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OT: Which synth for £300

This started in another thread, I have moved it here to avoid a thread hijack.....

I have a budget of £300 to buy a 50th Birthday present..... Currently looking at BassStation II and Microbrute, am very torn between the two, does anyone have any hands on with either of these, or perhaps something else within the budget.

I am after a hands on lead synth to accompany my Novation Circuit and iPad setup.

@MonzoPro said:

@AndyPlankton said:

@MonzoPro said:

@AndyPlankton said:

@dblonde said:
@andyplakton
congrats on getting to the 50 mark :)
mine this year also, its a good time to start with the slide :)

Not quite made it yet...another couple of weeks to go :D

I'm stuck between old boy and new boy toys, acoustic for slide, or a shiny new synth ? :D

Got to be a classic analogue synth for your 50th. Put an original VCS3 on your birthday list.

:D If only....my current candidates are BassStation II, Microbrute.....really torn between the two.

Both sound great, BassStation has Program memories and swing on the step sequencer, Microbrute is VCO not DCO and has the 'force me to play it' factoer with not having memory locations.

The Microbrute sounds amazing, I'd go for that one!

The sound is incredible, especially from a single OSC, and it is that which is making the decision so hard. The main downsides are mini keys with no velocity, and no swing on the step sequencer, if playing as a live lead then swing I could do without, but the mini keys are a bit worrying, and the reviews seem to suggest they are possible a bit spongy, I also read that where the synth will respond to velocity from the MIDI In, it won't from it's own keyboard, which seems a bit strange.

The BassStation also sounds great, has fullsized velocity keys, but it hasn't quite got the same Grit that the microbrute has, well, as far as I can tell from all the youtube vids anyway.

As I am using an external mixer for the hardware units I will want some form of at least basic FX unit too.

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Comments

  • edited January 2017

    I bought a Roland Gaia at around that price on ebay last year, very versatile synth, mono and poly, velocity, three octaves full sized keys, been very happy with it. The sound is in some ways similar to the Poison 202, if that is your thing. But obviously virtual rather than true analogue. You pays your money...

  • edited January 2017

    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

  • Monologue?

  • Depending on the timing you may want to wait till Thursday and see what surprises are in store at NAMM.

  • NAMM is only a few days away...

  • @PhilW said:
    I bought a Roland Gaia at around that price on ebay last year, very versatile synth, mono and poly, velocity, three octaves full sized keys, been very happy with it. The sound is in some ways similar to the Poison 202, if that is your thing. But obviously virtual rather than true analogue. You pays your money...

    Nice sounding synth..and i get the poison 202 comparison :) One for more investigation I think.

  • edited January 2017

    The Brute has a distinct character to the...brute sound. It got CVs to have fun with, people get really creative with that lil CV section on the panel, squeezing awesome sounds out of the thing. The BSII got pre-filter drive, post-filter distortion (and filter mod) to dirty up the sound. Here it's all about preferenses I guess, what kind of dirt you want/need. No CVs. But the audio in is magic for yer drums (or whatever you wanna mess up), a bit like a poor mans Elektron Analog Heat, so it kinda doubles as an analog drive/filter/dist fx unit. Very capable at a wide range of sounds, it's a fun machine to tweak. While it got fullsize keys there are only 24 of them, so mini or full size probably wont matter either way. It does have a very usefull aftertouch tho

    Edit: Btw, the BSII have plummeted in price in EU the last 6 months, it's @ 330€ give or take

  • @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    That thing looks crazy, and sounds both crazy and normal too.....Ideally I'd like something with it's own keyboard, otherwise I'll just end up sequencing it and not playing it :|

  • A synth is as personal as a woman. Whatever you choose, you gotta get hands on before proposing ;)

  • @Fruitbat1919 said:
    A synth is as personal as a woman. Whatever you choose, you gotta get hands on before proposing ;)

    Are you saying I need to get promiscuous down the music shop :o

  • @AndyPlankton said:

    @Fruitbat1919 said:
    A synth is as personal as a woman. Whatever you choose, you gotta get hands on before proposing ;)

    Are you saying I need to get promiscuous down the music shop :o

    Yeah man, you gotta get all touchy feely. If she don't put out for you in person, she ain't worth taking home!

  • @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    Or just go 0-Coast, that thing sounds nuts. If I had'nt already thrown away all my synth monies for this year, I would get that one

  • Take the wife along. Have a threesome :p

  • @ChrisG said:
    The Brute has a distinct character to the...brute sound. It got CVs to have fun with, people get really creative with that lil CV section on the panel, squeezing awesome sounds out of the thing. The BSII got pre-filter drive, post-filter distortion (and filter mod) to dirty up the sound. Here it's all about preferenses I guess, what kind of dirt you want/need. No CVs. But the audio in is magic for yer drums (or whatever you wanna mess up), a bit like a poor mans Elektron Analog Heat, so it kinda doubles as an analog drive/filter/dist fx unit. Very capable at a wide range of sounds, it's a fun machine to tweak. While it got fullsize keys there are only 24 of them, so mini or full size probably wont matter either way. It does have a very usefull aftertouch tho

    Yeah I hadn't really considered that 24 keys would be limiting but it probably would in the long run......

  • @ChrisG said:

    @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    Or just go 0-Coast, that thing sounds nuts. If I had'nt already thrown away all my synth monies for this year, I would get that one

    It does doesn't it :)

  • i would say bassstation out of those 2. i had the microbrute and liked it (sold it when i cleaned up a lot of gear i wasn't using that much). but main thing, for live you will benefit from the patch saving on the bassstation. pull up a new sound for any song. the microbrute is pretty quick to program but i would not want any more moving parts on stage. even at home i would normally not stray too far from a sound i liked, just due to laziness.

  • Take a look at Korg Monologue and Minilogue

  • Second Hand Roland Aira System One should be about just less than that. Should be a few around when the System 8 is about.

  • @ChrisG said:

    @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    Or just go 0-Coast, that thing sounds nuts. If I had'nt already thrown away all my synth monies for this year, I would get that one

    Exactly! I've been eyeing it

  • That's the thing with these £300 to £400 synths. They either tickle ya fancy or they don't.

    Don't forget to look around second hand though, as many people buy these cheap synths then decide they want something else and sell them.

  • @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    But that Noisy Coat costs over £500 - at least, it was nearly £600 when I first found out about it.

  • @u0421793 said:

    @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    But that Noisy Coat costs over £500 - at least, it was nearly £600 when I first found out about it.

    Yeah just spotted that :(

  • @nrgb said:
    Monologue?

    Yeah that could be a contender.....are they out yet ? Only seem to be available pre-order ?

  • @u0421793 said:

    @Arpseechord said:
    What about the Making Noise o-coast. It sells here in Canada for $648 which I believe comes close to £300
    Midi it up with your own keyboard and lots of patching possibilities

    But that Noisy Coat costs over £500 - at least, it was nearly £600 when I first found out about it.

    The o coast is $499USD so it's £403.5 according to Xenon currency exchange
    Mark up?!

  • @Jocphone said:
    Depending on the timing you may want to wait till Thursday and see what surprises are in store at NAMM.

    @nrgb said:
    NAMM is only a few days away...

    Yes there is that too

  • Just by crappy you tube vids alone, I would probably plump for the Korg Monologue. Don't know if I still would in person though.

  • @vpich said:
    i would say bassstation out of those 2. i had the microbrute and liked it (sold it when i cleaned up a lot of gear i wasn't using that much). but main thing, for live you will benefit from the patch saving on the bassstation. pull up a new sound for any song. the microbrute is pretty quick to program but i would not want any more moving parts on stage. even at home i would normally not stray too far from a sound i liked, just due to laziness.

    Yes, these are the main reasons why the difficulty, Excellent sound with ease of use vs awesome sound with not so ease of use

  • @Fruitbat1919 said:
    Just by crappy you tube vids alone, I would probably plump for the Korg Monologue. Don't know if I still would in person though.

    Yeah you have to be careful with the vids.....not a 100% true representation of the sound, but still representative of what I might end up with after recording.

    I had forgot all about the monologue until mentioned here, looking at vids now.

  • I've spent a bit of time with most of these synths at my local music shop. Loved the BS2, really impressed with the Minilogue, wasn't that impressed by the minibrute. Go try a BS2 in a shop, take some nice headphones and browse through its preset banks. Some amazing patches and sounds great (I will be getting one some day soon, the mpc live announcement has put it on the back burner though).

  • @AndyPlankton said:

    @nrgb said:
    Monologue?

    Yeah that could be a contender.....are they out yet ? Only seem to be available pre-order ?

    My local (Australia) has told me they will arrive sometime this month... B)

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