Originally posted by Darksounds:
Um no I actually prefer a hardware keyboard .
I like hardware too. The reason I pointed softsynths out to you in the first place is that many are very close sonically to their hardware cousins.
Most also have good working demos which would allow you to get a feel for their sounds. It costs you nothing to try them, if you use demos and freeware hosts and synths.
Examples : Clavia Nord lead - Emulated by Synth 1 ( freeware ) and Disco DSP Nord Lead edition ( demo )
Korg Wavestation - ( demo ) made by korg and does a very close emulation of the hardware sonically.
NI FM 7 - ( demo ) emulates the Yamaha DX7.
Arturia Arp2600, CS80v, Moog Modular - Excellent emulations of their hardware cousins... all have demos
There are many more..
OTOH, arrangers and workstations are great tools, but they are both geared more toward bread and butter sounds. I only assume that you also had at least some interest in arrangers, as you posted here in the first place.
When you mention Alan Wilder and Depeche mode, well.. I think more cutting edge.... and if you're looking for cutting edge preset synth sounds, including those based on acoustic instruments samples, I think it's quite likely you're going to fall short of your expectations in any arranger or rompler workstation. That is of course unless you are willing to do a lot of patch editing, which most arrangers don't have the facilities for in the first place.
I can do a lot of editing in the Motif ES, btw. It has the facilities, but if I'm focusing on more cutting edge sounds and tweaking, give me a VA and / or a dedicated sampler any day. Much easier and more productive to work in for that kind of work, and the presets start out closer to what I want in a VA.....
Then again, I have the AN150 and VL150 in my ES, so I can get a little more cutting edge.. but as I said before, not without editing on a computer.
But hey.. it's your money.. Good Luck.
AJ
[This message has been edited by Bluezplayer (edited 04-01-2005).]