Computer Music

DMS ASCENSION

This ambitious new instrument merges subtractiv­e and sample-based synthesis with ROMpler-style multisampl­e playback

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Soundware label Dance MIDI Samples’ first foray into virtual instrument developmen­t, DMS Ascension (VST/AU/standalone) is a combinatio­n synth/ROMpler, aimed at dance and electronic producers, and boasting around 10.5GB of content. The actual numbers within that are impressive: 870+ presets, 1100+ singlecycl­e waveforms, 900+ multisampl­es, and 1700+ MIDI patterns taken from across the company’s enormous catalogue.

Up and away

Ascension’s browser switches between presets, waveforms/samples and MIDI clips, depending on where it’s invoked. It’s got basic search and tagging, but it really needs big headers or colour changes between content types, as it always looks the same, which can get disorienta­ting. Presets are quite slow to load, too.

Ascension is a four-oscillator instrument, with each oscillator hosting one of the aforementi­oned subtractiv­e or ‘digital’ waveforms, or multisampl­es. While you can’t directly load your own samples, you can import them for conversion to editable waveforms (see Making waves). Up to 12 unison voices with spread and detune are on tap per oscillator, but all of the unison controls apart from Detune are buried away in the Settings panel of the Options menu – a workflow carcrash if ever we saw one. Each oscillator also has its own high and low shelving filters, FM via one of five waveforms with four pitching modes, and adjustment of phase and panning.

The resonant filter offers LP, HP and BP types in 2-pole, 4-pole and state variable modes, and overdrive. It sounds fine but exhibits a lot of audible stepping when swept manually – thankfully not when modulated.

Modulation sources comprise two syncable LFOs and six envelopes. The LFOs can run custom waveforms, just like the oscillator­s, and the ADSR envelopes feature curve-adjustable Attack, Decay and Release stages. Assigning them to targets (including all effects parameters) is done in a simple mod matrix.

Six decent-sounding effects are onboard: Distortion, Chorus, Phaser, EQ, Delay and Reverb, each with its own dedicated control panel, and all freely reorderabl­e.

The Arpeggiato­r provides up to 32 steps of arpeggiati­on and sequencing, with all the usual modes and parameters. It also doubles up as a handy MIDI file player, loading MIDI loops in from the browser for triggering with sustained note input. While you can’t edit the clips within the Player, you can drag them out to your DAW for editing (but not back again).

Take me higher

DMS Ascension is an extremely well-stocked source of all kinds of well-produced dance music orientated sounds – basses, leads, plucks, pads, orchestral­s, pianos, guitars, FX – with a fully realised synth architectu­re for cooking up your own patches. The hybrid oscillator­s are supremely versatile, the interface is easy to understand, and the Wave Editor and MIDI Player features are both very useful. On the downside, it’s a shame you can’t drag MIDI files into Ascension from a host DAW, the hidden unison settings are a definite fail, and we hope preset loading times improve in future versions. Overall, though, there’s a lot to like here, at a reasonable price.

Web www.dancemidis­amples.com

1-4 A seriously flawed product that should be avoided

5 This product’s problems outweigh its merits

6 A decent product that’s only held back by a few flaws

7 Solid. Well worth considerin­g

8 Very good. A well-conceived and executed product

9 Excellent. First-rate and among the best you can buy

10 Exceptiona­l. It just doesn’t get any better than this!

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