Very good I have been watching all your tutorials on Omnisphere finally I know what each button, slider, etc.. mean and does. Thank you for taking the time to explain in precise detail.
Just a fantastic set of tutorials. I finally understand what all those sliders and knobs do and why I should, or shouldn't, use them :) The analysis is just great and really explains how the sounds are shaped. Many thanks.
I learnt a lot from this. Thanks. But it kind of confirms my feeling about omnisphere that when people say it’s deep they generally mean overly complicated. Why is the filter envelope always on full? Why is the amp envelope release generally so high? This is why a synth like Pigments or Phase Plant is in my A-tier and Omnisphere is B or even C tier and I’m glad I only paid the upgrade price from Atmosphere and not the big wad. Still, enjoying the series and I’ve learned loads. Great as usual.
Glad you're finding the series useful - thanks for the feedback! I've never personally had an issue with those kinds of issues, but I can see how some of their defaults might raise an eyebrow. That particular area is where Roland often shine brightest for me: they seem to resonate with my musical defaults more than any other manufacturer. Some of the synths is their legendary series are pretty hard to make sound bad.
Hopefully the manual explains what all the “power” and “juicy” terminology means. Normally I would want to emulate my analog filters (Moog LP 24, CS80 HP/LP 12), so I can recreate the sound textures which I design in Omnisphere on my analog synth.
Just curious, how necessary would u deem your peripheral plugins that you have on the right, these oscilloscope and spectrum things? I have Ableton and I don't think it has that unfortunately.
They're primarily there to give my viewers as many different perspectives on sound as possible. That said, I do often use them when I'm sound-designing to provide visual confirmation of what I'm doing. Ears first, always and obviously, but eyes are useful too!
been wanting to improve at sound design in omnisphere (and in general) and learnt so much from these vids so thankyou!
You're very welcome! Thanks for the feedback :)
by far the most comprehensible and useful tuts on YT I've ever found. Kudos Sir.
I'm very grateful for the compliment, thanks very much!
Very good I have been watching all your tutorials on Omnisphere finally I know what each button, slider, etc.. mean and does. Thank you for taking the time to explain in precise detail.
Very kind of you to say so, thanks!
Excellent explanation and demos!
Just a fantastic set of tutorials. I finally understand what all those sliders and knobs do and why I should, or shouldn't, use them :) The analysis is just great and really explains how the sounds are shaped. Many thanks.
Wow, that's very kind of you to say! Much appreciated :)
Detailed and clear like the previous ones.
Thanks!
Very helpful Tutorial ! Thanks
Many thanks to you ...🍻
You're very welcome, thank you so much for your support :)
awesome video! thank you for making this, very helpful
You're very welcome, I appreciate your feedback :)
Ur amazing!
That's very kind of you to say :) Thanks!
I learnt a lot from this. Thanks. But it kind of confirms my feeling about omnisphere that when people say it’s deep they generally mean overly complicated. Why is the filter envelope always on full? Why is the amp envelope release generally so high? This is why a synth like Pigments or Phase Plant is in my A-tier and Omnisphere is B or even C tier and I’m glad I only paid the upgrade price from Atmosphere and not the big wad. Still, enjoying the series and I’ve learned loads. Great as usual.
Glad you're finding the series useful - thanks for the feedback! I've never personally had an issue with those kinds of issues, but I can see how some of their defaults might raise an eyebrow. That particular area is where Roland often shine brightest for me: they seem to resonate with my musical defaults more than any other manufacturer. Some of the synths is their legendary series are pretty hard to make sound bad.
Hopefully the manual explains what all the “power” and “juicy” terminology means. Normally I would want to emulate my analog filters (Moog LP 24, CS80 HP/LP 12), so I can recreate the sound textures which I design in Omnisphere on my analog synth.
A big sub here, great channel
Thank you, I really appreciate your support!
Just curious, how necessary would u deem your peripheral plugins that you have on the right, these oscilloscope and spectrum things? I have Ableton and I don't think it has that unfortunately.
They're primarily there to give my viewers as many different perspectives on sound as possible. That said, I do often use them when I'm sound-designing to provide visual confirmation of what I'm doing. Ears first, always and obviously, but eyes are useful too!