This is a two-part overview of Phosphor, a modern re-make of the alphaSyntauri digital synth of the early 80s. The first part shows a simple track with four Phosphor instances, and the second part takes a quick tour of the UI and shows how to quickly program a sound.
I like the fact that Phosphor displays the waveforms generated by their oscillators, however I don't like the fact that they're superimposed on the partial editing sections. I think you guys should put the waveforms above those sections. Also, the filters don't seem to have their own envelopes.
@Desmaad The filters don't seem to have their own envelopes because the filters don't have their own envelopes. Those filters are in the feedback path of the delays.
@AudioDamage001 I know this may seem silly, what with Phosphor being an additive synth and all, but I think that envelope controlled filters directly in the signal path would be a good thing, especially if you need to change the sound predictably over time.
I like the fact that Phosphor displays the waveforms generated by their oscillators, however I don't like the fact that they're superimposed on the partial editing sections. I think you guys should put the waveforms above those sections. Also, the filters don't seem to have their own envelopes.
Desmaad 1 year ago
@Desmaad The filters don't seem to have their own envelopes because the filters don't have their own envelopes. Those filters are in the feedback path of the delays.
AudioDamage001 1 year ago