MPowerSynth | Melda Productions

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2014/09/20 10:45:11 (permalink)

MPowerSynth | Melda Productions

New release-
MPowerSynth is an extremely versatile synthesizer featuring the best sounding oscillators on the market, the most advanced distorting filters and a unique modular effects engine. It also features our smart randomization system providing endless inspiration!
 
now available as beta version
-free trials
99 EUR  ± 127 USD introductory price
from 249 EUR  ± 319 USD
 
MPowerSynth preset making action, get MPowerSynth for free!
http://www.meldaproductio...mpowersynthpresets.php
 
http://www.meldaproductio...uct.php?id=MPowerSynth
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    bitflipper
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 12:57:49 (permalink)
    I'm surprised at the > $300 price tag, which puts it well above other versatile synths such as U-he products. I hope he reconsiders and prices it about half that.
     
    It's gonna be a good one, though.


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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 13:02:07 (permalink)
    OK I'll bite; How does one make the best sounding oscillators on the market sound better than, let's say for an example an oscillator? Do you over sample it and swear you can hear a difference? Use 64 bits and swear you can hear a difference? Finally how does one know that the market isn't already using the same tricks you might use to make your oscillators sound their very best?
     
     


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    Grem
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 15:28:01 (permalink)
    mike_mccue

    How does one make the best sounding oscillators on the market sound better than, let's say for an example an oscillator?
     


    Maybe he uses high quality ones and zeros! 😉

    Grem

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    sharke
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 16:08:24 (permalink)
    It's all moot unless you use gold plated USB cables with your interface anyway.

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    bitflipper
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 17:18:20 (permalink)
    Mike, as an engineer you're thinking of oscillators in the classic sense, e.g. sine/square/triangle/sawtooth regenerative feedback circuits. Soft synths don't actually have oscillators, as I'm sure you know. The term has merely been carried over from the hardware world out of convenience.
     
    Some software synths are able to generate waveforms of far greater complexity than anything Bob Moog ever envisioned. For example, much of Zebra's strength is in the "oscillators", which can morph smoothly between any set of source waveforms. Melda takes a similar approach to LFOs used as modulators in various products, so I'm guessing the new synth's oscillators are based on similar principles.
     
    Creating such waveforms isn't a simple process. You're generating very complex harmonic series that have to be band-constrained to avoid aliasing and intermodulation distortion. That can't be accomplished with a simple filter. It requires constraining harmonics at the generation phase itself. It's black-belt coding, for sure.
     
    Bear in mind that I have no inside information about this. I'm only thinking how I would approach it.


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    dmbaer
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 17:38:15 (permalink)
    bitflipper
    I'm surprised at the > $300 price tag, which puts it well above other versatile synths such as U-he products.



    Does anybody actually pay full price for Melda gear?  It's certainly no secret that all one need do is wait a month or two - everything at Melda eventually goes on sale for 50% off.  So the actual price will be ~$160.
    #7
    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/20 18:31:39 (permalink)
    Thanks Bit, That's some good food for thought.


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    Grem
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 08:12:19 (permalink)
    dmbaer

    Does anybody actually pay full price for Melda gear?  It's certainly no secret that all one need do is wait a month or two - everything at Melda eventually goes on sale for 50% off.  So the actual price will be ~$160.


    It didn't use to be that way. And no guarantee it will continue.

    He may continue to offer older plugs at the discount. But he may not do it for new stuff coming out.

    Grem

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    Grem
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 08:14:07 (permalink)
    mike_mccue
    Thanks Bit, That's some good food for thought.


    Yep. Good info for sure.

    Grem

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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 08:30:25 (permalink)
    "...Soft synths don't actually have oscillators..."
     
    I thought about it, and while I understand the idea that digital oscillators provide a potential for complex waveforms that do not have analogues, I'm having trouble complying with this particular phrase.
     
    :-)
     
     


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    Grem
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 17:52:54 (permalink)
    Well, I am not going to pretend I know how to code, but knowing what I do know, I think bit may have something there.

    My understanding is that the way to code something is not like the original equipment it's mimicking. The results will be the same (emulation), but not the actual process.

    IOW, there is code, processing info, that results in an emulation of an Oscillator.

    And Mike I know your smart about this stuff, and I'm just trying to offer a simple explanation.

    Grem

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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 19:04:37 (permalink)
    Hi Grem, Thanks for offering your insights.
     
    I'm guessing that I'm just getting hung up on semantics.
     
    I don't know very much about digital... I'm more of an analog guy, but I've read a little bit about digital oscillators in the past.
     
    Here's an example: http://www.dspguru.com/dsp/howtos/how-to-create-oscillators-in-software of some coding that applies to the one of the simple oscillator waveforms mentioned above.


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    Chandler
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 23:08:10 (permalink)
    On another site the maker posted a comparison between his synth and some popular ones(which he didn't name). In the comparison you could see there was less alaising and the harmonics looked clearer than the others.
     
    After having tried it, I do think it sounds good, but it's a bit hard to program. I'm hoping I can make 25 presets and win a free copy because that price is pretty steep.

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    Magic Russ
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/21 23:31:18 (permalink)
    I had installed it with the hope that I would be able to come up with some winning patches.  I scanned through the patches, thinking some were awful and some were good.  The better patches hinted at potential, but did not really fully exploit that potential.  I suppose that's why Melda is running the contest to come up with patches.
     
     
     
     
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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 07:16:46 (permalink)
    Why not make a collection of 25 presets and sell them for 50% off of $10 instead of trading them for the hope of getting a free $150 synth.
     
    Let's say you sell 30 collections of presets for $5.00... the rest is gravy.
     
    :-)


    #16
    bitflipper
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 09:30:19 (permalink)
    Presets are what sells synthesizers. That's been the case since the introduction of ROM-based presets, long before we had synths in pure software form.
     
    Yamaha sold a boatload of DX7s, and you can always identify one in a recording because every hit record that ever used it used a factory preset. Few users ever figured out how to program the thing. I don't have any FM synths myself, but I'll bet every one of them has a preset named "Jump".
     
    If I were the developer, I'd be upping the ante. The best patch programmers expect to make money doing it, and they're a small talent pool. Eric Persing founded a successful company after starting out as a patch designer. 30+ years later he's still selling the same patches he designed for Roland "hardware" synths, but as samples today. His flagship product is a great synth, but even many of its users don't know it. I'd be surprised if more than 1% of his user base actually programs Omnisphere beyond simple envelope tweaks.
     
    My point is that having a great collection of presets is far more important to a soft synth's success than having a great set of building blocks.
     
     


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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 09:42:56 (permalink)
    The last three synths I purchased don't have any presets, they just have knobs. I'll be buying more of that kind cause it's lots of fun to twist it out.


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    bitflipper
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 10:52:46 (permalink)
    I've always enjoyed tweaking sounds - but only with real knobs. My earliest experiences were with a Minimoog, but that instrument was so incredibly easy to program you could tweak it and play it at the same time. Later on I added a Micromoog, which was even easier to program. But synths quickly became more complicated after that.
     
    The first synthesizer I ever used on a recording was an Oberheim 4-voice. It belonged to the studio, and luckily the engineer had some experience programming it. We spent over an hour setting up a string patch (I was glad somebody else was paying for the session), which ended up sounding pretty awesome on the record. But that's when I realized that after all that work there was no way to save or recall the patch, except writing down knob positions.
     
    Spending hours to set up a patch that would run for 30 seconds on a recording just wasn't a good effort-to-payback ratio. So when I went shopping for the first polyphonic synth of my own, what did I do? Audition presets. I bought the one that had the best-sounding presets, without even studying its controls.
     


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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 11:11:31 (permalink)
    Yes, but as you say you spent hours tweaking a 4 voice synth that wasn't yours. It might have only taken a few moments if it was yours and you had experience using it.
     
    I wonder how many presets people routinely use out of the 1000's of presets they get with a new synth? A dozen? Two Dozen? 27?
     
    How often is all the exactitude practiced in selecting a preset vested in to playing a couple of notes, or maybe a few chords?


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    sharke
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 20:40:24 (permalink)
    99% of presets sound absolutely awful to me and in some cases put me off the synth. If I hadn't have gotten Z3TA+2 included in X1 Production Suite then I'm not sure I would have bought it after going through the presets, even though I know now that it's an awesome instrument. Most of them (and this goes for most synths I demo) sound like the designer is stuck in an early 90's timewarp of cheesy big-room rave music and I couldn't imagine ever wanting to use them in a track, not even with a lot of tweaking. But having said that, I've bought preset packs for Z3TA+2 that have been excellent, for example the Vintage 70's/80's one which is for sale in the Cakewalk store. I just wish more stock presets were of this caliber and usability.

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    Kroneborge
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 20:41:46 (permalink)
    Of course you don't have to use all the presets, if just a couple are useful and make a good song, that's often money well spent IMO.


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    S.L.I.P.
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/22 23:10:38 (permalink)
    Presets can be fun, and very rewarding. There are times when I don't have anything I want to record, and I'll sit back and go through presets. While most are not going to be ever used, occasionally you find that one preset that you get lost in, sometimes playing for hours, and sometimes this becomes the beginning of a song. 
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    Grem
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 01:04:22 (permalink)
    S.L.I.P.
    Presets can be fun, and very rewarding. There are times when I don't have anything I want to record, and I'll sit back and go through presets. While most are not going to be ever used, occasionally you find that one preset that you get lost in, sometimes playing for hours, and sometimes this becomes the beginning of a song. 




    Yep!

    Grem

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    Sanderxpander
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 03:51:48 (permalink)
    I'm a little disappointed that there are only three oscillators, perhaps I got spoiled by Z3TA+ (2). I mean I also have a MicroMoog that sounds fine with just one and a sub, but for such a modern looking synth I had expected six or something. I'm on the preset bandwagon too though!
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    The Maillard Reaction
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 06:36:36 (permalink)
    The extra oscillators may have bashed the CPU. I was surprised, when I was reading the product page, that we we are advised to use a 256+ sample buffer. My DAW lives at 64 and I wish my gear would run at 32. I don't see how I could go backwards and enjoy it.


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    Sanderxpander
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 08:48:50 (permalink)
    It seems pretty easy on my CPU so far but I haven't really pushed it yet.
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    bitflipper
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 13:58:46 (permalink)
    Sanderexpander, your comment got me thinking about oscillators, and what you might need lots of 'em for.
     
    More than 3 of these particular oscillators would probably be too CPU-intensive for most machines. Even Zebra, which is pretty efficient, seriously gobbles up CPU cycles when more than two oscillators are employed. Fortunately, my favorite patches need only one or two. I've played with SynthMaster in its massive multi-oscillator mode, and my computer just rolls over and dies.
     
    6+ oscillators serves just two purposes, as near as I can tell: emulating Hammond sounds and building up EDM supersaws. No general-purpose synthesizer nails Hammond sounds anyway (you'd need 96 oscillators to do that) and I hate supersaws, which grate on my ears.
     
    So I'm not impressed by synths that advertise many oscillators. It's easy enough for any developer to add any number of oscillators - it's literally cut 'n paste. Most devs don't bother, because it's what each oscillator can do, rather than how many times you do it in parallel.
     
    You have to ask yourself why multiple oscillators are used in the first place. The answer is spectral modulation. The Minimoog sounded great because its oscillators were inherently unstable. As they slowly drifted in pitch they modulated one another's harmonics in a crude simulation of what happens when acoustical instruments play together. The Micromoog emulated that in an even cruder way, with pulse-width modulation. But there are diminishing returns when adding more oscillators.
     
    My favorite new synth right now is OBXD, a free Oberheim emulation. Like the original Oberheim Expander Module, it has just two basic oscillators.


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    SmokeyJ628
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 17:01:51 (permalink)
    Chandler
    On another site the maker posted a comparison between his synth and some popular ones(which he didn't name). In the comparison you could see there was less alaising and the harmonics looked clearer than the others.
     



    Then, one of the makers of one of the other synths used in the comparison (Urs Heckman) chimed in to note that his synth has a switch which will turn his oscillator picture (the 3rd one) into one that looks like Melda's.
     
     
    #29
    bitflipper
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    Re: MPowerSynth | Melda Productions 2014/09/23 20:03:31 (permalink)
    The price has already been lowered after howls of protest on kvr. New price will be $256. Still too high, IMO, to be competitive with comparable products. Though I'm sure Vojtech would say that there are no comparable products, and he'd be mostly right.
     
    Unfortunately, part of the "incomparable" claim is because it's missing a few things people have come to expect from advanced synthesizers. Being able to pan each oscillator independently, for example. And of course the Melda UI philosophy does take some getting used to. Anyone who's been using synths for a long time will likely initially look at it and go "huh?".
     
    However, I expect to see many improvements made to it over the coming year. And if you just listen to it rather than examining every knob and feature, it does sound pretty darn good.


    All else is in doubt, so this is the truth I cling to. 

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