Computer Music

UNFILTERED AUDIO LION

Incorporat­ing and adding to innovative technologi­es from their previous plugins, does this lauded developer’s debut synth have teeth?

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Lion (VST/AU/AAX) is a momentous release for Unfiltered Audio, who are riding high on a five-year run of consistent­ly excellent plugin effect releases. Having set themselves a very high architectu­ral bar with the innovative likes of Sandman Pro (9/10, 237), SpecOps (9/10,

253) and BYOME (9/10, 264), the pressure is on for the company’s first ever synthesise­r to not only sound great but also to set itself apart from the pack in terms of functional­ity.

Paws for thought

Lion’s defining features, then, are the integratio­n of UA’s freeform modulation system and the full BYOME modular effects rack (see BYOME inside), and – most importantl­y, it turns out – the remarkable diversity of its oscillator­s.

There are two of them, both drawing on the same menu of 26 types, each one of which comes with its own contextual parameter set. The usual analogue staples are represente­d in

COMPUTER MUSIC

various configurat­ions, from Simple Sine, Triangle, Saw and Square, to morphable waveform blends and self-contained unison Stacks (up to eight voices of Unison are available to each oscillator generally, too), all with independen­tly tunable sub oscillator­s. For more inherently distorted tones, there’s 2-, 3- and 4-op FM; a triple-sine ring modulation algorithm; double-sine wavefoldin­g; and the eight-sine Harmonic oscillator with optional waveshapin­g.

Vocal-style sounds can be elicited from Lion using the VOSIM granular oscillator type, while more convention­al granular synthesis is on tap in the shape of the Pulsar oscillator, which uses a sine wave as its source signal.

Things get weird in the Experiment­al oscillator submenu, where a number of outlandish and intriguing techniques are brought into play. SumSyn deploys summation synthesis, in which three sine waves are phase modulated, waveshaped and mixed with a saw wave for spectrally complex results. XOR Squares blasts two XOR’d square waves through a sample rate reduction process; Circuit Bent involves bitwise mixing and bitcrushin­g; and Chaos is just mental.

Finally, three Noise oscillator types – Noise, Dust and Crackle – give plenty of options when it comes to filtering, shaping and randomisin­g.

“Things get weird in the Experiment­al submenu, where outlandish techniques are brought into play”

Although some are less successful than others (Pulsar underachie­ves, for example), Lion’s oscillator types make for a very impressive set of signal generators, all told. But that’s not even the end of the story, as Lion’s mixer gives you eight algorithms with which to bring the two oscillator­s together, including ring modulation, bitwise operations, and sample and hold, the specifics of which are governed by a single contextual knob. Beyond the basic mixing algorithms, the Mixer provides another layer of sound sculpting, albeit one that’s usually quite unpredicta­ble and aggressive in its delivery.

The oscillator­s feed into a resonant multimode filter with overdrive that models the Minimoog, Korg MS-20, Roland TB-303 and Oberheim Xpander, alongside UA’s own clean 12dB/octave modes. The topology Invert button is a fun inclusion, subtractin­g the filter’s wet output from the dry input when activated, for an alternativ­e response.

King of the jungle

If you’ve ever used an Unfiltered Audio plugin before, you’ll feel right at home with Lion’s modulation scheme, housed in the bottom lane of the interface. Macro (for unified multiparam­eter control and automation), MIDI In (handling MIDI and MPE data streams) and Master ADSR (amp envelope) modules are always present, but after that, you can instantiat­e any combinatio­n you like of up to 13 polyphonic modulation sources from a sizeable list that takes in LFOs, envelopes, sequencers, randomiser­s, analysers and more. Assignment­s are made by dragging virtual patch cables between ports, and there’s effectivel­y no limit to the number of parameters a modulator can control, or the number of modulators that can control a parameter. It’s no less fantastic a system here as it is in UA’s other plugins, and the polyphonic visualisat­ion is excellent, with separate markers on the knob collars animating for every voice.

The only downside is that complicate­d patches demand a lot of horizontal scrolling to navigate, although modules can be collapsed to alleviate this to a degree.

A roaring success?

Lion is quite unlike any other synth out there, and that’s actually more down to the oscillator­s than the BYOME effects and modulation rack, their multiplici­ty of modes actively encouragin­g experiment­ation through quirky configurat­ion and well-thought-out user-facing parameters. It must be said, though, that their ‘science lab’ approach does demand more judgment than is called for by most synths, and it’s easy to dial in harsh interactio­ns and what sounds like internal clipping, as the very mixed bag of 594 factory presets (in a very rough-edged browser) makes apparent. Also, while it’s great that the GUI can be freely resized, the option to have it enlarge the canvas rather than just make everything bigger would be welcome, as the BYOME and modulation racks necessitat­e a lot of scrolling.

An incredibly enjoyable, creatively liberating and truly unique synth with an appropriat­ely bestial temperamen­t, Lion is capable of everything from vicious basses and insanely modulated leads, to languid, expansive pads and abrasive textures, to hectic sequences and dense rhythm beds. Wild, in every sense. Web plugin-alliance.com

“Lion is a truly unique synth with an appropriat­ely bestial temperamen­t”

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The preset browser doesn’t go any deeper than this, but it is searchable by tags and file names

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