![]() ![]() ![]() As always, the list is organised in order of ascending price. Please note that prices are subject to fluctuation. While some of them may feature additional types of synthesis, they are all wavetable-centred. In this piece, we’ll look at ten wavetable-based soft synths worth having in your arsenal. Its immense popularity led to wavetable soft synths becoming the synthesis style of choice, so much so that it wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that they pretty much dominate the soft synth market, at least for dance music production. Thanks to its wide variety of sampled waveforms, it had the ability to handle just about anything you needed and was soon being installed in computers around the globe. It was a hit with bands like Tangerine Dream and Depeche Mode, and while Waldorf continued releasing hardware wavetable synths when Palm closed up shop to design DSP for Steinberg, it had always played second digital fiddle to first samplers and then analogue modelling.įast forward to 2007 and the release of Native Instruments Massive, a prophetically named soft synth based around wavetables. With its wavetables-clusters of samples-users could scan across the waveforms like a drone flying over mountainous terrain, with the machine interpolating smoothly between samples. First developed by Wolfgang Palm and released in the form of the PPG Wave series in the early 80s, it allowed electronic musicians to add an element of ‘reality’ to their songs thanks to its ability to play sampled waveforms. Who could have guessed it? Until the 2000s, wavetable synthesis was something of a backwater architecture. In this instalment of Ten Of The Best, we run down the top, must-have wavetable soft synths available.
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