dawnchaser's Electronic Studio Setup

dawnchaser

dawnchaser

Gear IQ 257

Electronic Studio Setup by dawnchaser featuring Moog Slim Phatty, Waldorf Blofeld Synthesizer Module, and Access Virus TI Desktop and 5 more pieces of gear

Kulshan Studios. Where soundsets and epic music are made

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Gear in this photo

This rig

~$7,391

Value by category

  • Keyboards and Synthesizers 93.9%
  • Studio Monitors 4.3%
  • DAWs 1.7%

Price mix

8

Mix of standard and high-end

1 Budget
4 Standard
3 High-end

Tabletop Synthesizers

Moog Slim Phatty

Avg price: $695.00

Totally underrated Moog synth, albeit with a couple flaws

Lotta folks slept on this one, which is kinda weird, but also kinda makes sense. Its sound is total classic Moog vibes. I've been pulling classic 80s basses and leads out of this thing like it's nobody's business, and you wouldn't know the difference from the originals. And I can also pull Trance and Techno sounds out of it that would fit in a modern song today.

But then it also has annoying tuning stability issues, and a super limited modulation section, and no white noise. a white noise generator would be really nice on this thing. And even having 2 mod sources that access the same parameters would be handy.

Having said that, the patch storage and the super fat warm sound is nice. I don't use this synth all the time, but when I do, I enjoy it. Always adds recognizeable Moog sound to any tune I use it in.

If you can get one, get it. Just give it time to warm up.

Synthesizers

Monster synth in a tiny package

At first I, like just about everyone else, was fooled by the challenging interface and wonky factory presets. I wondered why I even bought it, for the first few weeks after it showed up in the mail. But when I really dug into this thing, all the sounds came out. Huge Trance SuperSaws. Meaty Deep House basses. Gnarly DnB Reeses. Filthy Dubstep growls. Haunting Ambient pads and atmospheres. This this is a pint-sized Virus at 1/4 the price. I've written whole songs using the Blofeld. This synth could be a desert island synth for someone with a decent mixer to amplify it, and some good FX plugins to run recordings through.

Those are kind of its weak points. It's a bit on the quiet side, even with the Filter Drive modified to boost the signal a little. And most of the FX are pretty wack. The Phaser and Reverb in particular are... not great. This is a synth that really benefits from external FX (plus, turning off internal chorus/reverb/delay frees up a bit of DSP, giving you more voices to work with). And if you like the S&H Effect buried in the Triple FX section, because the Rate Reduction effect IS cool, unfortunately for you, you cannot modulate its intensity, or indeed, any of the FX values at all. So talking basses using modulated rate reduction FX don't really work on this synth. Which is a minor bummer. Otherwise, the Blofeld is a beast and definitely is worth having in the studio.

Tabletop Synthesizers

Access Virus TI Desktop

Avg price: $751.61

Synthesizers

One of the best analog polys - both at its price point and in general

Where to begin. This is one of my favorite synths, period. It's analog, but not so overly saturated in the lows that it overpowers mixes. It's bright enough to use for just about anything. And it has deep modulation capabilities, which is awesome for complex sound design. It can be as thin and clean, or as fat and gritty, as you need it to be.

Plus! And this is a big one

It has a Pan Spread function that is mono-compatible, which makes it super awesome for bouncy plucks and mid-basses. I frequently use the Rev2 for sub basses and mid basses, because they sit super nice and cleanly in a mix. But I've used it for pads, and often for plucks, because they just sound so nice and round and tight in a finished mix. Takes a little finagling to round off the brassy edges of the sawtooth waves, for gentler sounds, but the curtis filter makes that easy in 4-pole mode.

This is my favorite analog, no question. I don't use it on everything, but like my Virus TI2, I use it in everything. Super versatile, powerful synth.

Sound Modules

Still my fave synth of all time

Doesn't matter how old I get, I still love JP8080 SuperSaws. Nothing else hits quite like them in a song with a big epic melody. The mod options on this synth are pretty limited, and the filter pop you have to correct for by nudging up the Attack on the envelopes is kind of annoying, but there's few sounds more satisfying than a big epic anthem trance pad or arp on this machine.

Of course, it can certainly do much more than that, and it does everything from Tech House basses to Drum n Bass screams to Hardstyle shrieks super nicely. But I just like its SuperSaw, and I go bonkers with them whenever I turn mine on.

I wanna be buried with my JP one day

Synthesizers

Clavia Nord Lead 3

Avg price: $1,199.99

Massively underrated monster synth

Everyone already knows the interface is awesome. What gets less talked about, is how useful it is in just about every context. I used it for the midbass and plucks in my tune Daybreak (Alpenglow Mix) a couple years ago, and it just sits so nicely in the mix. Not too bright, not too dull, nice and punchy, and doesn't overpower everything else. The keybed is also really nice, and just invites you to sit down and play on it, and it works super nicely as a controller for desktop synths, too. It benefits the most from quality external reverb and delay (but what besides the Virus TI and the Supernova and Summit doesn't?), so if you get an NL3, also pair it up with good external FX to really get a feel for how this thing sounds. I'm keeping mine forever

DAW Software

Best and easiest DAW, bar none

Been using FL Studio a long, long time. It has improved considerably over the years, and I can write clean professional music nice and quickly, and it records all my hardware synths at 32-bit wav by default, so everything sounds super full and rich. I'm a ride or die, when it comes to FL Studio

Active & Passive Monitors

Yamaha HS7

Avg price: $319.62

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About this setup

This gear photo by dawnchaser features 8 pieces of gear, including Moog Slim Phatty, Waldorf Blofeld Synthesizer Module, and Access Virus TI Desktop. The setup spans Keyboards and Synthesizers, Studio Monitors, and DAWs, with a mix of standard and high-end pieces. Artists with this kind of gear are most often found in the Electronic, Pop, and Rock scenes. Notable artists with overlapping gear include Deadmau5, Above & Beyond, and Armin Van Buuren.

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