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Waldorf Blofeld Review 2021

Glassy. Digital. Metallic. These are the most common words you’ll hear when asking about how the Blofeld sounds. And to those who don’t explore too deeply into it, that’s all the Blofeld will surrender. But for those with a more adventurous spirit, this synth will reveal treasures beyond their wildest dreams.

But first, a little history.

Back in 2004, the Waldorf company, manufacturer of such iconic synths as the Microwave, Pulse, Q, and their assorted iterations, had gone under. The company had gone belly up, and their engineers and staff were all left naked in the breeze. That is, until 2007, when Joachim Flor, a sales rep with a big idea, reassembled the team, gathered some funds, and relaunched Waldorf with a brand new synth. A Virtual Analog synth that would combine the best features of the best Waldorf synths, in a compact affordable unit bearing an elegant, minimalist look. And a sound that punched far above its 2.25 kg. It would go on to change their fortunes, and fuel their ascendancy back to the forefront of the industry.

And that brings us to 2021.

Amidst a sea of wavetable hardware and software synths, and with VSTs having progressed markedly since 2007, one could be forgiven for asking “Is the Blofeld even really worth the money now when I can just use Serum?”

To which I would say, Yes. Yes it is. Let’s go over why.


Oscillators

Off the bat, the Blofeld sports 3 oscillators, all of which have basic Analog Waveforms (Pulse, Saw, Triangle, Sine), and the first 2 also offer wavetables. With the SL License (pre-loaded on the keyboard, and costs extra for the desktop) you can load in your own custom wavetables and samples, and expand the possibilities of your synth. The analog waveforms are distinctly Waldorfy in character, which is to say, bright and a little glassy. If you need the sound to be sharper or more cutting, every oscillator also has a Brilliance setting that mimics the aliasing behavior of the older Waldorf synths, which for making Trance plucks or super dirty riddim basses, is perfect.

All that is fairly standard on any synth though.

What makes the Blofeld shine is the FM and PWM capabilities every oscillator has in its submenus. You can use a variety of FM sources per oscillator AND PWM on every oscillator without using up Mod Matrix slots, and it helps conserve a little DSP power. So without even leaving the Osc section, you can create insane ripping dubstep and electro sounds using just the analog waveforms!

Once you start diving into the wavetables, that’s where things get truly exciting. These wavetables are full bodied, and you can experiment with modulating their position, and even use other wavetables as FM sources, to create truly devastating Dubstep wobbles and snarls that put Massive to shame. And if all you want to do is make some simple Trance leads, a little quick detuning and some Brilliance boosts will give you a nice epic lead that’s ready to roll in your next anthem.


Filters

Here’s where things start to get really wild. The Blofeld comes with 2 filters, which each oscillator can be freely assigned to. Your basic 2 and 4 pole LPs and HPs are in there, as well as some bandpass, notch, and comb+ and - filters that really mutate the sound. For the old schoolers out there, the Blofeld even iincludes the classic PPG filter from Wolfgang Palmer’s original PPG Wave synth from the 80s. Vice vibes, anyone?

That’s not where the story ends, though.

Each filter has multiple submenus full of options including everything from Keytracking, to FM (yes, you can pick frequency modulation sources for the filter!), to filter drive, to even panning. For the moment let’s touch on the Filter Drive. This is where the Bass Music crowd will want to sit up and sharpen their pencils.

It contains multiple distortion types, which you can dial in for something as subtle as mild Tube saturation to a pluck, to dirty bitcrushing (the Overflow drive type) on a square lead, to sine folding a wavetable bass. And the filter drive can be modulated by just about any source in the Mod Matrix, so you have mountains of options for how much you want to destroy your sound.


Having covered that terrain, the big question is, does the filter itself sound nice? A lot of folks harp on about it because it doesn’t sound “analog” enough and doesn’t behave like a Moog ladder filter. And yes, they are correct. It’s not a Moog.

But it’s not supposed to be. The Blofeld is its own animal, and the real secret to getting nice tight sounds is to switch to the 24 dB Lopass filter, and then experiment with Filter Envelope settings until you dial it in (a decent touch of resonance doesn’t hurt either). The sounds may not be as creamy as what you’d get from a Minimoog, but you can make incredibly tight plucks that cut through a mix. Big Trance pads on the Blofeld also sound incredibly smooth, and with the right pan spread settings, rival anything a Virus or Rev2 can make. If you want your sounds to have that same bouncy roundness that true analog yields, you can apply mild filter saturation and some resonance to make the sound more analog in character.


Amplitude

We don’t need to devote a lot of time to this, as it comes with the standard ADSR envelope for Amp, Env3, and Env4. What IS special is that there’s a number of modifiable parameters for each that allow you to sculpt sounds in more complex and unique ways, to yield even more interesting sounds. Personally, I rarely use those extra features, as most Trance sounds don’t utilize that level of depth for sound design. But for modulating modifiers, the 3rd and 4th Envelopes are pretty cool, and allow for twisted sonic exploration when dabbling in dubstep and drum n bass sound design.


LFO

Now this is where things get exciting. The Blofeld has 3 LFOs that can be clocked or run freely, and they come in a multitude of oscillator types. Saw, Pulse, Triangle, Sine, Sample & Hold, and Random. So you can do everything from tremolos and vibratos to chaotic glitches, and even talking psytrance sounds (if you link the S&H lfo to the wavetable pulse width and then apply some crafty distortion).


Modulation

This here, this is what the Blofeld is most famous for. 6 Mod slots, that allow you to modulate almost any parameter on the synth. The options are deep, and it’s easy to get lost down a Mod Hole just messing with potential settings in here. This is why the Blofeld is a sound designer’s dream. The one thing you can’t modulate, and it’s the one thing holding the Blofeld back from being truly equal to the Virus TI2, is that you can’t modulate any of the FX. For certain types of sounds I like to use in my own productions, that’s a hassle, and it’s the one lacking feature that really bothers me. Besides that, there’s myriad possibilities, and for most sounds most commercial producers use, it’s more than enough (most of us record dry and use ITB FX anyway).


Effects

This is a somewhat divisive section in the Blofeld user community. Some folks love all of the FX, others hate them. It’s true, compared to the Virus, the effects on here are by and large not the best. With deep tweaking you can make most of the effects solid, but some are better than others. The Distortion for example, is excellent. In some ways it even surpasses the Virus’ onboard distortions. Plus, unlike the Virus, the Blofeld’s FX sections are independent of each other, so if you want to absolutely destroy an FM bass sound for maximum nastiness, you can pile on 2 different kinds of distortion plus add filter drive from one or both filters. And if you’re a fan of talking robot sounds, if you dive into the Triple FX effect, the S&H effect is a very good rate reducer. Sadly, it isn’t modulatable by internal parameters. So if you want to morph it, you have to do it manually.

The Chorus and Delay are good though, and the Phaser sounds great once you turn the Feedback and Spacing down.


Unison

And finally, we come to the Unison section. In here we find the Poly vs Mono Modes, the Unisono Voice count and spread section, the Ring Modulator, and the variable-color Noise generator. The Voices can be increased to 6, which for you SuperSaw junkies, is great news (although if you’re using all 3 oscillators, you probably won’t want to go higher than 3 on Unisono, so you don’t hit a voice-stealing wall).

You’ll want to be wary of increasing the Unisono too high while using wavetables - wavetables take extra DSP on their own, and the voicing reduces that amount further. With a little clever tweaking, you can make some monster trance pads that rival the Virus and Mininova in power. It doesn’t quite touch the JP8000’s sound, but it doesn’t really need to. Its own unique sound is quite exciting and it comes with the added benefit of being tonally neutral, so it won’t be prone to frequency creep that piles up a ton of white noise and sibilants that drown out your percussion like Virus and JP SuperSaws can do when the Treble EQ controls get turned up.


Conclusion

In all, the Blofeld is a powerful, incredibly flexible machine with a distinctive sound that can be both shimmery and ethereal, and dark and ferocious. It’s not a perfect synth, and the menu diving can be intimidating for new users, but the glitches that plagued early models have been largely ironed out, making it a worthy companion to any other synth in your studio.

14 years on, its sound is just as useful and relevant when it came out, and deploying one in your songs will give you a unique tone that stands apart from the rest. For those of you in the market for a hardware Serum that can manage glimmering sparkling Trance pads and leads equally as well as devastating DnB reeses and dubstep growls, this is the unit for you.

Still worthit today?

Absolutely.

Hear it in action:

Top 10 Hardware Synths For Dubstep & Riddim

Hit a wall with Serum and Massive, and looking for something more to produce with? Looking to integrate some hardware into your setup? Just want something more hands on to work with? Then read on, and check out 5 hardware synths that are ideal additions to any basshead’s studio. These synths are are beasts capable of everything from insane wavetable snarls to filthy FM growls, and near-infinite combinations of both! These are listed in no particular order, and includes a mix of bigger flagship synths and budget units.


WALDORF BLOFELD

A modern, underrated classic. Known mostly in synth geek circles as a drone and soundscape machine, it’s a modern descendant of the Q and Microwave series, and it packs serious punch. Being a VA and Wavetable synth, it can easily make any standard sub basses and leads you might need, as well as all the filthy growls and snarls you want for your nastiest riddim bangers. It has a deep mod matrix, piles of FX, and many parameters (including the wavetables themselves) can be used as FM sources. Some of the onboard FX aren’t super great, and the interface can be intimidating for newcomers to sound design, but the distortion options and wavetables are perfect for dubstep that goes beyond what Serum can pump out. And it even has the ability to use User Samples and User Wavetables (with the separate SL License)!


Polyphony - 25 voices maximum (Poly, Mono, Dual or Unison modes)

Multitimbral - 16 parts

Sampler - 44.1kHz mono with 60 Mb RAM

Oscillators - 3 oscillators per voice (128' to 1/2') plus noise, frequency modulation, ring modulation

Waveforms - All Q Oscillator models: sine, saw, triangle, square with PWM; 68 digital 16-bit wavetables from Microwave II/XT/XTK

LFO - 3 LFOs per voice with square, sine, saw, triangle, S&H, random with delay and fade in/out

Modulation - Modulation Matrix with 16 Slots, freely programmable

Filter - 2 independent Multi Mode Filters per voice: Low pass, High pass, Band pass, Notch, Comb; 12 or 24 dB/oct modes

Envelope - 4 Envelopes per voice, ADSR, AD1S1D2S2R, One Shot, Loopable

Effects - 2 Effect units with Chorus, Flanger, Phaser, Overdrive, Decimator, Delay, Reverb

Vocoder - None

Sequencer - None

Arpeggiator - Programmable, 16 steps, Up, Down, Alt Up, Alt Down, Random

Memory - 1,024 sounds, 128 multi sets

Control - MIDI IN (plus OUT on Keyboard), USB


CLAVIA NORD LEAD 3

Another underrated synth, the NL3 has the distinction of having one of the best user interfaces of any hardware synth ever made. It’s great for bread & butter sounds for the more trance-like Future Bass and Chillstep sounds, but despite being a VA from 2000, it packs a powerful 4 operator FM synth under the hood, and a surprisingly versatile modulation engine. While it lacks the wavetables of later Nord Leads, with a little cunning, it can generate some gritty FM screeches and growls that rival anything from Serum or Massive. And the keyboard version of this synth has a really nice and playable keybed that’s ideal for live performances.


Polyphony - 24 voices

Oscillators - 2 oscillator groups each with Six waveforms: sine, saw, triangle, square (pulse with width modulation), noise, synced noise, dual sine; 2- and 4-op FM and differential FM; osc-sync; ring-modulation; variable unison.

LFO - 2 per voice, syncable to MIDI. Triangle, saw, square, smooth and stepped random, and triple-peak sine waveforms. Seperate vibrato effect.

Filter - 2 multi-mode filters (series or parallel). Lowpass, Bandpass, Highpass, LP-HP, LP-LP and Classic mode. 1-, 2-, or 4-pole.

VCA - ADSR envelopes for amplitude and filter; Amplifier Gain control

Memory - 1,024 patches, 256 performances

Control - MIDI IN/OUT/THRU (4-parts)


KORG MICROKORG XL

An unexpected synth on this list, it’s one of the least expensive, and one of the most powerful. The minimalist interface hides a powerful sound engine (based on the Radias no less), and Korg packed a ton of features into it. The XL can pump out standard synth sounds as well as grittier sounds from its PCM library that are great for riddim snarls - and the synth has a surprisingly high headroom, so you can really push its distortion without hitting a wall of clipping.


Voice polyphony - Maximum 8 voices (when using Vocoder, it is 4 voices)

Synth 2 oscillators + noise generator

Oscillator 1 Waveform - 8 types (Sawtooth, Pulse, Triangle, Sine, Formant, Noise, DWGS, Audio In), Modulation: Waveform, Cross, Unison, VPM

Oscillator 2 Waveform - 4 types (Sawtooth, Pulse, Triangle, Sine)
Modulation: Ring, Sync, Ring+Sync

Tone Generator System MMT (Multiple Modeling Technology)

Program Multi Timbral Maximum 2 (when using Layer, Split, or Multi)

Waveshape Type - Drive, Decimator, HardClip, OctSaw, MultiTri, MultiSin, SubOSCSaw, SubOSCSqu, SubOSCTri, SubOSCSin, LevelBoost

Multimode Filters Filter 1 - -24 dB/oct LPF ~ -12 dB/oct LPF ~ -12 dB/oct BPF ~ -12 dB/oct HPF ~ Thru

Filter 2 - LPF, HPF, BPF (switchable)

Vocoder - 16 channel vocoder, adjustable level and pan for each channel, Formant Shift function, Formant Hold function

Keyboard - 37 notes (Natural Touch mini-keyboard, velocity sensitive)

Controller - Pitch bend wheel, Modulation Wheel

Effects - Timbre 2 band EQ Master effect 2 units, 17effect algorithms.

Arpeggiator - Six types: UP, DOWN, ALT1/2, Random, Trigger, Individual step on/off function

Programs - 128 programs (A/B banks x 8 genres x 8 category)

Inputs - [AUDIO INPUT 1] (1/4” phone jack, unbalanced, with MIC/LINE switch) – Rear Panel
[AUDIO INPUT 1 (MIC)] (XLR jack / balanced) – Front Panel

Outputs - [L/MONO, R] (1/4” Standard phone jacks / unbalanced)
[Phone] (1/4” Stereo Standard phone jacks)

MIDI In/ Out: USB Type B


KORG MODWAVE

A newcomer to the game, the Modwave is Korg’s reimagining of the classic DW-8000 with piles of new features. It isn’t talked about too much in the Dubstep world, but a wavetable synth with as many modulation capabilities and features as the Mofwave definitely has all the potential to be another hardware Serum. It even has an X-Y touch pad for exotic modulations beyond what anything except Omnisphere can do. Plus, it boasts 32-voice polyphony, and multiple filter types and 200+ wavetables that can be cross-modulated, so what’s not to love?

Keyboard - 37 keys (velocity and release-velocity sensitive)

Maximum Polyphony - 32 stereo voices

Sound generating system - modwave synthesis engine

Controllers - Mod Wheel, Pitch Wheel, Kaoss Physics, 4x Mod Knobs

Other Sources - 4x Envelopes, 5x LFOs, 2x Mod Processors, 2x Key Track, Seq Lanes A-D, Step Pulse, Tempo, Program/Performance Note Count, Program/Performance Voice Count, Poly Legato, Velocity, Exponential Velocity, Release Velocity, Gate, Gate+Damper, Note-On Trigger, Note-On Trigger+Damper, Note Number, Aftertouch and Poly Aftertouch (external MIDI only), MIDI CCs +/-, MIDI CCs +

Destinations - Most parameters can be modulated, including parameters of individual Motion Sequence Steps. Depending on Motion Sequence length, there can be more than 1,000 potential modulation targets per Program.

Effects -Pre FX Decimator, Graphic EQ, Guitar Amp, Modern Compressor, Parametric EQ, Red Compressor, Ring Modulator, Tremolo, Wave Shaper

Mod FX Black Chorus/Flanger, Black Phase, CX-3 Vibrato Chorus, EP Chorus, Harmonic Chorus, Modern Chorus, Modern Phaser, Orange Phase, Polysix Ensemble, Small Phase, Talking Modulator, Vintage Chorus, Vintage Flanger, Vintage/Custom Wah, Vox Wah

Delay L/C/R Delay, Multiband Mod Delay, Reverse Delay, Stereo/Cross Delay, Tape Echo

Master Reverb Early Reflections, Overb

Master EQ 4-band parametric EQ

Inputs/outputs - Headphone (6.3 mm stereo phone jack), OUTPUT L/MONO and R (impedance-balanced 6.3 mm TRS phone jacks), DAMPER (6.3 mm phone jack, half-damper not supported), MIDI IN and OUT connectors, USB B port


ACCESS VIRUS TI2

No list of killer dubstep synths would be complete without the TI2. It has the most mod options besides the Blofeld, and it sports the best onboard FX of any hardware synth on the market. Its oscillators aren’t quite as bright as some of the other synths on this list (that’s a feature, not a bug. It’s intended to sound more Analog and Warm), but the onboard EQs can solve that conundrum. It has wavetables and rudimentary FM, allowing you to take it into some seriously gnarly territory with only a few knob twists and button presses. If you have the $$$ this one is not to be missed.


Polyphony - Over 90 voices

Multitimbral - 16 parts

Oscillators - 3 osc + subosc + noise, FM, Sync

Waveforms - Sine / pulse / saw / hypersaw / wavetable / granular / formant

Filter - dual LP/HP/BP/BR with envelopes and addtional multi-pole analog emulations (includes Minimoog 4-pole emulation)

LFO - 3 LFOs, multiple options plus mod matrix 18 slots

Envelope - Amp / Filter / 'LFO as envelope' option

Sequencer - none onboard

Arpeggiator - Up / Down / Random / Chord / Multiple additions, editable in software to any variation

Effects - Reverbs, Delays, EQs with Q and freq control, Tape Delays, Distortions (multiple), Phasers, Flangers, Chorus, Analog EQs, Vocoder.

Memory - 128 patches in each of 30 banks plus USB storage / Librarian with additional free patchbanks provided regularly by Access

Control - MIDI, USB, 16-part multitimbral in Multi or sequencer modes


NOVATION ULTRANOVA / MININOVA

While the Ultranova isn’t what comes to most folks’ minds when talking about dubstep synths (despite it and the Mininova having Dubstep as one of its preset categories!), it’s another budget keyboard that hides a mountain of features and killer capabilities that are grossly overlooked. Like its smaller sibling the Mininova, it is perfectly-geared towards Trance, House, and Psytrance sounds, and can make Chillstep and Future Bass leads and pads as good as the Virus or Nord Lead 3. But it also has wavetables and a deep mod matrix that makes it useful for wobbles and gritty tones. It lacks FM, sadly, but its onboard FX are great, and expand its capabilities greatly. And the VST librarian and editor that Novation makes available for free opens up the synth considerably.


Polyphony - Up to 18-note polyphony (dynamic voicing)

Multitimbral - Mono-Timbral (1 Part)

Synthesis Method - Based on Supernova II
Waveforms include: Square, sine, tri, sawtooth, pulse, 9 x saw:pulse combinations. 20 x digital waveforms. 36 x wavetables

Effects- Distortion - up to 2 instances. Compressor - up to 2 instances. Chorus/Phase - up to 4 instances. Delay - up to 2 instances. Reverb - up to 2 instances. Gator. EQ. 12 band vocoder.

Arpeggiator - 33 patterns. Chord function - lock up to 10 notes

Patch storage up to 512 on hardware (ships with 300 factory patches)

Controllers - 8 x touch sensitive encoders. 1 x large smooth encoder (with back-lit filter lock buttons). 1 x large patch select/speed dial encoder. 2 x volume & monitor mix dials. 39 x LED lit/indicated buttons. 1 x Pitch wheel (LED lit). 1 x Modulation wheel (LED lit)

37-note keyboard with velocity and aftertouch

Connections - XLR dynamic mic input. 2 x ¼" jack inputs. 2 x ¼" jack outputs. 2 x ¼" jack aux outputs. 1 x ¼" jack headphone output. SPDIF digital output on RCA connector. Expression pedal on ¼" jack input. Sustain pedal on ¼" jack input. MIDI in/out/thru. 12 volt power input. USB port (UltraNova can be powered via USB). Kensington Lock port


CLAVIA NORD LEAD A1

The Nord Lead A1 may not be the first synth that comes to mind when one thinks of dubstep, it’s a synth that definitely deserves a proper look. While some of its modulation and envelopes are limited compared to the NL3, it shares a sound engine with the Nord Wave, and has additional waveforms hidden in the second oscillator that expand it beyond conventional virtual analog synths. Its FX are better than the NL4’s, and with 2-op FM capabilities, and hefty distortion, with some layering and adventurous use of the sampled waves, you can achieve some gritty, screaming sounds worthy of any peaktime dubstep banger.

Keyboard - 49-key octave velocity sensitive keyboard with octave shift buttons (+/- 2 octaves)
Keyboard Split with 2 slots for the upper and lower section

Controls - 1x Modulation wheel, 1x Pitch stick (with no dead zone at zero crossing), 1x 1/4" (6.3 mm) pedal input for sustain pedal, 1x 1/4" (6.3 mm) pedal input for expression pedalPitch Bend RangeProgrammable up to +/- octaveUser Interface3x LED displays, 23x knobs, 3x encoders, 20x buttons for program and performance editing

Waveform - Multiple Oscillator waveforms; traditional analog, extended analog, pulse waveforms, wavetable
OSC - Configuration Knob Categories: pitch, detune, shape, sync, ring modulation, noise, dual OSC, FM

Filters - Multi-mode Filter: 12 dB (2-pole) low-pass, 24 dB (4-pole) low-pass and band pass, high pass
Ladder M and Ladder 303 characteristics

Control - Cut off, resonance, envelope amount, LFO amount, drive

Envelope - ADR/ASR

Tracking Ability - Filter keyboard tracking can be set to off, 1/3, 2/3 or full

Distortion - Filter Distortion: Adjustable

Modulation - LFO1 Generates: triangle, square, sawtooth, inverted sawtooth or sample and hold waveforms
Routing - can be routed to filter frequency, pitch, shape and OSC mod
Sync - Can be synchronized to the Master Clock
Modes - can be switched to Env mode with three different characteristics and sample and hold is manually triggered by keyboard

Arpeggiator - Range: 1 to 4 octaves
Modes - up, down, up/down, random, Poly
Sync - arpeggio rate can be synchronized to the Master ClockEnvelopeADR/ASR
Velocity control - on/off
Inverse Envelope - on/off

Amplifier - ControlADR/ASR envelope
Gain control
Individual Pan Control - per program
Velocity Control - on/off

Voices - Poly, legato with portamento, Mono, True Unison 1, 2 & 3

Layering - 4x program slots for layering possibilities

Effects - Types: flanger, phaser, ring modulation, chorus, ensemble and drive

Delay - Types/Controls: Tap tempo, four stages of feedback, ping-pong, dry/wet mix
Sync - delay speed can be synchronized to the Master Clock

Reverb - Types: room, stage 1, stage 2, hall 1, hall 2

Programs - Single Sounds: 8x 50 (400) locations
Performances (Multiple Sounds): 4x 50 (200) locations

Audio Output

Output - 4x unbalanced 1/4" (6.3 mm) (each slot can be assigned to its own output), 1x 1/4" (6.3 mm) stereo headphone output, 24-bit DACs

MIDI Type - USB MIDI
5-pin DIN in
5-pin DIN out
THRU - soft

Control - All control knobs and switches send and receive control change messages
MIDI Dumps - System exclusive or all programs

Sync - Master Clock will sync to incoming MIDI clock



KORG OPSIX


It may seem strange to be veering into DX7 territory with an FM synth, but for those of you who don’t already know, a lot of the craziest gnarliest dubstep sounds, especially from the 2010 era, were FM-based, not wavetable based. The gritty monster growls of Skrillex? Originally came off the FM7 vst. While wavetables may be back in vogue again, FM will always be useful paired with distortion and crafty modulation for some filthy wobbles and snarls. And now Korg has a 6 operator FM synth out that aims to capture some of the glassy, metallic, gritty magic of the DX7, and even go beyond the DX series, but in a more compact, easy to use keyboard.

Keyboard - 37 Keys (Velocity and Release-Velocity Sensitive)\

Sound Generation - Altered FM Sound Generator

Polyphony - 32 Voices (or Maximum of 24 Voices, Depending on Settings)

Structure - 6 Operators
11 Filters
3 Envelope Generators
3 LFOs,
3 Effect Engines,
Step Sequencer
Arpeggiator - Algorithm40 Presets + User Algorithm (Unique to Each Program)

Operators - 5 Modes - FM, Ring Mod., Filter, Filter FM, and Wave Folder

Oscillators - 21 Waveforms: Sine, Sine 12-Bit, Sine 8-Bit, Triangle, Saw, Saw HD, Square, Square HD, Additive Saw3, Additive Sqr3, Additive Tri3, Additive 12345, Additive 1+2, Additive 1+3, Additive 1+4, Additive 1+5, Additive 1+6, Additive 1+7, Additive 1+8, Noise S/H, Noise White

Filters - 11 Types: LPF 12, LPF 24, LPF MS-20, LPF POLY6, HPF 12, HPF 24, HPF MS-20, BPF 6, BPF 12, BRF 6, BRF 12

Envelope Generators - 3 x ADSRLFO23 Waveforms: Triangle, Saw Down, Saw Up, Square, Sine, Sample&Hold, Guitar, Exp. Triangle, Exp. Saw Down, Exp. Saw Up, Step4 Triangle, Step6 Triangle, Step4 Saw Down, Step6 Saw Down, StepRnd:Time, StepRnd: Lvl & Time, StepRnd:Level, Random:Time, Random: Lvl & Time, Triangle+, Saw Down+, Saw Up+, Square +Virtual Patch12 Routings

Effects - 30 Types: Chorus, Unison Ensemble, Phaser, Phaser (BPM), Auto Pan, Auto Pan (BPM), Flanger, Flanger (BPM), Rotary Speaker, Auto Wah, Exciter, Enhancer, LFO Filter, 3-Band EQ, Distortion, Guitar Amp, Decimator, Grain Shifter, Master Limiter, Compressor, Delay, Delay (BPM), Autopan Dly, Autopan Dly (BPM), Tape Echo, Tape Echo (BPM), Early Reflection, Reverb, Shimmer Reverb, Spring Reverb

Sequencer - Step Sequencer (Up to 16 Steps, Up to 6 Notes per Step), Motion Sequencer (Up to 6 Lanes)
Arpeggiator - 7 Patterns (Manual, Up, Down, Alt1, Alt2, Random, Trigger)

Programs - 500 (250 Preset Programs and 250 User Programs as the Factory-Set Default)
Favorite - 64 (16 Slots × 4 Banks)

Controllers - Modulation Wheel, Pitch Wheel, Ratio OP 1-6 Knobs, Level OP 1-6 Sliders, Data Entry A-F Knobs - Inputs/Outputs

Headphone - 1/4" / 6.35 mm Stereo
Output (L/Mono and R) - 2 x Impedance-Balanced 1/4" / 6.35 mm TRS
Damper - 1/4" / 6.35 mm (Half-Damper Not Supported)
MIDI In and Out - 2 x 5-Pin DIN
USB Type-B Port


MOOG SUB 37

Most folks don’t think of analog mono/duophonic synths when they think of dubstep, but they’re the ones missing out. Like the Nord Lead 3, the Sub37 has a very nice, easy too navigate physical user interface. And its analog oscillators and filters give it a fatness and grit that enables you to create some super heavy saw, triangle, and pulse basses (and even detuned reese basses with the right settings!), and the feedback oscillator and overdrive circuit allow you to push your sounds to even dirtier depths. It’s flexible LFOs allow you to make some nice hefty wobbles and growls, and if you want to counterpoint your colder wavetable and digital sounds with something with more weight, the Sub 37 is your best option.

Polyphony - Monophonic / Duophonic
Timbrality - 2

Oscillator - 2

LFO - 2

Synthesis type - Analog subtractive

Filter - 1 selectable 6, 12, 18 or 24dB/octave low-pass

Attenuator - ADSR

Aftertouch expression - yes

Velocity expression - yes

Storage memory - 256 patches

Effects - none

Keyboard - 37 keys

External control - MIDI, CV/Gate


ROLAND JD-Xi

And what synth list would be complete without a Roland? Boasting more waveforms and modulation and synthesis capabilities than the JP and SH series synths, the JD-Xi is a solid budget option that, like the Blofeld, hides a lot under its hood. With 129 voices for the digital parts, the possibilities are near-endless, once you figure out the interface. What’s more, there are piles of free banks and patches available for it, so you have access to loads of useful sounds for your bass tracks.


Keyboard - 37 mini keys (with velocity)

Sound Generator Section Maximum Polyphony - 129 voices (Digital Synth/Drum Kit: 128, Analog Synth: 1)
(Max. polyphony of the Digital Synth parts: 64 voices)

Parts - 4 Parts (Digital Synth Part: 2, Drums Part: 1, Analog Synth Part: 1)

Tones - Digital Synth Tone (SuperNATURAL Synth), Analog Synth Tone, PCM Drum Kit
* For an analog synth tone, the oscillator, sub-oscillator, and filter sections consist of analog circuits.

Effect1 - (Distortion, Fuzz, Compressor, Bit Crusher)
Effect2 - (Flanger, Phaser, Ring Mod, Slicer)
Delay - 2 types
Reverb - 6 types

Pattern Sequencer - Tracks: 4

Vocal Function - Vocoder, Auto Pitch, Auto Note

Other - Favorite, Arpeggio

Controllers - Pitch Bend/Modulation Wheel

Display - 16 characters 2 line LCD

Connectors - Headphones Jack: Stereo 1/4-inch phone type
Output Jacks (L/MONO, R) - 1/4-inch phone type
Input Jack (LINE(MONO) / Guitar Input) - 1/4-inch phone type
MIDI Connectors (IN, OUT) - USB COMPUTER Port (USB Hi-Speed AUDIO/MIDI)
(Use a USB cable and a computer with a USB port that support Hi-Speed USB.)
DC IN - Jack
MIC Input Jack - XLR type, unbalance