Dreamwaves by name, Dreamwaves by nature, this card is full of fantastic pseudo‑analogue pads, sweeps and atmospherics. Let's do this systematically and look at Volume 1 first. So with this in mind I was more than a little interested to check out the fruits of someone else's labour (Paul Osborn, the sound designer), as demonstrated by these two sound cards. The oft‑touted analogy about editing an SR is that it's like wallpapering the hall through the letter box, which would be rather amusing if it wasn't so true (I've tried both, by way of comparison, and can report that the results of my wallpapering were marginally more consistent than the SR editing). Me? I'm a Wavestation SR owner, and I like the sounds enough to wish that I wasn't - the more inviting user interface of an A/D or keyboard version would be preferable. Considering that the Wavestation first emerged in 1990, it's aged remarkably gracefully and, relative to some of its contemporaries, still remains quite desirable.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |