First Synthesizer

Should I buy an ARP Odyssey

An MS 20

A Minilogue

Or a Moog sub phatty

Currently have SEM emulator and Dexed to pair with.

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minilogue is a good entry synth. i bought one too and i'm very happy with it.

Its heavily considered, I'm just fully making sure I pick the right one since it will be awhile until I can give it a friend.

the ms20 is great too, but i think you'll be the most happy with the minilogue because of its great variety of sounds and how easy it is to work with it.
a good old moog would be a great addition later.

the Odyssey is more user friendly than the MS20 imo, both sounds really cool though. Never tried the other two

Minilogue.
MS20 is a bit of a pain for starting out and only really shines once you have hardware to run through the ESB.

>beginning with anything but a MicroKORG
neck yourself

Actually, don't buy any of those. Wait for the release of the Roland SE-02. You should look into it, but it's essentially a fully analog Moog Model D clone with modern functionality and components. It's gonna be the next best thing since sliced bread since it's Studio Electronics behind the helm instead of Roland.

Hi its OP

Yeah, just heard about that, looks pretty sick!
Forgot to list that one.
My logic is one synth per year ($500-700 ballpark)

That would be a good first synth...

Roland Jupiter8 or nothing

Kek

>Hi its OP
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I think you will really enjoy it because it does have that very unique Moog character. I have a massive collection of synths and even owned a Model D at one point, and I'm still looking forward to it's release. Just a warning though, a bunch of the reissues are incredibly difficult to use when you only have a handful of synths because their patching options are generally very poor. Full MIDI functionality will save you so much time and let you keep ideas around without just printing everything which is great for starting out.


Even if you're someone who knows how to repair vintage synths and keeps a collection of them around, the Jupiter-8 is still like loving a sickly young child. Every time it ends up needing fixed it's gonna break your heart and your wallet.

OP says hi

WTF is this hipster shit just get a casio

get a modular set up imo

youtube.com/watch?v=aOH8CZRnuUQ

Different user here,
I have a Microkorg, but I don't really find it interesting tbqhwy, seems more like it's preset based instead of the on-the-fly sound fuckery. Am I missing something?
I'd really love to like the thing famalam. Also I can't afford an other synth, so that'll have to do for a while.

are those shakey hands from playing piano?

Learn how to create your own presets senpai. Thing does a shit ton of stuff

awoooo~

Yeah, great advice for a first synth get one of the first models of the prophet-5 and spend 20 mins tuning it every time you want to play the thing.

if you're eventually hoping to get into modular synthesis the ms-20 mini is a good choice. it's got 2 VCO's, LPF, HPF, MF, Env filter, enough stuff to do on the patch board to get some wierd things, an external input for other stuff to pass through the filters. most importantly it's cheap for what it is.

>tfw know how to use a synthesizer but dont know how to create music

post patches or youre bsing

how? patches and sounds dont correlate to music. A synth is just an instrument. You could learn guitar but not be gud at making music

>
if you "know" synths that means you know how to accurately recreate a sound. that would also mean you can play piano well, which i doubt is the case. To create music you just apply what you know to experimentation. If someone was good at guitar theyd be able to make their own music too, since they would have at least rudimentry knowledge of chord structures and riffs, knowing what does and doesnt work. Even knowing just an E chord you could base a song around it (as is the case with ina gata na vita)