Goodness, it's been a while, but life has been a rollercoaster.
Spent two of those years recording and producing a couple of albums for a friend, and now I'm getting the urge to work on my own project. And then out of nowhere, my brother who emigrated to Japan wants to work on music, something I pestered him about for years. Oy. He wants to work In The Box, as he has a nice arsenal of softsynths, which I don't fault anyone for liking. In particular, Omnisphere which is a fantastic synth and gigasampler. I love it dearly. For the technoish pop rock he wants to do, it's more than capable.
But what I want to do is use Origin as much as I can. It has no equal. I say this as a guy who loves everything. Dave Smith Prophet and OB-6, KORG Kronos, KingKORG, Radias, Roland Fantom, Jupiter-80, Integra, JD-XA, System-8, Yamaha Motif and Montage, John Bowen Solaris, Access Virus, anything Waldorf, anything Kurzweil, anything Moog, anything vintage, a whole slew of softsynths... if it synthesizes, I probably love it.
But the Origin is a true chameleon. You don't need $6000-plus US to buy a Jupiter-8, you don't need $8000 on up to buy a CS-80 or Memorymoog, or multiple thousands for a Moog or Roland modular. Having the Real Deal would be awesome, for certain, no contest. But how many of us can afford all that? And in a piece of music, who will be able to tell if you used a real Jupiter or Minimoog or CS-80? I've created virtual ARP Chromas in the Origin that sound really good, a synth that is VERY hard to come by, and is often in need of maintenance. And I don't mean an iffy knob or slider. You can make a Moog 55 Modular or an ARP 2500 or a Roland System 700 and make them sound reasonably close, and save tens of thousands of dollars. This synth literally is a hundred thousand dollar arsenal in one tidy off-white box.
This is a piece of music history, and very few people know it.