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SUNRIZER is now ((AU<3)) - - - In the AppStore!!! ... (Free Update) - - - [Classic Synth!]

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Comments

  • @stormywaterz said:

    @giku_beepstreet said:
    btw. as you know I provide all Sunrizer banks for free, there is a web banks library (available via banks popover). If you made a bank, or know a nice free bank that can be added there, let me know pls.

    I think this one of the downfalls to iOS synths is no one creates banks. Zeeon and Sunrizer are kings for this. 1 or 2 dollars packs for like ten patches would be awesome for us guys who arnt sound creators but more of preset guys.

    I have a Spidericemidas free bank of presets for Sunrizer, demonstrated and posted here by Doug Woods of The Soundtestroom a month ago. The dropbox link should be there under his video and on youTube. I hope it would be useful to you in some way if you install it. I plan to make more banks for Sunrizer and Zeeon too. There are also quite a few great banks available for these two awesome synths in their in-app library links, especially for Zeeon, by Brice Beasley, and the huge bank of patches made by many of the Audiobus Forum members here. Some apps make it very easy for patch and pattern sharing, so I hope more people would make use of this.

  • @stormywaterz said:

    @giku_beepstreet said:
    btw. as you know I provide all Sunrizer banks for free, there is a web banks library (available via banks popover). If you made a bank, or know a nice free bank that can be added there, let me know pls.

    I think this one of the downfalls to iOS synths is no one creates banks. Zeeon and Sunrizer are kings for this. 1 or 2 dollars packs for like ten patches would be awesome for us guys who arnt sound creators but more of preset guys.

    I have a Spidericemidas free bank of presets for Sunrizer, demonstrated and posted here by Doug Woods of The Soundtestroom a month ago. The dropbox link should be there under his video and on youTube. I hope it would be useful to you in some way if you install it. I plan to make more banks for Sunrizer and Zeeon too. There are also quite a few great banks available for these two awesome synths in their in-app library link, especially for Zeeon, by Brice Beasley, and the huge bank of patches made by many of the Audiobus Forum members here. Some apps make it very easy for patch and pattern sharing, so I hope more people would make use of this.

  • @espiegel123 said:
    Tx so much for sharing that. It sounds pretty versatile. Is there any particular sort of particular class of sound for which this calls you in particular?

    I tend to like to program sounds -- thought I am not beyond using presets (a good preset lib really helps on the learning curve for programming, I find).

    @Spidericemidas said:

    @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    ....(snip snip)...... I STILL go back to Sunrizer and use it A LOT, pretty much every day in my music production somewhere. I find it very easy to program, it sounds lush, huge, fantastic, the onboard effects are high quality with detailed controls for Reverb and Delay, the two LFOs offer a lot of waveform and trigger choices for extra creativity, you can choose how you route the two main OSCs through the Filter, the onboard sequencer (with great programming features) offers so much more than just the usual arpeggiator patterns, and of course...those Super Saws! Not to mention the Morphing function with the Mod Wheel! Essentially you can program two different versions in one patch, and morph back and forth between the two. For example, in Set A, you could have a slow attack low filtered pad sound, and in Set B you could drop the attack, raise the filter, add more movement in the LFOs, even adjust the effects settings, whatever you like, and morph between those two sets smoothly with the mod wheel as you play from a pad sound into a plucked/lead sound - just as an example. Awesome!! <3 I may be biased as I also have the Roland JP8000 hardware synth upon which this iOS synth was based, which I really love, but at the end of the day, I find that Sunrizer just keeps on giving and giving the more you dig into it, and it still stands up well against the newest synths, I think.

    Sunrizer is indeed very versatile. Agreed, I also prefer to program my own sounds, but it's always good to have patch banks from other programmers which we can use, tweak further, or just deconstruct and learn from. I'm mainly using Sunrizer to make huge lush pads, mellow expressive key sounds and plucks, and dubby chord stabs. Generally in the chilled ambient genre. But you'll also find it can be made to sound very aggressive for searing leads and dirty wobble basses and crazy fx etc, if that's your thing. I forgot to mention it has a great chord memory feature too! Hold down say a major or minor chord and press the chord button, after that, just one key press will give you the major or minor chord of any note you press, and it remembers the particular chord setting you apply to any patch, if you remember to save, obviously! Really useful. I made a free bank of mostly chilled ambient patches available for Sunrizer a month ago which Doug Woods from the Soundtestroom demonstrated and posted the dropbox link for on his YouTube channel and here on the forum, I believe.

  • @espiegel123 said:
    Tx so much for sharing that. It sounds pretty versatile. Is there any particular sort of particular class of sound for which this calls you in particular?

    I tend to like to program sounds -- thought I am not beyond using presets (a good preset lib really helps on the learning curve for programming, I find).

    @Spidericemidas said:

    @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    ....(snip snip)...... I STILL go back to Sunrizer and use it A LOT, pretty much every day in my music production somewhere. I find it very easy to program, it sounds lush, huge, fantastic, the onboard effects are high quality with detailed controls for Reverb and Delay, the two LFOs offer a lot of waveform and trigger choices for extra creativity, you can choose how you route the two main OSCs through the Filter, the onboard sequencer (with great programming features) offers so much more than just the usual arpeggiator patterns, and of course...those Super Saws! Not to mention the Morphing function with the Mod Wheel! Essentially you can program two different versions in one patch, and morph back and forth between the two. For example, in Set A, you could have a slow attack low filtered pad sound, and in Set B you could drop the attack, raise the filter, add more movement in the LFOs, even adjust the effects settings, whatever you like, and morph between those two sets smoothly with the mod wheel as you play from a pad sound into a plucked/lead sound - just as an example. Awesome!! <3 I may be biased as I also have the Roland JP8000 hardware synth upon which this iOS synth was based, which I really love, but at the end of the day, I find that Sunrizer just keeps on giving and giving the more you dig into it, and it still stands up well against the newest synths, I think.

    Sunrizer is indeed very versatile. Agreed, I also prefer to program my own sounds, but it's always good to have patch banks from other programmers which we can use, tweak further, or just deconstruct and learn from. I'm mainly using Sunrizer to make huge lush pads, mellow expressive key sounds and plucks, and dubby chord stabs. Generally in the chilled ambient genre. But you'll also find it can be made to sound very aggressive for searing leads and dirty wobble basses etc, if that's your thing. I forgot to mention it has a great chord memory feature too! Hold down say a major or minor chord and press the chord button, after that, just one key press will give you the major or minor chord of any note you press, and it remembers the particular chord setting you apply to any patch, if you remember to save, obviously! Really useful. I made a free bank of mostly chilled ambient patches available for Sunrizer a month ago which Doug Woods from the Soundtestroom demonstrated and posted the dropbox link for on his YouTube channel and here on the forum, I believe. It may also be available in Sunrizer's web library soon.

  • @espiegel123 said:
    Tx so much for sharing that. It sounds pretty versatile. Is there any particular sort of particular class of sound for which this calls you in particular?

    I tend to like to program sounds -- thought I am not beyond using presets (a good preset lib really helps on the learning curve for programming, I find).

    @Spidericemidas said:

    @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    ....(snip snip)...... I STILL go back to Sunrizer and use it A LOT, pretty much every day in my music production somewhere. I find it very easy to program, it sounds lush, huge, fantastic, the onboard effects are high quality with detailed controls for Reverb and Delay, the two LFOs offer a lot of waveform and trigger choices for extra creativity, you can choose how you route the two main OSCs through the Filter, the onboard sequencer (with great programming features) offers so much more than just the usual arpeggiator patterns, and of course...those Super Saws! Not to mention the Morphing function with the Mod Wheel! Essentially you can program two different versions in one patch, and morph back and forth between the two. For example, in Set A, you could have a slow attack low filtered pad sound, and in Set B you could drop the attack, raise the filter, add more movement in the LFOs, even adjust the effects settings, whatever you like, and morph between those two sets smoothly with the mod wheel as you play from a pad sound into a plucked/lead sound - just as an example. Awesome!! <3 I may be biased as I also have the Roland JP8000 hardware synth upon which this iOS synth was based, which I really love, but at the end of the day, I find that Sunrizer just keeps on giving and giving the more you dig into it, and it still stands up well against the newest synths, I think.

    Sunrizer is indeed very versatile. Agreed, I also prefer to program my own sounds, but it's always good to have patch banks from other programmers which we can use, tweak further, or just deconstruct and learn from. I'm mainly using Sunrizer to make huge lush pads, mellow expressive key sounds and plucks, and dubby chord stabs. Generally in the chilled ambient genre. But you'll also find it can be made to sound very aggressive for searing leads and dirty wobble basses etc, if that's your thing. I forgot to mention it has a great chord memory feature too! Hold down say a major or minor chord and press the chord button, after that, just one key press will give you the major or minor chord of any note you press, and it remembers the particular chord setting you apply to any patch, if you remember to save, obviously! Really useful. I made a free bank of mostly chilled ambient patches available for Sunrizer a month ago which Doug Woods from the Soundtestroom demonstrated and posted the dropbox link for on his YouTube channel and here on the forum, I believe. It may also be appearing in the web library soon

  • @espiegel123 said:
    Tx so much for sharing that. It sounds pretty versatile. Is there any particular sort of particular class of sound for which this calls you in particular?

    I tend to like to program sounds -- thought I am not beyond using presets (a good preset lib really helps on the learning curve for programming, I find).

    @Spidericemidas said:

    @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    ....(snip snip)...... I STILL go back to Sunrizer and use it A LOT, pretty much every day in my music production somewhere. I find it very easy to program, it sounds lush, huge, fantastic, the onboard effects are high quality with detailed controls for Reverb and Delay, the two LFOs offer a lot of waveform and trigger choices for extra creativity, you can choose how you route the two main OSCs through the Filter, the onboard sequencer (with great programming features) offers so much more than just the usual arpeggiator patterns, and of course...those Super Saws! Not to mention the Morphing function with the Mod Wheel! Essentially you can program two different versions in one patch, and morph back and forth between the two. For example, in Set A, you could have a slow attack low filtered pad sound, and in Set B you could drop the attack, raise the filter, add more movement in the LFOs, even adjust the effects settings, whatever you like, and morph between those two sets smoothly with the mod wheel as you play from a pad sound into a plucked/lead sound - just as an example. Awesome!! <3 I may be biased as I also have the Roland JP8000 hardware synth upon which this iOS synth was based, which I really love, but at the end of the day, I find that Sunrizer just keeps on giving and giving the more you dig into it, and it still stands up well against the newest synths, I think.

    Sunrizer is indeed very versatile. Agreed, I also prefer to program my own sounds, but it's always good to have patch banks from other programmers which we can use, tweak further, or just deconstruct and learn from. I'm mainly using Sunrizer to make huge lush pads, mellow expressive key sounds and plucks, and dubby chord stabs. Generally in the chilled ambient genre. But you'll also find it can be made to sound very aggressive for searing leads and dirty wobble basses etc, if that's your thing. I forgot to mention it has a great chord memory feature too! Hold down say a major or minor chord and press the chord button, after that, just one key press will give you the major or minor chord of any note you press, and it remembers the particular chord setting you apply to any patch, if you remember to save, obviously! Really useful. I made a free bank of mostly chilled ambient patches available for Sunrizer a month ago which Doug Woods from the Soundtestroom demonstrated and posted the dropbox link for on his YouTube channel and here on the forum, I’m hoping it may also be appearing in the web library soon.

  • @Spidericemidas said:

    @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123 If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids of this synth on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123 If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @espiegel123 said:
    I am relatively new to the iOS appscape. I've heard lots of great things about sunrizer and am wondering if someone can help me figure out ic I NEED it or if I have it's bases covered between the Moog apps, iSem, Synth One, Volt, LayR

    Tx

    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids of this synth on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • What should I do if I want to hear what Sunrizer can do?

  • @brambos said:
    What should I do if I want to hear what Sunrizer can do?

    Umm if you want to hear wha....never mind 😂🤣😂

  • @Spidericemidas said:
    @espiegel123
    If you want to hear what Sunrizer can do, Doug Woods @thesoundtestroom has quite a few great demo vids on his YouTube channel that you could check out, if you haven’t already, including a demo and dropbox link for my own free bank of Sunrizer patches, which should hopefully also be available in Sunrizer’s web library soon.

  • @brambos said:
    What should I do if I want to hear what Sunrizer can do?

    Play some midi notes :)

  • edited July 2018

    @Cib said:

    @brambos said:
    What should I do if I want to hear what Sunrizer can do?

    Play some midi notes :)

    But first of all, go here v: :p ... (folks)

    https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/sunrizer-synth/id443663267?mt=8

    King

    —————

    Hope people Hunderstand the Humour!

  • Don’t know if mentioned before in this thread, but when i load the AU in BM3, i can’t scroll the preset list. For a brief moment i can, but then gets stuck. If i want to scroll, the whole window goes down or up.
    (Ipad Pro 12” 2017)

  • I've been out of sunrizer for a longer time, any interesting banks over there? :) (collecting mode)

  • edited July 2018

    @Identor said:
    Don’t know if mentioned before in this thread, but when i load the AU in BM3, i can’t scroll the preset list. For a brief moment i can, but then gets stuck. If i want to scroll, the whole window goes down or up.
    (Ipad Pro 12” 2017)

    The whole window goes up or down if there is nothing to scroll (e.g. you see the whole list). Im trying to repeat this behaviour, but no success so far (the same ipad and ios). Anything special you do?

  • Wait...Just tried again. I had to to tip my vinger very, very short to swipe to scroll. If i press too long i wont work. A bit tedious, but doable.

  • @Identor said:
    Wait...Just tried again. I had to to tip my vinger very, very short to swipe to scroll. If i press too long i wont work. A bit tedious, but doable.

    Yes same experience here.

  • edited July 2018

    Whoa! Ops! How did that happen? Sorry! 😲😅

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