Beginner/learner DAWless synth

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I'm a librarian and we're setting up a little synth workstation in the library aiming at kids/teens. We've got a Novation midi keyboard, and Ableton Lite, but also wanting to get some kinda of beginner basic synth that can run in standalone. The simpler, the better. Something that works easily and hopefully provides some sort of visual feedback. Also ideally free or cheap. Please help!

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There is a great and free synth called "Surge XT" that runs stand alone

It has a lot of presets and pretty good hands on controls. The presets are nice as they allow people of any skill level to make sounds and music. The presets will also be visible as the various controls will change so as a step two they can find a sound they like and then tweak the controls and hear how it changes

It has lots of visual feed back with on screen graphics that mimic real controls like knobs, buttons, switches, and sliders

You can find it here

https://surge-synthesizer.github.io/

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Most synths run standalone under savihost.
https://www.hermannseib.com/english/savihost.htm

Since your start is towards simple, I suggest
Tal Noise-maker
https://tal-software.com/products/TAL-NoiseMaker
AAS Sessions
https://www.applied-acoustics.com/session-bundle/
u-He Podolski/TripleCheese/Zebralette
https://u-he.com/products/#synths
Cherry Audio:
Synthesizer Expander Module
https://cherryaudio.com/products/synthe ... der-module
Surrealistic MG-1
https://cherryaudio.com/products/surrealistic-mg-1-plus
All free except AAS, which you usually can get on the secondhand market for less than $10.

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IvyBirds wrote: Thu May 16, 2024 2:33 am There is a great and free synth called "Surge XT" that runs stand alone

It has a lot of presets and pretty good hands on controls. The presets are nice as they allow people of any skill level to make sounds and music. The presets will also be visible as the various controls will change so as a step two they can find a sound they like and then tweak the controls and hear how it changes

It has lots of visual feed back with on screen graphics that mimic real controls like knobs, buttons, switches, and sliders

You can find it here

https://surge-synthesizer.github.io/
Surge is great but I think too complex for our aims. Although I will add it to our list of possibilities, thanks for the suggestion. And the reminder for me to fool around with it some more tonight 😎

Something like TAL Noisemaker is probably as deep as we'd want to go, but it's not standalone and running things through a non DAW host adds complexity when we're trying to reduce it.

I think Vital runs in standalone but again, could be too difficult for a complete noob to find their way around...

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I'd love a library like that near where I live...

You could try running Helm , vital's ancestor, provides a lot of visual feedback and more simple, it did worked for me when learning synthesis at the begining.

Other than that, Arturia have a lot of synth and provides standalone I read.

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SaviHost could be considered,
it's almost imperceptible
to load a VSTi

hmm, Synth1?

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Tone2 Firebird (32bit),CM magazine Dune,Curve, Fullbucket's MPS Synth(fun for kids)

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Azimuth sounds ideal for your use;

https://thesynthfactory.com/azimuth/
VST/AU Developer for Hire

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I recommend either the ARP Odyssey emulations or Moog Minimoog emulations, both simple yet both vintage classics.

Arturia, GForce, Korg all do various versions of the ARP Odyssey, while Arturia, GForce, Softube and Cherry Audio do Minimoog emulations, so take your pick.

Another classic and slightly more modern is Juno-106 emulations. Togu Audio Line, Arturia, Softube, Roland Cloud all do various versions.

ADDENDA:

You could also consider a very cheap hardware option either analog or digital.
Last edited by egbert101 on Thu May 16, 2024 1:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
<list your stupid gear here>

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Uvi Falcon
aliasing plugin owner
:?

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I think, Odin2 is extremely good for teaching purposes. Many algorithms (Subtractive, Additive, FM, PM, etc., it's possible even to draw wavetables and harmonics), simple, minimalistic controls, semimodular architecture.

For standalone, use savihost or NanoHost

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martiu wrote: Thu May 16, 2024 1:13 pmUvi Falcon
Not funny, sorry.

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martiu wrote: Thu May 16, 2024 1:13 pmUvi Falcon
Not simple or cheap though.

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nvm
Last edited by Examigan on Thu May 16, 2024 4:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Another one of those "list your favourite synth" threads coming soon.
<list your stupid gear here>

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