique. You have it in front of you and you play … this is not a keyboard synth , not a euro rack synth, this is a perfourmer for performance.
Thanks for your point of view, allways appreciate.
Great synth & walkthrough. Like you, i am strictly a studio artist who multi tracks everything. I have no need for multi timbrality.
13:00 Thunder! Aaahaaahaaaah Thunder! Aaahaaahaaaah
Really enjoyed the track "4 Mono Synths" @30:10
Sounds like an Raga. Gorgeous
Do you have the midi files for this track and would be willing to share it?
I would like to do a remix of it when my perfourmer arrives + add a dash of Vermona '14
Yeah....great video, thx 🎼
Awesome review
Love your channel, but must say (i own a Perfourmer MK2) that the audio demos don't do justice to this synthesizer. I didn't hear a lot of the filter action, which is stunning. Most of the demo's were using sine/triangle/square waves whereas i feel this synth sounds exceptionally beautiful with saw oscillators. Last but not least: i didn't hear the sound that melts hearts: a 4 voice saw pad sound with a slow filter envelope, voices panned apart and all 4 osc pitch modulated every so slightly by the lfo. That sound. Is. So. Unbelievable gorgeous!
where can i hear that?!
@@RezaMatix ruclips.net/video/fGZHjBJIeRU/видео.html
This made me want to go and play with my PF2!
That kraftwerk-esque tune is a beaut 👍
Great video and strong influence on my decision to buy a Perfourmer which I'm running through an MC- 707 BUT I just can't get the 707 to control the volume of the Perfourmer as you seem to do in this video. Can I ask please if you do this through Midi and if so how its setup. Thanks.
Hi, I'm controlling the perfourmer via MIDI but then feeding the audio outputs back into the 707. You can assign tracks in the 707 as audio tracks, and to take their input from the 4 available external inputs. This then allows me to pan the audio, adjust levels and also to apply effects from within the 707.
Thank you for this insight. Would you consider the Syntrx I/II direct equivalents? I am not sure if you have a review on the Syntrx or the recently released Syntrx II, but I’ll go check. Your reasoning gives me much to think about.
Good question, I was wondering the same thing
Here is the thing with this synth - it sounds very "German" - clean, discrete filter, i love all these different options. But, it is focused on live performance (duh!). I would love to add it to my collection, but I cannot see the financial justification in this - I have Pro 2, Pro 3 and Subsequent 37, plus some other stuff, and I am well covered on mono-front. Also, for the price of this synth you can get A4 which in the end does the same thing, but sports Elektron sequencer and effects. I understand the difference, but i think that voice quality goes just a little bit in favour of Perfourmer (it is very basic architecture and sound). I just think there are so many great synths out there - for that pricetag, you can get used Pro 2, for instance, or add two hundred and get a Pro 3. Again, Perfourmer sound is beautiful, had it for a while and loved hands on control and mode switches - i am a sucker for FM pluck going through spring delay. It sounds even more beautiful when you run it through effects because the base sound is as i said, "German" (if you know what i mean by that when it comes to synth sound:) . I would love to have kept it but i just couldn't justify this.
As usual, that's a great explanation of a2 piece of gear . Congratulations , i still don't know if you are a good seller or professor ...🤔🙂 both of them ,i'm sure , and also a nice musician 🤗
New intro bumper? Scary sounding. :P
Haha. It's an old intro actually, but people complained it went on for too long so I cut it ;)
What do you think about vermona qMI 2 module? Looks like it is exactly what you need: perfourmer voice routing applied to existing eurorack system.
GREAT!
I hope the rumors of an Abyss sequel with Typhon-like digital effects and control are true.
Abyss V2 is eight voice and with patch storage.. not sure about FX. There's a 6 voice.. probably digital poly.. called Nymph(omaniac) too
How about another Vermona Melodicer video Tim? Thanks
I wanna know about the voice modes, That seems to be the key to getting those amazing sequences out of it
Your video looks kind of raw with a gray pall over it. I think with this camera setting it is intended that you need to do post-production to this raw video.
Great review! I wonder how you would compare the PERfourMER to four Model Ds with MIDI-CV module (like you had in an older video) in terms of sound & flexibility?
Behringer Model D's? Well 3 VCO's, 2 envelopes and a wonderful filter will make for an amazing synth voice, and they have poly-chaining built in if you want to use that, but those more complex voices need more hands-on control and you don't have the voice-linking capabilities of the Perfourmer. I think for live use the Perfourmer would be the better choice but in the studio, with time and patience, the Model D's would give you the greatest flexibility and sonic depth, but that's just my opinion.
Dear Tim, hello, I hope you are doing just fine!!
I was wondering if you still own the behringer deepmind. I have seen a lot of videos on that synth, but I just really love your reviews lol
I know it isn´t a new piece of gear, but it would really nice if you did a video on it u.u
Great video again Tim, please, could you make another Vermona Melodicer video-tutorial? Thanks Tim.
Excellent showcase, thank you!
...hey couldn't help but notice that mc707 beside the Vermona. What's up with that? Wouldn't have thought you're into grooveboxes. (:
I love grooveboxes ;)
@@TimShoebridge Right on! I'm ready for your take on this type of device, should you decide to cover the topic. ((:
Say what you will about the resonance issue, it sounds amazing. DSI tetra is similar too, though needs a hardware controller to make the most of it. I'm already subbed to Oora. Love his content.
Interesting synth it's a bit pricy but before this review I wrote it off but I can now see the appeal
I just realised something about Tim. He is the synthworlds equivalent to Tony Stark/Iron Man😁 Like Tony Stark he has all the cool gadgets around him and like Iron Man he delivers hardpunching lessons using the gadgets to those needing it👍 Whenever I see a new video from Tim is availible I always crack a smile and look forward to watching it once I can make sure I have plenty of time to just sit and enjoy to the fullest.
Not finished video yet, but curious how you would compare with the 4 voice elektron analog ?
Dataline/ cenk does amazing performance demos for them
Not sure it would be a very relevant comparison: these 2 engine have only 4 voices feature in common. Everything else, from the sounds to the workflows, define an opposite conception and usage. To compare the both would look like to compare golf to football, not really a learnings centric dynamic imo
I've owned an analog4 and a couple of analog keys over the years. Really love the concept but it took me a long time to get into the workflow and for it to not "get in the way" if you know what I mean. The first 6 months I spent scratching my head, I started to think there was something wrong with me! I think an A4 is comparable to a perfourmer in some ways - four analog voices, flexibility in terms of voice allocation, both definitely built with live performance in mind. To my ears each voice of an A4 sounds not very analogue, a bit bland TBH, but it is the bringing together of those voices, the sequenced automation plus the effects all combining so that the raw sound of each voice is not actually important. You can say the same about the perfourmer in that each voice is basic, but it is how they combine that matters to the result. The workflow of the perfourmer is simple, but that is of course because it has no presets, no projects, no sequencer, no effects, no ability to output CV, etc etc. For the price, picking up a used A4 is a steal given all those capabilities you get in the box.
Thanks for taking the time to reply!
I believe it's official- i have a Thin Shoebridge crush 😍
Haha You noticed I have lost weight! :)
me too , and im not even gay. ! :-O
@@MikkelGrumBovin lol I meant HUGE CRUSH, but now that you bring it up- you have been working out Mr Shoebridge lol
@@aliciafranco5704 lol 😂
Elitists are never content and always focus on the negative.
Abyss MKll will be eight voice.
Curious: did you delete the comment from the girl who complained about being "washed out" or did she delete it herself? I guess she was referencing your grey blacks rather than the synth
I haven't deleted any comments. Maybe my washed out expression!! ;)
@@TimShoebridge lol I guess she had a sudden change of heart then, cheers
@@Wagoo I get that a lot! ;)
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I'm wondering how it compares sonically to the Elektron Analog 4. I've been shopping for a 4 voice analog synth with individual outs. Elektron's Analog Keys and A4mkii are at the top of the list so far, but this also looks like a good contender.
The comparison with elektron A4 would make no sense in my opinion, because they are radically opposite engines. So it fully depends what you want to achieve with these 4 voices, what your workflow is and what the setup in which you want to include them is. In example, one of the A4 assets is to propose one of the best sequencer on the market, large memory and file management, crazy effects etc ... P4 has only midi note with no effect, neither pattern nor preset management. No keyboard or any way to play the p4 directly. And this is just the top of the iceberg.if you talk about raw sound, for me the Vermona Is much better, but what you can do with your raw sound with an A4 is stellar so here the comparison does not make anymore sense to me:
Those 4 inserts are begging for effect chains.
NUmero 1 ( You ) , Ciao.
Your VERY serious/ intense about it all…🤨
Thank you for a honest review. So, did you finally sell it?
Lovely tone. Incredibly limited
Quite similar to the analog four, it sounds a bit better and fatter, but for the money the a4 offers so much more with the built in sequencing features
you don't really have to destroy a patch, lol, there's ways to save it, but I'm doing what Junkie XL does, and not telling the whole world how to do it
As soon as they fix the filter, I'm getting one.
There is nothing wrong with the filter - it works and sounds great in context.
“Sometime you want simplicity…” just get a piano then don’t put down a synth because it has a dedicated knob for each function. You’re a negative elitist reviewer time to retire old man.
Great vid, thanks for posting
I've had one for a while now, I'm almost tempted to get a second one and polychain though a midi them together for a big old 8 voice, simple but super organic. Could be a pain to dial in a patch but that'd be a lovely sound