Pigments takes Wavetable synths to a new, more refined and mature level than any other implementation I’ve seen to date. You can read my review of Wolfgang Palm’s Infinite soft synth for more info on the PPG history. As such, it’s a digital form of synthesis, but PPG Wave paired it with real analog filters which gave that instrument a hybrid feel that could be straddle the best of both worlds realistic, complex (sampled) waveforms paired with warm analog filters. Wavetables are basically tables of single cycle digital waveforms that can be cycled through in different orders. But Pigments is a very robust implementation of wavetables that’s both complex and user friendly. Wavetable synthesis is not new, it’s been around since Wolfgang Palm developed PPG Wave. The really cool new tech with Pigments however, is its new wavetable sound engine. One of the two synth engines will be immediately familiar to most synthesists, as it’s a basic analog synth oscillator that behaves in the way people are used to oscillators working. But concurrently to their soft synths they’ve also been making their own unique analog hardware synths like the Brute series, so Pigments seems like a logical evolution for them.Īll that modeling, designing and building of analog gear has put Artruria in an ideal position to release their first “from the ground up” soft-synth, and it’s a winner! Pigments is a mega-synth with two completely different synthesis engines and two separate filters that emulate a variety of classic filters. This latest soft synth moves in a totally new direction for Arturia as it’s not an emulation based on a vintage hardware synth (that’s been their stock in trade for over a decade) – it’s completely original.
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