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#89979 - 04/02/05 05:31 PM
Alesis Fusion Workstation : Your Thoughts
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Member
Registered: 12/04/04
Posts: 57
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As you know I'm looking for a synth and I've just come across the specs for the yet to be released Alesis Fusion synth and I must say some things sound very intrigueing , I especially like the harddrive . OK granted I'm not sure if this kind of synth would be appropriate for me at this point in time . See below for the details . As for price Musicians Buy is accepting preorders (the synth will be available later this month) for $1700 US which seems very reasonable IMO.
What makes a Keyboard a workstation?
A workstation is simply a keyboard with a built-in sequencer and digital sampler. What’s so great about that, you ask? Well… workstations are cool because having a keyboard, sequencer, and sampler in one package is convenient, portable, and saves a lot of money over buying everything separately.
Unfortunately, integrating all these features makes most workstations daunting and difficult to use. Users have to battle confusing menus and poorly written manuals to get their ideas recorded. Worse yet, owners often have to compromise their artistic vision because it’s too much of a hassle to hammer out an idea exactly how they want it to sound—users end up settling for “good enough.”
We’ve seen other companies try to make the “ultimate workstation” by packing in lots of features without any attempt to make the experience of creating music simple, inspiring, and fun.
The Alesis Approach
At Alesis, our focus was not to simply pack in as many features as possible without regard to the user experience. We re-examined the idea of the workstation and set out to build an instrument that is musically inspiring, easy to use, and has everything to record even your wildest musical ideas without compromise. After over two years of research and development, our work resulted in the Fusion workstation.
Examining the Creation Process
How does a keyboard player find inspiration after sitting down at a workstation? Keyboardists often start by playing different sounds—a Grand Piano, synth lead, or maybe some drums. They search till they find something that inspires them and use that as a foundation to build their ideas.
What separates the Fusion from the competition is our wide palette of synthesized sounds. The best analogy for this can be found in painting. What if Rembrandt only had a few shades of gray at his disposal? There would be no depth or realism to his paintings. The paintings might still be pleasing to the eye, but you would feel like you were left lacking in the experience. This same principle applies for sonic choices as well.
The Fusion has a major advantage over its competitors because it gives you several sonic colors to paint with. With four totally different synthesis types built into one workstation, owning a Fusion is like having four different synthesizers at your disposal. More synths mean more sonic colors. More sonic colors mean more inspiration and better music.
Sample Playback
Say you want some good old sample playback synthesis… It’s been around a long time and it’s still the best way to create a realistic grand piano, drum kit, and many other instruments. No problem—the Fusion has it. We started from scratch and built a world class library of sounds just for the Fusion.
All Fusion sounds were custom made by some of the most talented sound designers in the industry. With thousands of incredible sample-based instruments at your disposal, you’ll never have a shortage of sonic inspiration on the Fusion.
Many people think the grand piano is the most important sound on a keyboard and we couldn’t agree more. We searched for the absolute best piano we could find and came across the “Holy Grail Piano” by Q Up Arts. The Holy Grail Piano is a world-class grand piano that was painstakingly sampled from top to bottom and turned into a breathtaking instrument. You can find this incredible piano on every Fusion workstation along with thousands of other top-quality sounds just like it.
Sampling
The sampler has become an incredibly popular instrument since its inception in the 80s. Whether you make hip hop, electronic, or even rock music, you can always use a sampler to make your song better. Whether you just want to play back a soundbite or go all-out and create your own custom instrument, the Fusion has you covered. Our synth’s comprehensive sampling capabilities let you record, edit, and manipulate sounds just like on a hardware sampler (or computer) and you can even store your samples on the Fusion’s massive 40-gigabyte hard disk—something that no other workstation offers. The graphical editing makes doing all this a snap.
Virtual Analog
If you’ve been playing keyboards for a while, you’ve probably heard of our award winning analog and virtual-analog synthesizers. The A6 Andromeda is the king of analog for countless top producers and musicians around the world, and our Ion and Micron virtual-analog synths beat the pants off competing keyboards costing five times as much! When it comes to analog, nobody can touch us in terms of sound quality or bang-for-the-buck.
The Fusion is our latest virtual-analog creation and it will knock your socks off.
Forget the cheesy “sampled analog” found on many of our competitors’ products—the Fusion will give you the real stuff: earth-shaking basses, gnarly leads, and lush pads.
There are plenty of assignable knobs and buttons giving you virtually unlimited control over an incredible array of mind-blowing sounds. Take one listen and you’ll know what we’re raving about.
FM Synthesis
Many of the bands you know and love from the 80’s and 90’s (and today) get their unique synth sounds from FM (Frequency Modulation) synthesizers. With sonic timbres ranging from the from the all too familiar “DX Rhodes” piano found in dozens of hit ballads to the instantly recognizable sounds found in Michael Jackson’s Thriller, FM is capable of generating a world of unique new sounds.
The FM synthesis engine on the Fusion can recreate all the great FM sounds of the past as well as go beyond and do things that were never possible on old FM synthesizers. We’re sure the FM timbres on the Fusion will work themselves into tons of platinum albums over the next few years.
Physical Modeling
Physical Modeling is a cutting-edge synthesis technology that is so new, many musicians don’t even know about it yet. The Fusion has it anyway because it’s the mother of all workstations and we think our users will appreciate what it will do for their music.
Have you ever listened to a wind or reed instrument on a keyboard and thought “this doesn’t sound like the real thing!” We have too. This is because analog, FM, and sample-based synthesizers are just not able to recreate the nuances of wind and reed instruments accurately. Physical modeling is a radically different approach to synthesis and creates sound by calculating how a sound wave behaves inside an instrument like a clarinet or a flute. This results in the most realistic and expressive wind and reed instruments you’ve ever heard coming out of a keyboard.
With physical modeling, you can even create instruments that don’t (or can’t) exist in real life. For example, have you ever wondered what a 30 foot long flute would sound like if played with hurricane-strength wind? Just configure your physical model on the easy-to-edit program menus and find out for yourself!
More Creative Tools
Once a musician has found an inspiring instrument, the Fusion has plenty of functions to make the songwriting process go more smoothly. For example, the Fusion’s advanced arpeggiator has multiple modes tailored for different styles of playing. First, it can function as your typical arpeggiator that plays preset or user defined patterns (like those commonly found in electronic music). The Fusion also has “Phrase arpeggiations” that help you play in styles that might not be familiar to keyboardists such as guitar strumming—creating convincing guitar strumming has never been easier than on a Fusion. The last mode is “Drum arpeggiations.” These are programmed beats that you can use to add drumming in your song. Think of this mode as being a full-featured drum machine that is thrown into the Fusion for free!
The Fusion’s high resolution sequencer was designed from the ground up to capture all the subtleties of your playing. The large LCD display and full graphical editing capabilities help making edits and fixing mistakes easy. That’s only the tip of the iceberg. The Fusion is the first and only workstation that lets you seamlessly mix MIDI and multitrack digital audio. The sequencer records MIDI and multitrack direct-to-disk audio recordings on one screen. Being able to edit MIDI and audio on screen is just like working on a computer (without having to lug around a computer plus monitor, that is). Once you’re done recording, editing, and mixing your composition, you can even burn your mixed down projects on CD using our optional CD recorder. **
With a long list of celebrated synths and recorders like the A6 Andromeda and HD24, you could say Alesis has been around the block a dozen times when it comes to synthesis and recording technology. The combination of these world-class technologies in the Fusion lets you take your idea from concept to a finished recording in one awe-inspiring workstation.
Playing Well with Others
The Fusion is designed for the modern keyboard player. We know you’ll want to move files to and from the workstation from your computer, so we’ve included USB 2.0, ADAT Lightpipe, and Compact Flash connectivity. Moving samples, multitrack recordings, projects, and mixdowns from your workstation has never been easier.
Let’s say you want to create a song away from your studio. Just fire up your Fusion and get to work. When it’s time to move your project to a computer just connect your Fusion to your computer through USB and drag your files to the desktop—it’s as simple as that. The Fusion stores all sound and MIDI data in common formats that can be opened in any DAW software.
The Mother of all Workstations
Over the last two years, we’ve put a lot of love and energy into making the absolute best workstation ever built. We’re sure you’ll agree once you play it and all other workstations will feel weak in comparison. Don’t take our word for it—try one and hear for yourself.
What is the polyphony of the Fusion Synth?
This depends on the types of synthesis being used. Currently gett ing 180 voice polyphony for sample playback synthesis.
Are the sounds in the Fusion new?
Alesis s tarted from scratch and ha s developed a new library of sounds for the sample playback section. There are newly developed sounds for the Analog Modeling section as well as the FM and Physical modeling part as well.
Technology
Fusion - a union by or as if by melting: as a : a merging of diverse, distinct, or separate elements into a unified whole.
Synthesis
The Alesis Fusion has a newly developed synthesizer engine that employs a Coldfire processor surrounded by seven high-performance DSPs. This massively powerful processing core starts by giving you the following four synthesis types: Sample Playback, Analog Modeling, FM and Physical Modeling.
Alesis Dynamic DSP Synthesis™
The Fusion’s synthesis engine is whatever you configure it to be. Maybe you just want regular sample playback synthesis for all of your instruments in one song. The next song has sampled drums and an analog synth lead. The song after that is more esoteric and combines physical modeling and FM synthesis along with analog and sample-based synthesis. It all can happen on the Fusion because of our Dynamic DSP Synthesis engine.
Sample Playback and User Sampling
The Fusion has a unique new approach to the concept of sample playback synthesis. Unlike our competitors’ sample-based workstations, the Fusion is designed to be extremely flexible. Sounds in the built-in 64MB (comparable to 128MB linear) Flash ROM can be exchanged for other samples that are stored on either Compact Flash or the internal 40 Gigabyte Hard disk. This means you have access to a virtually unlimited library of sounds.
You can also easily create your own custom instruments. The Fusion allows you to sample through the analog inputs, or to load in WAV files from your computer via USB (or Compact Flash) to create your custom soundset.
Our optional E2 memory module allows you to expand internal memory. This will add an additional 128MB of RAM on top of the internal 64MB giving you a total of 192MB of memory for sample playback sounds.
Alesis has created a completely new soundset for the Fusion. Our newly developed libraries offer the absolute best collection of top-quality instruments for realistic performance.
Virtual Analog
Alesis has a very strong background in Virtual Analog (VA) synthesis. Over the years we have researched and built many synthesizers (including the real analog monster called the Andromeda) with massive sounds and extremely accurate emulations of classic analog filters.
The Fusion contains a very flexible virtual analog synth. The VA engine offers three oscillators with ring modulation and lots of flexible routing as well. The engine features multiple types of filters with variable poles to emulate the characteristics of many vintage analog synths. The Fusion also offers in-depth modulation assignments of countless parameters. The VA engine in the Fusion goes far beyond other VA synths—even ones that only do virtual analog synthesis. With the user defined modulation table assignments it’s like having a modular analog synth that can remember all your crazy patch cable routes every time you call up the program.
FM Synthesis
The Fusion is the first keyboard in Alesis history to offer Frequency Modulation (FM) synthesis. This radically different and sonically diverse form of synthesis was introduced in the 70’s and has made a major impact on musicians and producers alike.
FM is fundamentally different from our subtractive sample-playback and virtual analog synth engines. Unlike many other kinds of synthesis, FM uses at least two oscillators to make sound. Traditionally, FM uses one operator oscillator that is modulated by a carrier oscillator, but depending on the sound you are looking for, you can have multiple operators or multiple carriers (or both). Each additional oscillator greatly affects your overall sound. While FM synthesis might be a little more complex to understand than other synthesis types, it can produce very unique timbres that just can’t be created using any other methods.
The Fusion’s FM engine is designed to be straightforward and easy to operate. There are six oscillators that can be flexibly routed to either generate sounds or work as carriers. The oscillators can output the following waveforms: sine, sine square root, sine squared, sine warp or white noise. Each of these waveforms offer distinctive sonic variations and give you a wide palette of sounds to choose from.
Our FM signal router is a handy menu that has preset templates allowing users to quickly assemble programs without the difficulty of traditional FM programming. Additionally, you can add envelopes and an LFO to further modulate and shape your stunning new FM sounds.
Physical Modeling
The fourth and final synthesis type on the Fusion uses cutting edge Physical Modeling algorithms. Physical modeling is an advanced new approach for creating sounds that is vastly different from all the other synthesis types found on the Fusion. It uses complex mathematical calculations to compute how a sound wave behaves inside an instrument. This lets you create a “virtual model” of an instrument that you can play and modify in real-time.
A real world example of this is when a flute player changes the pressure and shape of his lips on the mouthpiece while blowing into the instrument. This results in minor changes in the nuances of the flute’s sound. These changes are easy to create using physical modeling but very difficult to do using any other form of synthesis.
Many musicians cringe at the mention of mathematics and algorithms, but they have nothing to fear with the Fusion. Our synth designers carefully created an interface with simple and intuitive parameters that make sense to musicians. This means users can tweak their sounds without having to deal with any complex math or confusing parameters.
A physical model has several real-time parameters for a user to tweak such as Breath, Noise, Jet, Curve, Frequency and Bore Filter. With physical modeling all of these parameters can adjusted in real-time to affect the sound. Traditional instruments such as digital samplers have no way to alter the specifics of the sound because samplers only play static recordings of a sound that can’t be modified by the input parameters.
The Fusion contains two core physical models including “Wind” (flutes) and “Reed” (clarinet, Oboe and Sax). Both of these models are fully adaptable and can be set to model instruments that do not (or can’t) exist in real life. This gives users the ability to tweak existing models or create totally new sound timbres using the powerful physical modeling engine.
Mix up your Synthesis
The Fusion’s synthesis engine is whatever you configure it to be. Maybe you just want regular sample playback synthesis for all of your instruments in one song. The next song has sampled drums and an analog synth lead. The song after that is more esoteric and combines physical modeling and FM synthesis along with analog and sample-based synthesis. It all can happen on the Fusion because of our Dynamic DSP Synthesis engine.
Now that you understand the different components that make up the Fusion’s synth engine, it’s easy to imagine the kinds of music you can create with it. Each synthesis type can be played individually or can be mixed together with other types to form new, composite sounds.
The Mix Mode of the Fusion can have up to eight different instruments (each with a different synthesis type.) This lets you layer and mix different synthesis types to make incredible new sonic atmospheres. Imagine your custom samples, mixed with real world instruments, layered with FM percussive textures, modeled wind instruments and a thick stew of analog filters all in one workstation. The Fusion makes all this possible.
Tone Generator Fusion Engine Synthesis - Sample Playback, Virtual Analog, FM, Physical Modeling
Polyphony Dynamic processor allocation. Up to 180 voices of sample playback.
Multitimbral Capacity Mix: 8 internal/16 external, Song: 16 internal/16 external
Waveforms- tones 120 MB (when converted to 16-bit linear format)
Sounds Preset Instruments: 800 Programs Preset Drumkits : 64 Drumkits GM: 128 Programs, plus 8 Drum Kits User: 40GB of whatever you want
Mixes 200 Mixes
Filters 13 types
Effects- types and amt 20 Reverbs, 10 Chorus, 50 Insert Effects, 4 Band EQ (low shelf, low, mid, high mid, Hi shelve
Sampler
Multi-samples (waveform capacity) 128 samples per Multisample
Sampling sources Analog Input L/R, Stereo Output (resampling)
A/D Conversion 24 -bit, 64 X oversampling
D/A Conversion 24 -bit, 128 X oversampling
Sampling Frequencies 44.1 kHz
Memory Memory 64MB installed, optional expansion to 192MB
Sampling Time 11 Min, 53 Sec (with onboard memory), 37 Min, 15 Sec (with full expansion memory)
Sample Formats Alesis format, wav
Sequencer
Note Capacity Unlimited / based on HD limitations
Note Resolution 480 ppq
Tracks 32 Tracks
Songs 40GB of whatever you want
Arpeggio Preset: Preset 1000 User:User Unlimited
Sequence Format SMF
Controllers Pitch Bend Wheel, Modulation Wheel, Aftertouch, Assignable Control Knobs (4), Assignable Trigger Buttons (4), Assignable Switches (2)
Display 240 x 128 backlit LCD
External Storage Compact Flash Type I and Type II (Flash and Microdrives), SATA HD and (by Fall 2005) CD-RW
Connectors Stereo Input L-Mono/R (Standard 1/4 Jack), Stereo Headphone Output (Standard 1/4 Jack),Stereo Main Output L/R (Standard 1/4 Jack), Stereo Aux Output L/R (Standard 1/4 Jack), S/PDIF Output (Coax/Optical), ADAT Output (Optical), MIDI In/Out/Thru, Sustain Pedal, Footswitch, Expression Pedal, USB (to Host), HD Recording Inputs 1-8 (Standard 1/4 Jack), External Drive (SATA), AC Inlet
Power Consumption 50 W
Dimensions Fusion 8HD: 51.5x14x5 in, 130.8x35.6x12.7cm Fusion 6HD: 35.5x14x4 in, 90.2x35.6x10.2 cm
Weight Fusion 8HD: 58.4 lb, 25.6 kg Fusion 6HD: 30.4 lb, 13.8 kg
[This message has been edited by Darksounds (edited 04-02-2005).]
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#89980 - 04/03/05 12:08 AM
Re: Alesis Fusion Workstation : Your Thoughts
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: CA
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It should be one great Workstation Darksounds. With all those features packed into it and the price you pay it is a no brainer in my opinion. But ultimately the true test will be how good the sounds really are. You can have a ton of cutting edge features but if the sounds don't cut the mustard, i.e. they aren't exceptional, then you may as well look elsewhere. My only concern about the Fusion is how good the acoustic sounds will be. When demos finally get posted on the fusionsynth.com site, then we will get a better picture on how good the bread and butter sounds on the Fusion really are. Better yet is demoing a Fusion in person and putting it through its paces. That will be the ultimate decision maker on whether it gets a thumbs up or a thumbs down, i.e. it's a winner or in fact turns out to be a dog. My thoughts are it will be a blazing success if the acoustic sounds pass the test for quality and realism. The Synth sounds are already over the top in my opinion, i.e. they are extremely good from what I heard from the NAMM demo. It may well be the first Workstation I get that remains a keeper. We shall see... Best regards, Mike
_________________________
Yamaha Genos, Mackie HR824 MKII Studio Monitors, Mackie 1202 VLZ Pro Mixer (made in USA), Cakewalk Sonar Platinum, Shure SM58 vocal mic.
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#89982 - 04/03/05 06:53 AM
Re: Alesis Fusion Workstation : Your Thoughts
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Member
Registered: 12/01/04
Posts: 120
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"In many ways, the Alesis sounds similar to the Yamaha Motif except the Motif does thing like virtual sound modeling or FM synthesis through the addition of plug-in cards. That's going to be a problem for the Fusion: it has to trump the competition, not just match it." lol so eight tracks of recording through 1/4 inputs at 24bit doesn't alone trump the competition...hell thats a feature beyond the 9000$ board from Korg. " The Motifs are very well established in the market so if the Fusion doesn't offer more in terms of sound quality and/or feature-set then people won't buy it, especially if they already have a workstation of some sort." You know...if you honestly tried out some stuff from Alesis, you wouldn't make silly statements like this. We already know the VA of the fusion at the very least will be on par with the Ion ( main contrast being Ion has 16 filer types Vs the 13 types of the fusion )...lol does Yamaha even have a VA on the market? Past that how many filter types does the Motif have? Anyhow...back to things we know. From the namm footage we know the fusion has the "holygrail" piano...so think its safe to say piano should be covered. An electric piano was in the demo that was nice. We also know that the sample set for the fusion is ALL NEW...so thinking about Q synths in relation to the fusion is pointless. Hah plus when you have "unlimited" sample space...its really pointless. 88keys for under 2000$...I really dont think Alesis has to worry about how the Fusion stacks up to the Motif, its Yamaha thats gonna have to scramble with something to counter it. Given Alesis has stuff like the Andromeda a monster of an analog synth for the same price ( lower even ) then Yamaha charges for some of their arrangers. Link to Andromeda demos http://www.alesis.de/downloads/audiodemos.html Link to ion demos http://alesis.com/products/Ion/Demos/ Track 3 "HowWhy" ion http://www.nowhereradio.com/artists/album.php?aid=4453&alid=-1 The only lacking I see with the Fusion is its insert effects options...yet with all the other freedom offered Im thinking it would be easy to counter. Anyhow I agree with KeyBplayer...hahah twenty or more hours of demo time should help with how the Fusion pans out If the new samples suck, if the VA is somehow a train wreck, if its OS is just crap and so on...ill be the first ( relative ) to admit or point it out. Its mostly the insane potential the Fusion could drop off that has me excited. Hell when I first saw pictures of it ( right after the Korg ) I was thinking it would be in the 3 to 4K range...1600$ :P Yet another link...this one directly related to the Fusion. http://www.keyboardmag.com/story.asp?sectioncode=29&storycode=5131
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#89985 - 04/03/05 10:43 PM
Re: Alesis Fusion Workstation : Your Thoughts
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/09/02
Posts: 1087
Loc: Atlanta, Georgia
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Originally posted by Alone&Forsaken: "In many ways, the Alesis sounds similar to the Yamaha Motif except the Motif does thing like virtual sound modeling or FM synthesis through the addition of plug-in cards. That's going to be a problem for the Fusion: it has to trump the competition, not just match it."
lol so eight tracks of recording through 1/4 inputs at 24bit doesn't alone trump the competition...hell thats a feature beyond the 9000$ board from Korg.
The mLAN16e transforms the Motif ES into a 16 channel output, 8 channel input computer audio interface that allows you, simultaneously, to record 14 individual output channels plus the stereo mix to your computer and use insert effects as you record. During playback you can bring 4 stereo busses from your DAW back into the ES to be monitored at the Motif ES's stereo analog output while applying additional Motif ES system and master effects to these busses. The Fusion has an eight-track hard-disk audio recorder built into it... sorta like the $550 Zoom MRS-802B? I guess if you want that built into your synth then you'll like the Fusion but my computer is still my recorder of choice and the Motif offers a lot of options in that regard.
" The Motifs are very well established in the market so if the Fusion doesn't offer more in terms of sound quality and/or feature-set then people won't buy it, especially if they already have a workstation of some sort."
You know...if you honestly tried out some stuff from Alesis, you wouldn't make silly statements like this. We already know the VA of the fusion at the very least will be on par with the Ion ( main contrast being Ion has 16 filer types Vs the 13 types of the fusion )...lol does Yamaha even have a VA on the market? Past that how many filter types does the Motif have? Anyhow...back to things we know. From the namm footage we know the fusion has the "holygrail" piano...so think its safe to say piano should be covered. An electric piano was in the demo that was nice. We also know that the sample set for the fusion is ALL NEW...so thinking about Q synths in relation to the fusion is pointless. Hah plus when you have "unlimited" sample space...its really pointless.
I've tried the Alesis QS 6.1 and 8.2. They were not very good sounding synths - I've been trying to help a freind sell his QS 6.1 with two of the so-called "dance cards" installed for $300 for two years with no takers (you want it?). I also remember the Alesis Nanopiano... that didn't last long either and it sure wasn't popular. I didn't just suddenly decide to not like Alesis - they earned their reputation for less-than-stellar synths all on their own.
Since you asked, Yamaha makes the PLG150-AN analog modeling synth plug-in card for the Motif, and they also make the AN200 analog modeling synth. It's actually easier to do a Google search for Yamaha's product lines than to make bad assumptions.
But to be fair I wasn't crazy about the lack of a hands-on interface for the PLG150-AN and I shopped around for a new VA. I tried out the Alesis Ion, but for my money I liked the Novation X-Station 49 better and I bought one. Makes a nice companion to my Motif ES 8.
If the new samples suck, if the VA is somehow a train wreck, if its OS is just crap and so on...ill be the first ( relative ) to admit or point it out.
The Fusion may be the greatest synth Alesis ever made but if it is then it'll be a departure from some of their failed synths of the past. I'm hoping the Fusion turns out better than it's predecessors, that's all.
_________________________
Jim Eshleman
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#89988 - 04/04/05 12:43 PM
Re: Alesis Fusion Workstation : Your Thoughts
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Member
Registered: 12/01/04
Posts: 120
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"That's what you get for not READING the posts you are responding to... been there, done that..." Sorry...my bad...you played the Ion and ran through its presets in prob under an hour if that at best :P Go play the Micron / Andromeda in the first place and Ion again. Beyond that you only brought up the Q series that... (the sample set for the fusion is ALL NEW...so thinking about Q synths in relation to the fusion is pointless) ...( and nanopiano ). Oh but you also dumped on a mountain of you happen to own a Motif now with blah blah blah of your production setup ( or at least a setup that could be done ). So it just seems to me you have a bias to what you already own...I mean heck wasn't it a bit extreme of you to toss out "just add a few thousand of gear to a Motif" to contrast it to the Fusion we haven't played. "But to be fair I wasn't crazy about the lack of a hands-on interface for the PLG150-AN and I shopped around for a new VA. I tried out the Alesis Ion, but for my money I liked the Novation X-Station 49 better and I bought one." Starting to catch on when I say Yamaha doesn't have VA or real analog that competes with Alesis. Not a matter of being fair, just a matter of seeing things for what they are. You know...I would care for your points if your site and music were a bit more reflective of your supposed taste behind your gear ( sorry just when someone speaks of hands on, then has a load of midi driven material quantized all to hell and back just seems kinda odd ). Beyond that...happy you like the Novation its a nice synth "Since you asked, Yamaha makes the PLG150-AN analog modeling synth plug-in card for the Motif, and they also make the AN200 analog modeling synth. It's actually easier to do a Google search for Yamaha's product lines than to make bad assumptions." I dint ask...lol and Im still under the assumption that what Yamaha offers doesn't hold a candle to efforts from Korg/Alesis/Nord and so on. Why dont you google me up some review links that say otherwise :P AN200...lol come on now. Right off less polyphony, less filter types, low rez encoders, on top of the fact the unit is more so a table top groove box its STUPID to contrast it to Ion /Micron / Andromeda ( :P even If I just sorta did :P ). Hah but if a groove box thats out of production that Yamaha dint see fit to include in their own product archives is something you wish to make your grand point with...point taken just not how you intended. " I'm hoping the Fusion turns out better than it's predecessors " I want it to turn out nice as well, just kinda hard for me to say "in light of its predecessors" given this is the first " workstation " Alesis has put out Funny thing here...I only brought up Alesis SYNTHS ( not romplers ), to illustrate that we could have something around the same level of their VAs with a 32track sequencer ( if Im thinking right on the 32 ). The synth engine for the Fusion is ALSO all new much like the sample set thats gonna be droped in it. Just given its been common knowledge for years that Alesis VA kicks more or less everyone to the curb ( where relative )...its not hard to extrapolate the new synth engine linked to a sequencer its sample banks user samples and 24bit recording across eight tracks could be a very good thing. Now IM just gonna wait for what I already know is gonna be said. [This message has been edited by Alone&Forsaken (edited 04-04-2005).]
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