Synthesizers are amazing instruments. I used to love watching videos of Vangelis, Rick Wakeman, Keith Emerson and Jean Michel Jarre play their racks of synths in the 70s and 80s. Their arms would jump from keyboard to keyboard with practiced precision, their fingers hitting buttons, moving sliders and changing patches between phrases.
What I love most about synthesizers is the way you can use them to create new sounds, or emulate existing sounds. Creating a new sound can require just as much inspiration (and perspiration) as creating a new melody or groove. Subtle variations or combinations can make all the difference.
Watch the masters at work in these Youtube videos. First is Rick Wakeman performing an amazing solo on several racks of synths.
Rick Wakeman solo.
Second, you can watch Vangelis in the studio as he is recording “China”. While his fingers spend most of the time pounding on his favourite CS80, he is surrounded by an incredible number of keyboards, and utilizes some of them in his playing.
Vangelis: The Making of China.
Audiotuts has run quite a few synthesizer tutorials in the last month. Times have changed. We can now have a huge stack of software synthesizers on a laptop we can carry with us anywhere, and control them with a MIDI controller keyboard like the M-Audio Axiom that has a generous helping of knobs and sliders for controlling the synthesizers’ parameters. You no longer need to own a music store or have an army of roadies to have a great synth setup.
A large range of soft synths and virtual instruments are available, and most DAWs include at least one. What is your favorite? While we can hardly scratch the surface in this article, here is a handful to get us started. Please add to the list in the comments.
1. ES2
ES2 is Logic Pro’s synthesizer. Featuring three oscillators, two filters, and 32-voice polyphony, it is a powerful and versatile subtractive synthesizer. Davide Di Bucchianico shows us around the synth in his tutorial How to Design Reeses and Hoovers
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2. Malström
Reason's Malström soft synth uses “Graintable” synthesis invented by Propellerhead, making it capable of creating unusual sounds. Propellerhead explain:
“The Malström Graintable synthesizer features all imaginable filtering and modulation options, and a couple of unimaginable ones too; Try some real-time waveform stretching, some spectral modulation, or some awesome wavetable sweeping.
“Malström comes with a wide range of meaty and exotic Graintables, letting you create anything from lush pads to scary squeals, from the pretty to the gritty. And that’s just the sounds coming from Malström itself; try using this monster’s audio inputs to filter other Reason devices, and let some of Malström’s magic rub off on your drums or sampled vocals. With a device like this, no one can accuse your sound of being ordinary.”

3. Metasynth
Metasynth by U&I Software is a very different soft synth only available for Mac OSX, effectively allowing you to “paint” sound. For more details, see Robert Pitman’s tutorial An Introduction to Metasynth.

4. Prologue
Prologue is included in Cubase 5. It is a subtractive synthesizer with three oscillators, powerful multi-mode filter, four envelopes, two LFOs, a powerful modulation matrix, and on-board effects.. It comes with hundreds of presets covering a wide range of sounds.

5. Rapture LE
Rapture LE is included in Cakewalk’s SONAR 8.5. It includes over 200 programs & hundreds of oscillator shapes.

6. Reaktor
Reaktor is an expensive, complex, modular soft synth (or rack of synths) by Native Instruments. It makes use of both FM and subtractive synthesis. Programming Reaktor isn’t simple, but it does come with a long list of useful pre-programmed patches.
7. Subtractor
Subtractor is a subtractive synthesizer for Reason. It is an analog type polyphonic synthesizer. See it in action in Mo Volan’s screencast A Basic Guide to Subtractive Synthesis (Part 1).

8. Thor
Thor is another of Propellerhead Reason’s soft synths. It includes four different filter types and six forms of synthesis.

9. Vacuum
Pro Tools’s Vacuum monophonic vacuum tube synthesizer is designed like an old-fashioned synth, and has all the knobs and parameters Rick Wakeman would expect. It even looks dusty. If you prefer not to program, it comes with around 200 presets.

10. Xpand!
Pro Tools’s Xpand! is “a free RTAS® sample-playback/synthesis workstation plug-in that provides fast, efficient ways to access and manipulate thousands of high-quality sounds directly from within Pro Tools.”
The webpage lists the following features:
- Comprehensive sound factory for all musical styles and applications
- More than 1,000 factory patches and 500 combinable part presets
- Four layer-able parts for millions of combinations
- Subtractive synthesis, wavetable, FM synthesis, sample playback, virtual tonewheels, and effects
- 64-note polyphony
- Quick and easy sound tweaking
- Two built-in effect sections and four arpeggiators/phrase generators
- Highly efficient — requires little CPU power per instance

11. ZynAddSubFX
ZynAddSubFX is a free and open source software synthesizer. It is a polyphonic, multitimbral synthesizer with three synthesis engines: additive, subtractive and “pad”.

Which soft synth or virtual instrument do you prefer? How much do you use soft synths? What do you love and what do you find frustrating? Let us know in the comments.
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User Comments
( ADD YOURS )Gabe October 9th
Metasynth is Mac only, not windows only.
( )Robb Walker October 9th
“Metasynth by U&I Software is a very different soft synth only available for Windows”
Actually it is only available for mac OS.
( )Graham McDonnell October 9th
Seems to be a list of fairly ’standard’ soft synths…
There are plenty great synths Id of mentioned before these, FM7 (and FM8), Korg Legacy, Stylus RMX to name a few, but my new favourite synth is Spectrasonics Omnisphere! What a beast!
You can hear some music created with these great synths on the mp3 player here: http://www.grahammcdonnell.co.uk (shameless plug!!)
( )Eric Shafer October 9th
Second vote for Korg Legacy.
( )Locke October 13th
+1 for Omnisphere!…
Recently I have set my eyes (and ears) on the Sylenth1. Looks like a serious candidate for my wish list….
( )Esben Lorenzen October 9th
Just gotta love Reasons Thor!
( )Once you really got into it, and understands exacly how it works, its just a joy to work with it!
However, i just recently discovered Circle, which im trying to get to know now. So far, i really like it.
Osnildo October 9th
Great list, and very interesting videos…
Just one thing: the Metasynth are for MAC and not for Windows.
( )TechnoCat October 9th
“Metasynth by U&I Software is a very different soft synth only available for Windows”
It is only available for OSX.
( )Rafi October 9th
Rick Wakeman´s video would be half as cool without that mullet!
( )Dave October 9th
Metasynth is for MAC OSX also (#3), in fact, that screen shot is from MAC OSX.
( )Stephen S October 9th
The article says Metasynth is Windows only, when in fact it is OSX only.
( )Adrian Try October 9th
Thanks everyone for the Metasynth correction—it was late at night! I’ve amended the article.
( )Toby October 9th
….and my names Toby not Robert!
NI’s Absynth 4 and Massive are a must have as well.
( )Nicholas Horn October 9th
It would have been awesome if you’d have used only 3rd party, non-host specific synthesizers in this tut. Not everyone has Pro-tools, Logic, Reason, Sonar, AND Cubase (nor should they if they hope to ever get anything completed).
Here’s my short list of 3rd party synths that I would suggest people “add to their racks”:
10. Linplug Octopus – Dual Matrix FM synth. Easier to patch than a DX7.
9. Waldorf Largo – A new one, but extremely close to the hardware equivalent of the Micro Q and of course, the newer Blofeld.
8. U-he Zebra – Modular synth that can sound like any other synth, but can also sound like only Zebra can sound.
7. Gforce Minimonsta – This is the Moog sound that Mr. Wakeman is known for in the above videos.
6. Korg Legacy Bundle – Sounds disturbingly close to the original Polysix and Monopoly hardware. The MS-20 can shake some floors as well.
5. Image Line Morphine – Additive synthesis made easy. Great for evolving pads and soundscapes.
4. Synth1 – Windows only, but free and a “classic” software synth. Think of it as Subtractor, but without Reason rewired to your DAW. As an added bonus, it has an extremely low CPU hit.
3. Sylenth1 – Not to be confused with synth1 above, this one is a trance/dance masterpiece that is basic in comparsion with some other offerings on this list.
2. Rob Papen Albino III – One of the most useful mod/seq matrices on any synth today. Couple that with some great waveforms and the ability to layer four sounds, and you have quite a beast.
1. Audjoo Helix – Workhorse that can do it all. Classic pad sounds with enough modulation options to create sounds that haven’t been heard a 1,000 times before.
These are in no specific order, and with exception to synth1, are all cross-platform. Most support both UB and VST on the Mac side.
And a small correction to your article as well: metasynth is NOT windows only. Quite the opposite, in fact.
( )Guillaume MONGOFLEX October 20th
I agree with you,and don’t forget CRYSTAL-excellent freeware with 3 oscillators & enveloppe design-;SUB BOOM BASS by rob papen the creator of Albino, the TAL synth collection-ELECTRO,VINTAGER,U-NO 60 & U-NO 62,TAL BASSLINE- both excellent freeware emulations of classic synths.
( )Sanjin F. October 9th
i love my analog synthesizers, but waldorfs microwave 1 is one of the best i ever heard..digital synthesis with analog filters (curtis chips)..sounds great!
( )Davide Di Bucchianico October 9th
i want metasynth! but it’s a little too expensive ;_;
( )2mbst1 October 9th
The list is missing Massive from Native Instruments. Propably one of the most flexible synths around!
( )miniMAL October 9th
Omnisphere…
( )kev on music October 9th
great! all reason synths are there hehe
( )Derek Ledoux October 10th
Yeah I’m definitely all about the Korg Legacy pack. Especially the MS-20.
( )Edwin October 10th
I actually love GForce Imposcar the best. Although weirdly, I haven’t used it much. And Imposcar 2 is available as an upgrade from 1. Check it: http://www.gforcesoftware.com/imp2.php
( )West October 10th
I once heard BT suggest that Camel Audio’s Alchemy was the most unique and powerful software synthesizer around. I’ve played with the demo and REALLY liked it.
I’m also playing with Synplant, which is a LOT of fun!
( )TC October 11th
Hmmm.
These are not 11 synths you can add to your rack.
Either, they come with Logic, or they come with ProTools, or they come with Cubase. Are you gonna get a whole new DAW just to get one of them?
By all means, get Reason if you need more stuff, it’s packed with it.
Beyond that, look through the comment thread for the real good tips, or watch this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UNn2AxxaEY
( )Guillaume MONGOFLEX October 20th
Don’t forget MASSIVE as well…excellent synth too & big sound quality
( )