My jaw hit the floor when this popped up for me. I’m so happy you took time to make this!!! 😊 I also got the m1 and triton as gifts for Christmas this year, so crossing fingers I’ll find those on your channel or they might get featured in the future!🎉
I've made a series for the M1 - it's here: ua-cam.com/play/PL3P42Av427hzUMB8o2ZRhBjii-jnq4Fy-.html I haven't got round to making a full series with the Triton yet, but you never know when the mood will take me :)
Thank you very much for the explanation, very simple and detailed. And it is true that the wavestation, in my case the ex version, is one of the most entertaining synthesizers when it comes to making sound. And very satisfying afterwards, the results. I find it a bit complicated, in the case of the virtual wavestation, to load old sounds in syx format, and even more so if they are from the Ram 3 or the Card. If you decide to continue with these tutorials that would be great if you could shed some light on the virtual wave station in this regard, uploading pre-sounds either in exclusive format or not would be great. Thank you very much for everything you bring us and show us.👌🏾👏🏾👏🏾🤗
Thank U.. I had the hardware in another life. These tutorials are very interesting as they will help me to decide if I'll get this plugin. It was a fantastic synth if you did the effort to program your own wave sequences, patches and performances. This takes time but you'll have sounds nobody else has. I guess many owners got suck in the presents but the real gold is in creating sounds from scratch and start with making wave sequences and use four variations(oscillators) of those to create a patch and eventually grow from there in combining parts(patches) into a performance. The FX where good and all this combined with Vector and Modulation and you're in an infinite universe of evolving sound. Using the joystick ads enormous joy and direct manipulation. This synth is a dream for Poly-rhythmic and/or Poly-melodic evolutions and all this fully polyphonic!!! And don't forget you don't have to play all notes at the same time to play chords .. the possible variations are beyond imagination !
Yamaha also released a synth in 1990 with vector synthesis. I have the TG33 sitting on my desk. Not sure how all that fits into the history of vector synthesis. Very cool stuff. Thanks!
I used to own an SY-22, and I absolutely loved it. Basically the Yamaha implementation sits right alongside what Sequential Circuits first created in 1986, and which then became the Wavestation (albeit under a different company logo) in the same year that the SY22/TG33 was released. It's always the case - great ideas get borrowed, and this was one of the better ideas from the late 80's.
My jaw hit the floor when this popped up for me. I’m so happy you took time to make this!!! 😊 I also got the m1 and triton as gifts for Christmas this year, so crossing fingers I’ll find those on your channel or they might get featured in the future!🎉
I've made a series for the M1 - it's here: ua-cam.com/play/PL3P42Av427hzUMB8o2ZRhBjii-jnq4Fy-.html I haven't got round to making a full series with the Triton yet, but you never know when the mood will take me :)
Oh yeah this channel is golden
Cool, glad you're enjoying my content :)
What a fortunate coincidence! I've just started using Wavestation - soon, I will know all about it.
Hope so ;)
@@OneManAndHisSongs No pressure, then. Anthony!
Excellent tutorial.
Many thanks!
thank you loads
You're welcome!
Thank you very much for the explanation, very simple and detailed. And it is true that the wavestation, in my case the ex version, is one of the most entertaining synthesizers when it comes to making sound. And very satisfying afterwards, the results. I find it a bit complicated, in the case of the virtual wavestation, to load old sounds in syx format, and even more so if they are from the Ram 3 or the Card. If you decide to continue with these tutorials that would be great if you could shed some light on the virtual wave station in this regard, uploading pre-sounds either in exclusive format or not would be great. Thank you very much for everything you bring us and show us.👌🏾👏🏾👏🏾🤗
Thanks for the feedback, I appreciate it! I don't typically have much to do with SysEx, but I'll give it some thought.
GREAT!!!!!😎
Thank U.. I had the hardware in another life. These tutorials are very interesting as they will help me to decide if I'll get this plugin. It was a fantastic synth if you did the effort to program your own wave sequences, patches and performances. This takes time but you'll have sounds nobody else has. I guess many owners got suck in the presents but the real gold is in creating sounds from scratch and start with making wave sequences and use four variations(oscillators) of those to create a patch and eventually grow from there in combining parts(patches) into a performance. The FX where good and all this combined with Vector and Modulation and you're in an infinite universe of evolving sound. Using the joystick ads enormous joy and direct manipulation. This synth is a dream for Poly-rhythmic and/or Poly-melodic evolutions and all this fully polyphonic!!! And don't forget you don't have to play all notes at the same time to play chords .. the possible variations are beyond imagination !
I'm glad you found the series useful, thank you for your feedback!
Awesome! I just bought this a few weeks ago and found it quite difficult to get the work flow. Now I know I won't have a problem. 😉
Hopefully you'll find it useful! Episode 2 is just out :)
thank you
You're welcome :)
Yamaha also released a synth in 1990 with vector synthesis. I have the TG33 sitting on my desk. Not sure how all that fits into the history of vector synthesis. Very cool stuff. Thanks!
I used to own an SY-22, and I absolutely loved it. Basically the Yamaha implementation sits right alongside what Sequential Circuits first created in 1986, and which then became the Wavestation (albeit under a different company logo) in the same year that the SY22/TG33 was released. It's always the case - great ideas get borrowed, and this was one of the better ideas from the late 80's.