If you buy RE @ 49 you would pay the difference (50) to get VST/AU as well.
IF you buy RE @ 49, AND Synapse puts the VST/AU on sale sometime in the future, say 79, you can get the VST crossgrade through Synapse for 30 at that time.
If you buy RE @ 49 you would pay the difference (50) to get VST/AU as well.
Bummer. Would have been an impulse purchase for sure. I need to save up for the Reason upgrade.stratatonic wrote: ↑06 Nov 2017If you buy RE @ 49 you would pay the difference (50) to get VST/AU as well.
IF you buy RE @ 49, AND Synapse puts the VST/AU on sale sometime in the future, say 79, you can get the VST crossgrade through Synapse for 30 at that time.
Smart Move. The legend gets a head start, By nov 24...there's going to be lots of noise in the RE and VST market!
I have not tested the sustain pedal however slap it into a combinator should sort that out for now.
To be truly pedantic its more than 50% off.Creativemind wrote: ↑06 Nov 2017To be pedantic it's less than 50% off. 50% off would €49.50.
Whichever way you look at it...it's a bargain!
Idk, I still kind of feel if you got an understanding of the underlying architecture, (where the drive is, how much drive is there [i.e filters/amp], what type of drive, what type of filter slope, the curve of the envelopes) you defintely would be able to create the exact same patches using VK2. Still I agree it is a phenomenal instrument, and like said before in the end I only got VK2 instead because I'd created so many patches I just had to buy it after the trial. Both occupy the highest tier in classic analog synth land. The weird thing about VK2 for me is that I've had Mono/Poly frying my MBP CPU (2.7ghz i7) with one pad patch unison set to 16, with 128 voices (it sounds awesome don't judge), but no singular VK2 patch has come anywhere close to doing that sort of damage on either of my workstations.Loque wrote: ↑07 Nov 2017Man...the sound is so great of this synth. The synth looks so simple, but it sounds awsome. I just tried to re-create a few patches with VK-2 and (as my experience is with most synths) they never sound the same, completly different. So if you have one, you still can buy the other. Playing the filter sounds very nice on The Legend, putting some noise in it...luv it!
Well, i tried to recreate some simple sounds, but with not that success. They came close, after i completely ignored any values and focused on my ears. But the feedback-loop, filter sound, the fx are taste on its own and cannot be easily recreated and they also have an impact on the sound. I just tried (again) some feedback loop in other synths similar to The Legend, but failed. The feedback also seem to have some pitch adjustment in it - dunno - maybe someone else has a detailed idea, what this thing does. In the end i cannot reproduce this feedback loop with some of my synths and the point is, i can hook it up in The Legend with one simple knob.Flavolous wrote: ↑07 Nov 2017Idk, I still kind of feel if you got an understanding of the underlying architecture, (where the drive is, how much drive is there [i.e filters/amp], what type of drive, what type of filter slope, the curve of the envelopes) you defintely would be able to create the exact same patches using VK2. Still I agree it is a phenomenal instrument, and like said before in the end I only got VK2 instead because I'd created so many patches I just had to buy it after the trial. Both occupy the highest tier in classic analog synth land. The weird thing about VK2 for me is that I've had Mono/Poly frying my MBP CPU (2.7ghz i7) with one pad patch unison set to 16, with 128 voices (it sounds awesome don't judge), but no singular VK2 patch has come anywhere close to doing that sort of damage on either of my workstations.Loque wrote: ↑07 Nov 2017Man...the sound is so great of this synth. The synth looks so simple, but it sounds awsome. I just tried to re-create a few patches with VK-2 and (as my experience is with most synths) they never sound the same, completly different. So if you have one, you still can buy the other. Playing the filter sounds very nice on The Legend, putting some noise in it...luv it!
You can add a audio input from the backside to the mixer on front or try the mod matrix and mix it in. I tried splitting the output or the filter output, didnt sound satisfying. Maybe i give it another try with some frequencey and pitch shifting (which will introduce lateny too ) and an envelope to the signal before routing it back.
I read in the original legend thread it does not support sustain pedals.Carly(Poohbear) wrote: ↑07 Nov 2017I have not tested the sustain pedal however slap it into a combinator should sort that out for now.
Odd how the Prop Shop works. I was hoping to go through and see if I could go with Paypal credit. I guess it skipped through some processes and now I have it. Oh bummer. No crap presets in this. It sounds nice. If you you are not synth savy it's real easy to create new stuff with the existing patches.kitekrazy wrote: ↑06 Nov 2017Bummer. Would have been an impulse purchase for sure. I need to save up for the Reason upgrade.stratatonic wrote: ↑06 Nov 2017
If you buy RE @ 49 you would pay the difference (50) to get VST/AU as well.
IF you buy RE @ 49, AND Synapse puts the VST/AU on sale sometime in the future, say 79, you can get the VST crossgrade through Synapse for 30 at that time.
It more insane with VST effects. Waves sale prices on Diamond were around $200. Spire VST was $139. The soft synth market hasn't been as competitive. I still prefer REs for Reason because most likely they are stable. I just had Reason crash on opening while it was scanning VSTs. Even though I'm a casual user I've never had it crash. VST support now makes that possible.Social Exodus wrote: ↑06 Nov 2017
Honestly, I have no idea why these synths are all deeply discounted right now. But for whatever reason (pun intended?) there is a good old fashioned price war happening here, wouldn't you agree?
Note, that the filter of The Legend can be adjusted on the back.Re8et wrote: ↑09 Nov 2017Now I'm buffled.
My trial just finished. I tried also to recreate a sound of the Legend with the Vk2, and it went really close, but not the same.
Then I took al fx, amp, drives, etc off, to the point of Saw vs Saw, but the two filters sections has slightly different range and slopes, and in the
end the simple Saw had a "brighter point" on the Legend. Maybe it was for that feedback loop I did not know of what is doing exactly. Anyway some particular patches I could not Vk2 replicate to exact range are true blue, almost.
Deal of the week it mean it ends on saturday... hard choice..
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