I just found of something you can do with this that is very very cool IMO.
You can layer patches internally!
Very simple and you may already know but here goes anyway;
Just click on multi, you’ll see the list of channels, all you need to do is change the instance you want to layer to the same channel as the rest in the drop down box.
So if you wanna layer 2 pads, just change the second one to CH1.
It really is Pad making heaven!
Mine should be arriving today!
Cant wait… been after this for a long time.
its a great vst, the internal fx are ace as well. I’m sure you’ll love it! will be great to see some tuts with it too
dont you need like a pentagon super computer to run this?
not if you use it right, you can have 8 different patches coming out of 1 instance all on different buses and there own midi notes.
Gets a bit heavey if you start have a few loaded up.
I dont just it on my laptop cause it would blow it up! Just the desktop
@gofunk… off topic slightly here but came across this trance site, dnt knw if you’v seen it ? seems like a cool site… not just for gofunk, for all trance hds here at Sonic…
http://join.trancemusicmastery.com/melodic-patterns :w00t:
ta 4d tip mate !
TMM is prettyold now, it isnt really very good at all…
i’ve been wanting to buy omnisphere for a while. the steam engine looks nasty.
I love what they did with the lightbulb. It’s def high on my list of things 2 get.
[quote]phil johnston (13/04/2011)[hr]Mine should be arriving today!
Cant wait… been after this for a long time.[/quote]
Congrats!
I love Omnisphere’s sound library. BTW, did you know they have a special “Tribute to Moog” library and a contest going on right now? first prize is the OMG-1 which was demo’d at NAMM 2011, but isn’t for sale.
[url]http://www.spectrasonics.net/contest/[/url]
[url]http://www.synthtopia.com/content/2011/01/14/the-omg-1-synthesizer-the-coolest-synth-of-namm-2011/[/url]
[quote]jjdejong0 (13/04/2011)[hr]dont you need like a pentagon super computer to run this?[/quote]
Yes, Omnisphere Does use quite a lot of RAM and can also be CPU intensive.
Here is how I work around this on Windows 7 64-bit w/ Ableton Live 8 (currently version 8.22). It could proabably work on MacOS too, but I haven’t tried.
I use jBridge (currently version 1.3) to run the 64-bit version of Omnisphere in a seperate process so I don’t run out of RAM in Live, which can quite easy happen.
I then use the Freeze feature in Live to free up CPU while being able to unfreeze if I need to change anything.
This work-around works for me while I’m waiting to a future 64-bit version of Ableton Live, which IMHO is long overdue.