Additive Synth For Reason

US Oberon is now available from the Propellerhead shop      01/07/15

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Oberon from zvork is a new synth for Reason. A spokesperson had this to say about it, "Oberon is a synthesizer built to explore and produce the fattest of sounds with uncompromised audio quality. Based under the hood on an optimized additive engine, it delivers totally alias free audio with a familiar user interface while giving you incredible control on your sound. With its interactive central display, edit your envelopes, waves, filters and more through multi-point curves."

Here's a detailed description from the Propellerhead shop:

The Oberon synthesizer has two oscillator sections and two filters. Each oscillator can be fed to one of the two filters or to both, in serial or parallel mode. These filters enable you to alter the timbre of your sound but are not the only mean to do so. Each oscillator can generate a number of different waves, from simple sawtooth and square to more complex metallic or robotic sounds. Each of these waves is in reality a wave sequence that can be played at different speeds.

All the above could seem very classic if it wasn't for these following features:

Multi-point loop-able envelopes

Each of Oberon's four envelopes are defined by a user editable curve, with up to 16 points. These envelopes are furthermore loop-able, between the start and sustain point, with a tempo synchronization option.

Editable waves

There are two editable waves, or wave sequences, that the user can customize. For each of these wave sequences, two editable curves let you draw the shape of the start and end waveforms of the sequence.

Editable Filter response curves

In Oberon, the filters don't have predefined modes such as low pass, high pass or comb. Instead you define the filter response yourself, again with an editable curve. Each filter response can morph between two curves for even more dramatic and changing effects.

X-Morph between oscillators

This special feature lets you smoothly morph between two sound sources, potentially of different pitches and timbre. Morph between a pitch downed version of the same oscillator or between oscillator 1 and oscillator 2 for original transitions. The morphing effect can also be masked for certain portions of the spectrum if, for instance, you want to apply the character of one sound source solely to the high frequencies.

Unison and Octave virtual voices

To fatten your sounds, each oscillator can be virtually duplicated up to 8 times with a pitch detune. After that, if this isn't enough, another virtual copy of the resulting sound can be added to your final sound mix at an octave higher. As the term "virtual copy" coins, all this is extremely efficient on your CPU.

Timbre bend

If you are in need of metallic inharmonic sounds, this is the functionality you need. With it you can quickly bend your sound to mimic highly rigid strings, bells or quirky buzzes, in a predictable way.

Separate voice audio and gate outputs

On the back panel you will find 8 separate outputs for both stereo audio and CV gate. Individual voices can be distributed among these outputs.

Patches

Oberon comes with over 300 patches in all categories.

 

Pricing and Availability:
$99

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