i must confess, i never bothered with microtonality that much.
I always loved microtonal music without really taking too much care of it:
Terry Reily's "Shri Camel" might be my all time favorite record and i preferred the Baroque tuning for Bach,
i listened to World music all my life.
But myself?
I often detuned sounds a lot and thought that is much more interesting (which is "some kind" of microtuning)
but never took a bigger look at this subject, only to find out that
... that microtunings make a night and day difference:
the same patch may sound not that exciting to you and you play it in another scale
and it completely changes the emotions you get from it.
This means, that scales are at least as important as the sound itself.
Now i understand much better, why a cheap CASIO keyboard sounded so much more intereesting to me
when a Balkan player used it then when standart Western music is played on it.
If you want to play world music, then you have to play it in the right tunings to make it sound right.
So I downloaded the scales archive from the SCALA page (thousends of scales !) and enjoy so much just flipping through scales
with some SERUM, OMNISPHERE, REPRO 5/1, DIVA, REASON, AALTO or FALCON patch.
These synths CAN load those scales, FALCON let's you even create your own.
Unfortunately two of my favorite synths do not allow this at the moement:
PIGMENT and MATRIXBRUTE and both would benefit so much from it. *
When i saw the new NOVATION video today about their next update in colaboration with AFX,
i thought i ask you:
How important are microtonal scales to you? **
* Microtonal scales can not be send via MIDI - They have to be a function in the synth itself. (if i got this right...)
** in case you never did something with it, here is the scales archive from the scala page:
http://www.huygens-fokker.org/docs/scales.ziptake any synth that can load scl tunings and try some of the scales, if you want just with a simple init patch
some of the scales might sound very weird to you, some sound almost the same as standard western. hear & feel for yourself