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Ενα εκτενεστατο review του Pro 2, του νεου υβριδικου μονοφωνικου synth του Dave Smith.
Το review ειναι απο το τελευταιο τευχος (Νοεμβριος 2014) του Electronic Musician.
Part 1/2
Dave Smith Instruments Pro 2
Meet the new boss: the return of the mighty monosynth
Review by Geary Yelton
Meet the new boss: the return of the mighty monosynth
Review by Geary Yelton
The second synth I ever owned was a Sequential Circuits Pro-One. In 1981, it gave me everything I wanted in a monophonic instrument: analog oscillators, a noise generator, a fat lowpass filter, ADSR generators, a choice of LFO waveforms, surprisingly flexible modulation routing, a rudimentary step sequencer, and the first arpeggiator I’d ever used. It had no MIDI and no presets, and it deleted its sequencer data the moment you switched off the power.
Sequential Circuits sold about 10,000 Pro-Ones during four years of production because they sounded so good and they cost just over half a grand. The Pro-One was like a Prophet-5 for those of us who couldn’t afford patch storage or polyphony. Today, a used one in good condition commands as much as $2,000—close to the original price of a new one when you take inflation into account.
Sequential Circuits was founded by Dave Smith, the man who first conceived of MIDI, invented vector synthesis, and launched the first commercial soft synth. His current, eponymously named company recently introduced a direct descendent of the Pro-One, appropriately named the Pro 2. Thirty years after the original ceased production, you’d expect some significant enhancements, and you won’t be disappointed. The Pro 2 blends the rich sound of analog filters with the precision and versatility of digital technology, and it sells for about the same price as a good used Pro-One.
The Pro 2 begins with a single Prophet 12 voice and expands on that foundation. It has 4 digital oscillators, 2 analog filters, and one of the most sophisticated step sequencers I’ve seen in any instrument. Control-voltage inputs and outputs give it modular compatibility. And although it isn’t a true polysynth, it lets you play 4 notes at the same time.
Look Around
The Pro 2’s black-and-red front panel and wood trim, as well as its user interface and much of its functionality, take their cues from the Prophet 12. The Velocity_and Aftertouch_sensing keyboard has 44 keys (the same as a Minimoog), and the pitch bend and mod wheels emit a red glow. Above the wheels are two pressure-sensitive, latchable touch sliders (the likes of which first appeared on the company’s Tempest analog drum machine), along with the Volume knob, the Distortion knob, and a few buttons you’d want under your left hand.
The sharp (3" x 0.75") OLED display is the same as the Prophet 12’s and can be read from any angle. The soft controls_four rotary encoders and four buttons that flank the OLED_affect whichever parameters are displayed. Forty-six knobs and dozens of buttons are dedicated to specific functions. Most buttons either illuminate or have LEDs to indicate status. The front-panel layout is consistently logical and easy to learn.
The back panel has two unbalanced 1/4" outputs, a 1/4" stereo headphone jack, and an unbalanced 1/4" mono audio input with its own level knob on the front panel. In the middle are three MIDI jacks (In, Out, and one that’s switchable between Out and Thru), a USB port for MIDI I/O, and 1/4" jacks for a footswitch and an assignable pedal. The footswitch can control sustain or toggle the arpeggiator hold On and Off. You can reverse the polarity of the footswitch or pedal jack, ensuring compatibility with any brand.
Between the audio jacks and the pedal jack are nine minijacks for control-voltage signals_four inputs, four outputs, and a gate output. Although I wish these had been 1/4" jacks so I could interface it to my Moog Voyager without the need for adapters, they are designed for use with Eurorack gear, such as the company’s new DSM01 Curtis Filter module.
Architectural Detail
As on the Prophet 12, the oscillators, filters, and amplifiers are monophonic, whereas the delay and output stage are stereo. As with other keyboard synths from Dave Smith Instruments (DSI), the Pro 2’s front panel is divided into functional blocks, with controls for the oscillators, filter, and envelopes in the lower half.
You’ll find lots of dedicated controls, with deeper functions never more than two button-presses away. Function-specific knobs let you dial in level, tuning, shape, shape modulation, waveform crossfades, and glide amount for each of the four oscillators. Access additional parameters such as FM or AM amount using the four soft knobs and buttons surrounding the display.
Waveform shapes range from 5 virtual analog (including super sawtooth) to 12 more-complex wavetables, 12 super wavetables, and 3 colors of noise—the same as the Prophet 12 supplies, with the addition of the super waves. Super waves duplicate the standard waves, but additional iterations are stacked and detuned for extra thickness, and their bigger, fatter sound makes an audible difference.
A sine wave sub-oscillator pitched an octave below Oscillator 1 supplements the four main sound sources. Filter 1, a 4-pole lowpass that self-oscillates at high resonance settings, is a new design based on the original Prophet 5 (but without using a Curtis chip). Filter 2 is a 2-pole design that effectively emulates the classic Oberheim SEM filter. Like the original, it lets you sweep through lowpass, notch (band-reject), and highpass responses.
Pressing the Bandpass button inverts the notch filter, and changes are graphically displayed. Sweeping between responses has always been one of my favorite Oberheim capabilities, and the Pro 2 lets you modulate the sweep with any source. You can enable just one of the two filters, or use both in series or in parallel. You can even dial in a mix of series and parallel, thanks to a continuously variable knob.
Engaging the Oscillator Split button routes two oscillators to one filter and the other oscillators to the other filter. Although each filter has its own 5-segment (DADSR) envelope generator, dedicated knobs affect only the ADSR segments and the envelope amount; use the soft controls to change the initial delay segment and the effect of Velocity on envelope amount. The amplifier’s envelope generator has the standard four ADSR knobs, with other parameters accessed by the soft controls.
Although the two freely assignable 5-stage envelopes are functionally identical to the filter envelope, you change their settings using the soft controls. Dedicated buttons switch between the two envelope generators. All envelopes are loopable, meaning their attack, decay and release segments will repeat as long as you hold down a key. Route control signals from any of the five envelope generators to any modulation destination.
In my Prophet 12 review (see the January 2014 issue of Electronic Musician), I wrote that its modulation scheme approaches a modular synth in its flexibility. The same is true of the Pro 2, but the routing possibilities are even more extensive. The Pro 2 allows you to easily patch any of 51 mod sources to 142 destinations. Audio input and output are among the mod sources, and the mix of parallel and serial filter routing is one of the destinations that can be modulated.
Twenty-five of the mod routings have fixed sources—LFOs, envelopes, and sequencer tracks—and 16 are freely assignable. When you press the Assign Source or Assign Dest button, all the modulation paths are listed in the display. The four LFOs let you specify their destinations using a dedicated knob.
Each LFO can run freely or sync to the internal sequencer, arpeggiator, or an external clock source. You can also specify that an LFO cycle will be reset whenever you press a key. Settings include phase and slew rate, and LFO frequencies extend into the audio range for some awesome FM sounds.
One Equals Four
One of the Pro 2’s most unusual features for a monosynth is its ability to play four notes at the same time. In the 70s, a monophonic synthesizer that allowed you independently and simultaneously to control the pitch of more than one oscillator with the keyboard was parapolyphonic, which literally means like or almost polyphonic. In very few recent instruments, manufacturers have resurrected the concept and shortened this term to paraphonic. I hope we’ll see other new monosynths with this capability soon.
When you press the Misc Params button and change the key assignment from Low Note, Hi Note, or Last Note to Paraphonic, the keyboard will trigger the four oscillators independently. Only the first key you press triggers the filter envelope; subsequent key presses will trigger notes instantaneously at the current cutoff level, with no filter envelope. Each of the four notes does have its own amplifier envelope, however.
Sometimes when you’re playing paraphonically, it’s easy to forget that the Pro 2 isn’t truly polyphonic. The playing technique is different enough that I’d be hard-pressed to reproduce some of the paraphonic sounds with a true polyphonic instrument. And it sounds so analog,
I occasionally forgot I was playing a synth with digital oscillators.
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