Future Music

Could IK Multimedia’s Syntronik 2 be the only vintage synth plugin you need?

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The already huge compendium has added new titles

>IK Multimedia are taking you further down the vintage synth rabbit hole with Syntronik 2, a new version of the classic keyboard compendium that brings the total number of synths emulated by them to 33.

There are 11 new instrument­s to play with – all emulated using a combinatio­n of sampling and modelling – and while many of these don’t have the high profiles of the 22

big hitters that made it into the first version of Syntronik, there are still some eye-catching additions. These include Korg DW-8000, Waldorf Microwave, Oberheim Matrix-12 and OB-1, Sequential Circuits Prophet VS and Moog Source.

And, of course, all of the emulations from Syntronik 1 have been carried over, with all of their original presets intact, and plenty of new ones besides. In fact, the

number of presets runs to a whopping 3,300, and there’s a new browser that makes it easier to navigate them.

You can map and play up to four different synth parts simultaneo­usly, or create splits for performanc­e. What’s more, each of the four parts has its own note and chord arpeggiato­r. When used in conjunctio­n with the new step sequencer, these enable you to create musical parts within Syntronik itself.

Among the other new features in Syntronik 2 (some of which are said to be user-requested) are peroscilla­tor Drift controls that emulate the behaviour of analogue circuitry, extended envelopes and LFOs (plus a programmab­le mod matrix) and a Wave Set Browser that enables you to choose the sound for each of up to four oscillator­s and two sub-oscillator­s per preset, taking the sound design possibilit­ies to a new level.

71 effects are included, too – pulled from IK’s T-RackS, MixBox and AmpliTube 5 – and you can insert up to five simultaneo­usly via a lunchbox-style interface. 33 of the effects are new.

There are three paid-for versions of Syntronik 2: SE (11 synths), standard (22 synths) and Max (33 synths). These are available from $100/€100.

Owners of qualifying IK products can get upgrade/crossgrade pricing (check your account to see) and, anyone who purchases the Total Studio 3.5 Max or Total VI Max bundle will get it for free.

There’s also a free version, Syntronik 2 CS, which is fullyfunct­ional and comes with 100 presets and 2.4GB of sound content.

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