Missed er Completely Modern......
Are you implying a Standalone polyphonic Aftertouch capable CS80 Virtual.... is a limited instrument...it has 2x the polyphony of the original and 200x the memory allocations....
I digress..... ( does anyone else think the mini Mg, Mg Modular, Arp2600, CS80, Prophet, and a "new" Origin modular format which integrates these gems together... all detatched from a Computer sluggish CPU, With a full control surface, deserve this type of Dissrespect given a "Muse Receptor" costs virtually the same without a controll surface, ingenuity,without a keyboard, without any software,and only 2 outputs???
Mg is selling a mono synth right now at half the price....
When I bought my first Mini Mg($500), my Yamaha CS80 rang in at $8,000.00.....with 16 oscillators and 4 user presets....
Maybe you will like John Bowen's Solaris at the same price....or a Korg M3 with Radias plugin.......
If you decide you want both worlds, may I suggest Neko OpenSynth....
There you will have your 2 worlds(Arturia/Receptor) at a higher expence mind you....
But if it is all about the moolah........may I invite you to Climb back on your M Audio Rocket ship to Future world.....
There you may expect to find all of these marvels at a great discount.......
Slammah, stop being such a fan boy. Mr Modern has a great point in some respects. Though it would be difficult to design a synth which accomodates existing 3rd party vsts, and attempts to do so so far have proved convoluted, opening up the architecture would be a great move.
If companies could develop, eg, individual modules which could be bought via download for the origin I for one would be much more inclined to buy it.
I love some of arturia's synths. The problem has been though that they don't develop them past a certain point. I own the Mg modular, and I would have been happy to pay something to get version 2 because it improved on a good starting point for a synth. If arturia had continued to tweak it, and it were on version 4 or 5 by now, it would be a great synth. As it is the glitches and bugs still remain, and there are better products on the market today, with better filters (which don't step), better oscillators, and more flexible routings.
My concern with origin is that it will be left behind in favour of newer products. If the architecture were open, and 3rd parties could develop their own individual filters, oscillators and so on, it would be a real powerhouse and I'd buy it on sight.
Creamware, Tc electronic and Digi have all achieved similar feats, so why not Arturia?
I'd love to be able to buy the Origin knowing that, eg Access, Waldorf, DSI etc etc were going to develop their own Origin modules. I'd happpily pay good money for them. Limiters and compressors? Mastering plugs? Perhaps these don't excite me because they can be added inside the host daw already and for live use they're of limited significance. But the prospect of extra filters, oscillators, ring mods, distortion fx - definitely.
Let's hope Arturia see the sense in this. Origin looks like a great interface for live performance.