Cherry Audio releases teaser for a forthcoming new synth, which is set to be released on 11 July.
Perhaps, Cherry Audio is getting into the summer blockbuster spirit with the teaser. The cinematic trailer indicates that the prolific plugin developer has been on the hunt for a “Rare Antiquity”, presumably a vintage instrument that it’s now emulated in software.
Little else is known of this ancient artefact, but rest assured that you’ll be able to hear “the roar of the lost synth” in just a week.
Synclavier Digital shared this official intro to their Regen synthesizer, which debuted at SynthPlex 2022.
The Synclavier Regen offers the power of the Synclavier II DSP engine, enhanced and optimized, and packaged in a compact desktop synth module.
Features:
255 Regen timbre presets
700+ samples of royalty-free factory content
Additive waveforms, subtractive waveform generator and multi-sample patchlists
12 partials to build your sounds.
12 tracks for multi-timbral playback or stacking (layering) of sounds.
4 USB ports for keyboards and other peripherals plus one USB port for connection to DAW. And 5-pin MIDI standard (TRS).
2 full-colour high resolution screens
Senstive liquid-like touch swiper and 12 selector pads.
Multiple effects per track, including chorus, reverb, vibrato, tremolo, arpeggiator, bit crush, and multi-mode filter.
High fidelity DC-coupled audio out (stereo XLR or TS) with 130dB of dynamic range.
AtomoSynth has introduced Tottem version 2, a drum synth Eurorack module featuring four independent, all-analog percussion synth voices.
Two of the voices feature a full percussion synth, with triangle and square wave oscillator, an envelope for the “sweep” effect, one modulator with triangle and square wave as well as noise, also a decay envelope for the overall volume contour. These are very flexible generating from powerful bass drums, toms, clicks, all the way to “laser gun” and weird glitch sounds.
While the other two voices feature an oscillator with “metal” and square wave, a white noise generator, a mixer, and also a decay envelope. These are great to produce metallic sounds like hi-hats, crashes, cymbals, clicks, beeps, and all craziness in between. Combining the two synth voice types you can expand the possibilities even further for more complex sounds.
Lastly, an output mixer with individual level controls and outputs for each voice and a master output.
The developers say that the new Tottem has a raw, organic character and is not designed to emulate any drum machine, giving you “a new sound to enrich your percussion palette.”
Features:
Four analog percussion synthesizer voices.
Two voices feature, one oscillator, two decay envelopes, one LFO, and a noise generator.
Two voices feature, one square wave and metal oscillator, one noise generator, one mixer, and a decay envelope.