Deep Synth : FM Synthesizer

Deep Synth : FM Synthesizer

By Aleksandar Mlazev

  • Category: Music
  • Release Date: 2017-02-08
  • Current Version: 3.10
  • Adult Rating: 4+
  • File Size: 9.16 MB
  • Developer: Aleksandar Mlazev
  • Compatibility: Requires iOS 10.0 or later.
Score: 4
4
From 2 Ratings

Description

Unique synth with AUV3 (Audio Unit) and midi keyboard support! You can touch and change the wave and hear the difference. Deep Synth also has: - simple envelope filter - reverb effect - tremolo sound effect - hair - high frequency modulation. - 5 points wave form modulation - polyphonic keyboard - 5 octaves range selector - point vibe to make your wave dynamic - build-in resonator effect - supports MIDI keyboards via USB (full velocity and pitch shift support) - works as Audio Unit instrument plug-in AUV3 The sound generator inside the synthesizer is producing the exact wave form as the one you have created. You can control the position and width of the picks in real time. The synth app has fast and capable piano keyboard. It is fully polyphonic and you can play in 5 octaves.

Screenshots

Reviews

  • Simple but Unique

    4
    By Nutshelldj
    This is an interesting synth. It has a different take on FM and wavetable synthesis than most others on iOS. I do compliment its simplicity with the great tones I am getting. One star knocked off due to not being any deeper than the name implies, with more modifiable parameters and such. Yet it has a place on my iDevices.
  • Not FM synthesis, but fun making waveforms

    3
    By ErikSF999
    Unless there is something going on under the hood that actually modulates these waves at some control rate faster than you can move one of the wave-forming dots around with your finger, there is nothing like Frequency Modulation driving this synthesizer. What it is: a single waveform synthesizer that lets you customize the wave itself, in finger-dragging time. Useful if you like to noodle with this sort of thing, although the controls are imprecise at first: the dots are more like force fields than line connectors. Most of the waveforms will not simply be drawn from dot to dot. But that is a good thing, because it allows you to draw more interesting waves than would be possible with five sample points. Not a bad toy, but not a new FM synthesizer either, so... *shrug*

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