timebaby's Electronic Synth Setup
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Gear in this photo
This rig
~$999
Value by category
- Keyboards and Synthesizers 60.6%
- Studio Gear 25.4%
- Studio Equipment 14.0%
Price mix
Mix of budget and standard
Boldest pick: Roland VT-4 Voice Transformer
Only 6 pro artists on Equipboard own it, but it's ranked #15 in Vocal Effects Processors.
Avg price: $184.83
Weird Choice For a Remake
Of all the synths Uli could have chosen to resurrect, the Wasp has to be one of the least likely. But hey, that's cool, it's a neat vintage British synth that I'm glad to see get a second chance at life, regardless of how I feel about Behringer's business practices.
That said, this is a very specific unit. Like its name suggests, its bread and butter is buzzy lead sounds. To be honest, this is my first analog synth, so I'm far from an expert on their operation. But to my novice mind, this one seems to have a good range of controls, resulting in everything from traditional lead sounds to more experimental bloops and buzzes. I had hoped to use it mainly for dirty basslines, and haven't found it to be particularly great on that front, but it's a budget synth so I'm not complaining.
Avg price: $420.87
So close to greatness
There’s a lot to like about the Curcuit Tracks, in theory. It’s a compact groove box with a programmable internal synth engine, a fair number of sample slots, it’s own simple effects engine for reverb and delay, and other modern necessities for electronic music like side chain compression and ratcheting.
In practice, it doesn’t quite stick the landing, though. The main issue is that Novation forces you to do all the programming through their website, and somehow they decided it would be a good idea to make the synth sounds impossible to listen to without loading them into the Tracks’ internal memory. I don’t mind loading in samples through the site, though the option to add more than one at a time would be nice; but having to load your synth patches into the memory before you can hear them, then go back to the site to edit them, then reload them, and repeat until you’re happy, is an asinine design decision.
Other problems include a song mode that’s too fussy if you’re not making four on the floor dance music, and a single pair of stereo outputs which make recording a bit of a slog (unless you can get a mix you’re entirely happy with on the internal mixer, which I admit is probably good enough for most people who would buy a groovebox and not a pricier set up).
This isn’t a bad unit. Programming basic parts is pretty intuitive, though I often find myself wish for more steps instead of having to chain together separate 32 step sequences. The internal mixer is good (not great), the effects are pretty easy to use, and aside from the nonsensical synth programming, the Novation website through which all the patch programming flows is easy to use. As a cheaper, less functional alternative to something like the Elektron Digitakt, you can do a lot worse. I just wish Novation had done a little better.
Avg price: $253.52
Avg price: $139.74
About this setup
This gear photo by timebaby features 4 pieces of gear, including Behringer Wasp Deluxe, Novation Circuit Tracks, and Roland VT-4 Voice Transformer. The setup spans Keyboards and Synthesizers, Studio Gear, and Studio Equipment, with a mix of budget and standard pieces. Artists with this kind of gear are most often found in the Electronic, Rock, and Pop scenes.