
- #SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS HOW TO#
- #SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS MOD#
- #SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS FREE#
- #SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS MAC#
Great synth ear training, useful explanations Program, record and play Primer in your favorite desktop recording software. Plugin version of Syntorial's synth, Primer.Train where you want, when you want, and how you want. Sync your progress across all 3 platforms.
#SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS MAC#
Pay once and get access to all of the above on iPad, Mac and PC.More Lesson Packs planned for the future. Additional Lesson Packs covering Massive, Sylenth1, Cakewalk Z3TA+ 2 and Minimoog Voyager, each containing 30+ videos.All 199 Lessons, including 129 Challenges, 147 Videos, and 706 Patches covering the most common synthesis parameters.
#SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS FREE#
The free app comes with the first 22 Lessons, additional Lesson Pack samples, as well as Syntorial's fully featured synth.

#SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS MOD#
#SYNTORIAL SOUND DESIGN REVIEWS HOW TO#
You aren’t just learning how to design sound, you are becoming a sound designer. It engages you in Interactive Challenges in which you program patches on a built-in synth.

* Electronic Musician Editor's Choice 2014 * A unique and fun way to train your ears in re-creating synth sounds.” - MusicTech Magazine “The best training in synth sound-design we’ve come across. "The most comprehensive and fun tool for learning synthesizer programming, hands down." - Keyboard Magazine "Syntorial is the most direct route between hearing a sound in your head and knowing how to bring it to life." - Electronic Musician Magazine By combining video demonstrations with interactive challenges, you’ll get hands on experience programming patches on a built-in soft synth, and learn everything you need to know to start making your own sounds with ease. I'm not really thinking about tweakability here, more about knowing if a sound feels cheap or not.Syntorial is a synthesizer training app, that will teach you how to program synth patches by ear. How would you go about comparing different synths? Using the same type of waveform and finding out which one sounds best? What other parameters would you play with first? Is there anything Zebra or Diva can do that Vital can't?Īnd if not, why? Different types of oscillators, filters that give specific types of sounds? Something else?Īlso, I know it's pretty vague but I tend to like "analogue-sounding" synths, and people usually put synths like Vital or Serum on the other end of the spectrum, right? Like they're not as "warm", and more used in modern music or something. So I'm planning on learning the basics of synths (I was just using presets so far and tweaking a bit when needed), and later on sound design (? If that's the adequate term), and I've got a few stupid questions.
