Thanks, loved the video. Especially when I thought I preferred the peak on a certain sound and then got the explanation about the tail on the envelope that wasn't supposed to be there.
Well since I'm pretending everything isn't digital compressed and cold because it's a youtube vid, I say, why settle for orange, when you can go full warm with hot red waveforms
@@midnightsocean2689 I know that the Hydra wave is something I would need to do additional processing to get rid of those spikes or its going to muddy up the mix.
@@HOLLASOUNDS Ooh! yes yes indeed. I had to do that on the high end of many synths I used. It's just my opinion but a truly epic synth shouldn't need loads of post processing every time you use it.
I own a Peak and from a value perspective must admit that the Hydrasynth is hard to beat for what it offers. Thanks for doing the comparison, that was not easy.
Not only does the Peak sound incredible, it is a striking piece of hardware. When I look at it, I'm hit by what synthesizers have become. This clean, refined, compact, box that can do it all and sounds glorious. Look at all those knobs!
Hydrasynth has adjustable curves in *all* envelope stages (from exponetial thru linear to logaruthmic) Meaning you could probably precisely match the Peak's envelopes with some tweaking.
Thank you for making this video... It's pretty clear that there's no real winner or loser in this as the word "warmer" can be a bit subjective. There were nice tonalities coming out of each one and really, at the end of the day, it's how the musician is able to create a tone specific to the song or jam they will be playing to. We're better off sometimes not spending so much time and energy on trying to answer unanswerable questions and investing the time into creating. Thanks again!
Hey thank you so much for making this video (despite finding the question so repulsive! Which I can understand) I'm so intrigued by the possibilities of the Hydrasynth, this breakdown has helped me a lot - it's great to hear the stripped back, raw tones of the synth as you've done here - thanks again!
Excellent comparison video. Enjoyed watching and listening Jake. Indeed very subtle differences. I played the Hydrasynth at NAMM 2020 and loved it. Very versatile synth.
Thanks for doing this test, Jeremy👍 And I must say *thanks a million* Novation for making the Peak so awesome❗️I really think you did a lot of very smart choices when you were designing it. 😃
My favorite thing about the Hydrasynth (keyboard version) is the polyphonic aftertouch and the ribbon controller. I think it's totally criminal that those are rare elements in a synthesizer. The degree of nuance and control you can get from polyphonic aftertouch makes the Hydrasynth one of the best synths for me to come out in many years.
There is something about the Peak that is more musically pleasing to my ears. While the Hydrasynth is phenomenally powerful and capable of huge sound design, there is still some sort of intangible quality about the Peak that is very compelling.
I know you hated making this video. But I wanted you to know I enjoyed it. Your expertise and approach are appreciated! Also, the actual temperature check (and cat) at the end are fantastic. :)
Great video. I was deciding between these two a while back, and kept reading users saying things like "I struggled to make the Hydrasynth fit in my mixes", while also complaining about how cold and shrill the sound was. I eventually went with the Peak due to this. Maybe the new(er) warm mode makes a big difference, but comments like these strike me as pretty ridiculous now. The differences are so minuscule in this video that in a full mix of a track there's no way you could tell. Makes you wonder about our biases on analog vs digital (analog = warm, digital = cold) and how that ultimately influences our opinions of the sounds we're hearing.
I think a huge factor that rarely gets mentioned is how responsive a synth feels to things like moving knobs and sliders. If a synth responds like an instrument, if you feel you can make it sound like you want, I would take that over glorious sounding analog oscillators and filters. I’ve had warm sounding analog synths that responded coldly and I’ve had digital synths respond warmly.
Thanks for nailing the description about the Peak being in a pocket, or sounding compressed. It's almost like the sonic equivalent of silly putty, you know when you cut silly putty with a knife and you get a very well defined snap cut. That is what the Peak sounds like to me. Personally, it's this quality that keeps me from choosing it. But I keep coming back to listening to examples of it because it seems so capable and high quality.
Really enjoyed this, I don't give a crap about one better than another, just like to geek out with synths and 'tests'. It's never the car, it's the driver ;) My favourite thing about hardware synths is they NEVER require me to plug them into the internet to prove I bought them and didn't download them illegally, hahahahah
Yeah, the Peak does analog tones a bit better, which makes a lot of sense since it has some analog parts. But buying a Hydrasynth for analog tones is like buying a Nintendo switch to play the classic Mario games. The Hydra is for people who want a sound design box that’s comparable in flexibility to something like Zebra2 or Pigments. A couple observations... Peak has fantastic on board effects. Hydra’s range from very good to so-so IMO. But there’s plugins for that unless you’re trying to record DAWless. Peak always sounds slightly saturated to me, even when it’s not going through the filter. Maybe there’s something to that. I know my Sub37 saturates when the oscillators are cranked past 50% or so.
I have the summit and I absolutely love the on board effects. They are surprisingly amazing. If they sold it as a standalone effects pedal I would likely buy it just to be able to use it on another synth at the same time. I never have high hopes for built in effects but these blow me away.
Awesome! I appreciate what this video ended up demonstrating. I'm not too familiar with wavetable synths in practice, and demos tend to get really wild really quickly. This grounded the ASM's capabilities in more sonically familiar territory. I have a much better understanding and appreciation for the Hydrasynth. I always thought it was a really cool synth, but I find it far more appealing now. I may have to grab one. 😬
I own both the Peak and Hydrasynth. I have had the Peak for about a year, and the Hydrasynth for a couple of weeks. Both are extremely capable synths and offer a very wide palette. I completely agree about the Peak sounding like it's in a well defined space. For some sounds, the Peak fits in perfectly, and for others it needs more work to make it fit. The Hydrasynth I feel needs more work to get it to sit right in the mix. I haven't been able to deep-dive the Hydrasynth FM synthesis yet, but I am not disappointed in owning both. They are amazing pieces of hardware. I do most of my producing in the box, so the only 3 pieces of gear that I have are a fully analog Deepmind 6, a hybrid Peak, and a fully digital Hydrasynth. I wanted to have these 3 sonic palettes to add something extra to my arsenal while producing/sound designing.
This video is just what I needed. I was concerned, but not so much about “warmth”. Just that the Hydrasynth sounded thin in comparison after a few other reviews I watched. I do hear a small difference and obviously since this video is focused on sound and they’re side by side, it’s easier to tell but if they were not, it’s very likely I wouldn’t notice the difference. Thanks for clearing this up for me! Great video!
I think it is a very good test. Your point of view on the envelope is solid, and it is also my main concern when it comes to synthesizer sound creation (Especially the attack changes). The difference in waveforms was very informative, and Peak's design is good. Thank you. Keep up the good work.
Apart from that ringing in the chorus test and an associated lack of detail from the hydra ( a little muddy) in only that test. I felt that the hydra is an amazing sonic equivalent to the Peak and at half the price that’s astounding. Hats off to you in getting those patches matching so closely you must have had one dinger of a headache at the end of it all. The main take out- two very accomplished ‘warm sounding’ synths.
I can't agree more with the conclusion. Hydrasynth can do so much more, but if you really want the sounds of the Peak "pocket", yes, Peak sounds refined in that area, and the reverb is designed for that space. Very good answer to an impossible question.
Great video. Right off the bat I thought the Peak had a more pleasant sound. The “warmest” digital synths I’ve ever played are the Nord Lead 4 and A1. Two really great distortions per patch, very harmonic filters, filter drive, all the good stuff.
There's just something about the PEAK that just sounds amazing i am absolutely stunned, if money was a no factor i'd always get the peak i guess... but hydrasynth explorer for half the price is just a steal of a deal
This is a cool comparison, and as a guitar guy who has recently gotten into synths, it's great to see how these match up. On the other hand, I have a little bit of a practical streak(thankfully, helps with the GAS), and rather than asking "Would I rather have a Peak or a Hydrsynth?", the correct question seems to be "Would I rather have a Peak or TWO Hydrasynths?"
Just gonna make a thread with myself... so, I'm at work, and not on the best headphones, but in many cases, I can hardly tell when you switch synths. The Peak seems really cool, and I know Novation makes great stuff(looks slick, too), but... at about 11 minutes I've seen what I needed to see: Hydrasynth. I can always double track with an entire second Hydra if I want :)
Totally agree, I have the Minilogue XD and I feel it even lacks the warm bottom end often heard with pure analog. I own the Novation Summit and it's an awesome synth on all levels, oscs, controls, pristine effects & saturation nodes.
I have both and I played the hydrasynth everyday for almost 2 years. When my Peak came in the mail, the difference between the two was striking. It didn't sound "different," it sounded better. Much better. Its like comparing two expert singers that both have 20 years of experience and perfect technique and both have the exact same range. Chances are if you take a pole, one singer is going to be much more popular than the other one, and there will be no debate that they sound different.
What a cool video, Jeremy! I have both of these synths and they both sound pretty awesome. I find the ASM Hydrasynth is able to sound much more otherworldly, while the Peak nails the traditional sounds beautifully. Anyway, I'm enjoying watching this video. (It's still playing, while I write this)
As a lucky owner of both, worrying about "warmth" is indeed silly, as Jeremy says. If you know how to program synths, either one can do almost anything you can imagine. If you want to simulate an analog sound, watch Marc Doty's Intro/Analog Sound video on the Pro 2. I can guarantee you that if you program a bit of pitch instability into a patch, almost anyone will think it is analog.
I think this is a great point. When I got my Hydrasynth my immediate reaction was that it was very harsh. However, I quickly realised that there was simply a learning curve, and I had to learn how to tame it. It can sound really lovely.
good comparison - I already have a bunch of great Novation stuff and the Hydrasynth keyboard will give me more options as well as an amazing control surface (plus ribbon and MPE) and very little menu diving - scribble strips rule (like on the Solaris) the new features are great too like Scala microtonal options and more some amazing patch makers out there now for HS that sound incredibly warm and lush, but I also love digital synths (PPG, Blofeld, CZ-1, DX-7, etc.)
Enjoying this . Commenting as I watch, turning snap off in the voice section of hydrasynth would help to get those envelopes a tad closer. The hydrasynth with snap on has sub ms envelopes extremely fast. With snap off it’s more akin to traditional synths.
I know you used it here for demonstration purposes, but having two different synths play very similar sounds and each panned completely to one side sounds really cool! Now I want to try it out in actual music but dang that's a lot of money for a stylistic device.
Nice share bro! So close in warmth. So subjective. Well done. And agreed... the low pass gate on bass was SICK on the hydra! Also liked that Steiner Parker 12 on the Hydra bass. And yes... the physical temp test was... Hysterical.
I love that in the methodology you're having to make sound design limitations on the Hydra to match the inherent limitations on the Peak... regardless of warmth, that is instructive in itself.
@@hostnik777 Because I want to hear and see how this youtuber was going to do it and it entertained Me. Also I wanted to have a look at the Hydra Sythersizor.
@@HOLLASOUNDS they can absolutely be "compared" what are you talking about? What is better is subjective but they can absolutely be compared and ARE being compared in this video
@@neonblack211 They are different and even when two synths of similar abilities are put side b6 side its completely subjective to the person. I choose the Novation Mininova over the Arturia Mini Freak, but most people would disagree.
More people need to use your final method of testing on synths. It's important to know, regardless of whether it worked out the way you wanted it to or not.
@@Skarlet_Overdrive I was referring to the Rev 2 … which IS fully analog … Yes, the Peak/Summit has FPGAs … I have a Rev 2-16-KB and a Summit … love both, but they are very distinguishable … The Rev 2 does a better job of imitating vintage Oberheims and Prophets … and the Summit does a better job of imitating vintage Rolands/Synthwave/Synthpop … and each has 16 voices; or 8 when split/layers … If you can only have one fully analog poly synth, or one hybrid synth, these are the ones (best bang-for-buck value, for sure!) I’m planning to add a Hydrasynth Deluxe - for edgy digital sounds (and that poly AT/ribbon, which I can use with my other poly synths!) My other synths are a Matriarch, MS2000B (relatively warm digital/early VA) and a Pro 3 SE.
I would have loved this video right about 5 months ago. Got the Hydra because of the interface which I really gel with, I actually thought at the time the Peak sounded a little better, there's one other video floating around comparing them that I based it off.
Interesting Friday afternoon demo, Jeremy, though I agree it is a bit of a waste of time. I find them both very capable machines and the results can seem quite nuanced. Some of the differences are lost on TH-cam, especially noticeable in the reverb demo, the Peak's is so lush with a very sweet tail. My own workflow doesn't really revolve around sound design, so I don't use the Hydra as often as I should. My holy grail is for a pristine sound rather than lots of variety. (I love the Moog Sirin, very basic, but sounds beautiful). I use the Hydra mainly for sampling of fill FX when I get the time - usually noodling in front of the telly, while my wife's Summit (Peak) is the workhorse in our wee studio as it does everything that we need very well. As an aside , I'm using the UDO Super 6 at the moment, which is looovely sounding, though on paper is less capable than either. With a foot on the GAS pedal, a synth I think is interesting is the Dreadbox Typhon, though I've not tried one yet.
The cat experiment is the only valid test :D in all seriousness, I'm totally blown away by the Hydra. I've been GASing for a Peak for ages now and this could be the pretender to the throne. Damn :/ well, I'll add the Hydra to my audition list for this year (if we can ever go back to in-store browsing. Meh)
Apparently Brahms had synaesthesia and used to ask the orchestra for "more pink". So I think the question of which synth is warmer is probably quite sensible by comparison! I have a Hydrasynth, and I was curious to discover how the PEAK sounded. It sounded great! Mostly I thought the two were very evenly matched, and it probably comes down to how fussy you are and what type of sound you're trying to make. Good video, thank you.
Just like to add that I use a MicroFreak along with the Hydra Desktop for layered sounds (you get 2 octave poly aftertouch and 2 octave ribbon control by using the little Freak as a controller). These two combined are slightly lower priced than Peak here in Europe - they make a combo worth considering.
Both of these synths sound phenomenal. I sold a DSI Pro 2 and picked up a used Peak in the spring. I feel like the Peak has a defined character and the Hydrasynth is more neutral after watching. I think if you're going for the Peak sound then it's probably a bit easier to get that character, but as you've shown the Hydrasynth can come quite close and is able to do some stuff the Peak can't.
Dude you are the absolute best.. I love your personality, based on the videos, i bet you are even better in real life. I appreciate your work to the highest. I've learned so much from you. Never stop please! Love from Sweden (:
For the Peak/Summit, the Diverge and Drift settings are the single things that add the most "warmth". I'm not sure if the Hydra has something like that or not. If you compare these to any VCO based analog Poly like the Korg Prologue or Prophet 5, you will hear this subtle smearing and detuning of the sound because the oscillators aren't completely perfectly in tune. Additionally, I always find analog synths have a bit of extra drive to their oscillators. So, it is important to compensate that with drive on digital synths. Peak is great for that. For me those two things are a big part of what warmth is, and why, without diverge/drift and drive, digital synths still are missing something.
I think warmth as people perceive it stems from even harmonics (usually produced by analog saturation of tubes) and cold is the sparkly odd harmonics of digital saturation/distortion. Or so I heard
Fun comparison! .. I'd love to see a 'warmth' comparison done choosing either of these 2 'digital' synths compared to the Black Corp 'analog' synths that are know for their 'warmth', like the DDMk2 or Xerxes. It would be interesting to see if there is anything significantly noticeable to warrant the 3x price tag.
I own the Peak and enjoy it for what I would consider that more compressed, smooth tone. Listening to the ASM it had more edge to it that would be useful in more aggressive patches. But the reverb is on the Peak is on par with some of the more high end reverb pedals out there
I guess the other thing you can do on both synthesizers is just find an interim wave in the wavetable if you want your saw to be bassier or your triangle to be brighter, and then there's other waveshaping besides. There are just so many options on both, and getting where you want to go is glorious.
@@HOLLASOUNDS No, I just mean using a wavetable to get an in-between wave that you like instead of some wave that you might think is "too bright" but hey, both machines have filters.
@@MichaelRohaly In video He shows the two waves and says they look very similar but I dont think they do, Peak has a cleaner looking wave. I noticed that Hydra as spike like peaks and for Me that's the short of wave shape that creates problems with clipping and clashing sounds and I would need to use additional processing to smooth that out.
@@HOLLASOUNDS The point is you can, on either synth. But I don't remember where in this video he actually shows the waves. I think you're talking about the display of what's going on with the envelopes.
My guess is by "warmth" people are referring to pleasing analog or analog-like harmonics, distortion, presence, space, and a gentle rolling off of high frequencies, and on the flip side a lack of digital harshness or flatness. Converters and processors can make a difference, even in comparing digital synths. The Hydrasynth at times (but not always) sounds a little bit flat in comparison, although it has nice bass. I would say the Peak sounds warmer much of the time, but it's close.
I’m finding, esp. in the early comparisons, that I prefer the Peak’s sound, but I’m not sure I’d have ever noticed what I “don’t like” about the Hydrasynth. It’s only in the light of one that I feel anything “bad” about the other. Which is to say, I’d LOVE to own either one!!
I was also in doubt which one to buy. I had my mind set on the Novation peak, but if I look closely and listen, the hydrasynth can do a lot more than the peak can. Well the reverb and chorus sound good on the peak, but for in the studio that is not so important as there are very good vst's reverbs..... on the other hand, the hydrasynth has very good filters, many choices in envelope shapes, good low end and is considerably cheaper.
@@HOLLASOUNDS way more types of synthesis algorithms and filters. Also more envelopes for complex modulation. You can go a lot deeper with sound design. Whether or not you really need to make such complex patches to make good music is a whole other discussion, but it’s nice when creating a really big lead patch that is going to carry a track without much else going on.
First, thanks for video, very interesting test. The Peak sounds like a Peak... It is a unique sound because the machine does not try to offer ten thousand of complex options. The designers focused on making the machine consistent with itself. In the Hydrasynth you feel that there is more power but the temptation was too great to add tons of parameters everywhere, forgetting a little about the coherence of the whole. In fact, the Hydrasynth is very surgical on all levels: the sound is a bit less warm, higher, more digital, the adjustments take longer to make but can be very precise and you can manipulate more parameters, etc. The Peak has been designed as a whole and this is its strength. The Hydrasynth relies on the quantity of parameters by letting the user do a lot of fine adjustments himself. The Peak by avoiding this pitfall and by proposing some limits guides in a way towards a sound that will always be that of a Peak. One can escape from it less. But the sound of the Peak is magnificent, so why try to escape from it? :-) Disclaimer: I am a happy owner of Peak and inevitably this analysis is very subjective! (And to be totally frank I find that my old MS2000 Korg, entirely digital of a time when the processors were much less powerful, has more basses and more warmth than the Peak and the Hydrasynth, so even in digital world, vintage is better. And this is something very surprising that I would not have bet a cent on if I did not own an MS2000)
I have a Summit and an MS2000B … Great synths (and both sound warmer than the Hydrasynth, which I’ve played with quite a bit - but for edgier, industrial sounds, which is where it excels …).
I have a Hydra keys, and I think it's actually really good as a warm-sounding VA if you want to do classic subtractive sounds. I've struggled to make it sound good in other contexts though, something about the wavetables seems to fatigue my ears in a way that the PPG/Waldorf synths don't.
I also have a Hydra keys, and I've had the reverse experience. I've never tried using is as a standard VA, because I wanted the way it worked with wavetables. I love my Blofeld, but I don't like it as much as the Hydra.
@@Michael_Smith-Red_No.5 I don't use mine as a VA, either. I bought it to make weird sounds and to mess with wavetables. It's just that, for whatever reason I find the VA waveforms coupled with the excellent filter models sound great and the wavetable/fm/etc is very hit-or-miss.
I thought this was a really interesting walkthrough - thanks for putting this together. Respectfully, I dont think "warmth" is a stupid question. I think every oscillator and filter implementathc has its own "character", whether implemented in hardware or as algorithms. I know in my eurorack system that each of my five go-to"filters sounds different, and I choose which one to use based on what kind of soudn i'm looking for - sometimes i'm looking for a sound i think of as edgy, hollow, open or electronic, and sometimes i'm look for a soudn I think of as warm, compressed, or saturated. I think software- based synths face the same challenge, which has to be played out in a) the choice of algorithsm, b) the implementation, and c) the choice of hardware 9where appicable. So I really appreciate your approch - to try to dial in the same "patch" on each device and compare it "character" - I think it simportant to understand what range of voicing a synth is cabable of delivering, and your walkthrough provides some very interesting ideas on hwo to make that assessemrnt.
I think this is a great Video Jeremy, I think the take away here is to get both. To be honest, im getting both I love them both. and HA the hydra is totally hot.
There is something about the Peak that makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside that I haven’t found in the Hydra here. Don’t know if it’s this mythical “warmth” but definitely some complexity that keeps me hooked every time I hear it. Hydra is IMO just more one-dimensional in comparison.
@@wickeddubz I only meant the sound - workflow seems more robust on the Hydrasynth but sound samples don't impress me over VSTs that I've got in Ableton or on my iPad.
Warmth or not... but i definitly think the PEAK is richer and has more "power" in almost every example. The HYDRA is very "surgical" what can be of course also put to good use.
I agree, but I will I raise your richer and more powerful and go all in with "better" in every patch...that thing kinda warms my heart....which is the organ we use to "hear" warmth if we are getting technical. Also, yes, for digital hardness, or surgical cutting...the hydrasynth sounds like it was made for the job.
Hydra seems like it would be a powerhouse for edgy Industrial … whereas Summit (Peak too?) can imitate warm Vintage Rolands amazingly well … They both do other things, but these are their fortes imho …
What I found is that basically Hydra's factory patches do sound glassy and brittle, but there shouldn't be any surprise, - this is what its creators were aiming for and marketing, this crispy exactness of digital wavetable synthesis. Many people complained that it sounded "too digital" based on nothing other than factory patches, but I think they have no idea what they're talking about, Hydrasynth can engineer almost any kind of sound, and it being digital is no deal breaker, I've owned some digital synths which sounded way warmer and more bassy and voluminous than analog synths. Many times it's all in th eye of Beholder though.
EXCELLENT stuff. I have both, I like them both, probably as much, and apparently, like you. "Refined & Defined" vs "Wider & Wilder"? Sometimes I think the Hydra has a slightly "metallic" edge to enhance or dial out depending on what I want, and you perhaps hinted at this too. But even if you hated making it, this is a great demo of how often sounds are about the maker, as much or even more, than the tool. Final section ... 34 mins ... JUST BRILLIANT! A delightfully appropriate answer/response to the question posed ... B)
I got a peak used from my local store in perfect condition for 1400cad which was a really good price even for the time. The peak is a really attractive looking and great sounding synth!
I gotta say as a previous owner of the peak, it had incredible sounds and was constantly useful as an instrument but I ALWAYS had to do some kind of EQing after the fact due to the most annoying feature in the universe, it didn't have a way to cut any lows if you used the filter in low pass mode. Like a non resonant high pass or low cut eq or anything. It was a deal killer because if you're onstage playing with anyone else or any backing tracks, it just took too much bass space. It sounds so impressive by itself but there is a reason this is a common feature in most synths. Even the Juno 106 had a non resonant high pass. That was why i eventually sold it. Its great in the studio but boom boom on the stage. /rant
Im not sure but I would bet the novation is driven hard at the D/A-Converters. That would explain the "clipped" or saturated, compressed and warm sound. In my opinion the Hydra sounds more free and clean but with less analogue randomness and grit. By the way: They complement each other pretty good! :o
That is some seriously specific and in depth synth nerdery and I love it. It's surprising how much you can actually hear that slight exponential to the Peak envelope, and how it almost has a tail too. If you didn't have them side by side and so specifically dialed in like this I don't know that I'd ever catch things like that, but that just makes all the work on this close comparison even more useful. Unfortunately what I take from it is I want to own both. But...
Dig the video, when adding in Analog Feel and Warm Mode, did you also enable Random Phase in the Voice menu? That would prevent some of the unison-phasing-esque sounds when doing chords for the 'Soft Triangles" part of the video.
Great video! I feel like the hydrasynth has the training wheels removed compared to Peak. You can go to some really crazy places on the hydrasynth. Love mine!
One thing I've noticed over the years of using so many synths is that I can only take so much of the warmer sounds, especially in headphones. My ears resonate and ache after a while. So I can only listen to synth music for a certain amount of time. (But I've been playing since the 1980s). Funny thing is, my acoustic guitar and piano never fatigue my ears. Those lower tones really hurt sometimes. LOL!
The warmth of the Novation Peak is due to the wooden sides panels
You're correct
It’s the rich tone-wood they use... As we all know it makes all the difference in transferring the vibrations from the low frequency modulators.
you have to set them on fire though
very reasonable😂
Imagine if they had been covered in “fine Corinthian leather”!
i was the stupid person that asked the stupid question. i apologize.
Lol. Turned out not to be a stupid question! Was interesting.
Thanks, loved the video. Especially when I thought I preferred the peak on a certain sound and then got the explanation about the tail on the envelope that wasn't supposed to be there.
Just record the music to tape in a bathroom with a bath full of hot water.
Thanks for the trigger to another ultra-informative video by Jeremy
All us synth nerds support one another. Asking a question means you're curious, and not stupid. :)
I put my Hydrasynth in the oven at 350 for about 2 hours... when I took it out, it was really, really warm!
So did I. It tasted horrible!
Best place for it … 🤫😉
The orange waveforms look much warmer than the blue ones.
Well since I'm pretending everything isn't digital compressed and cold because it's a youtube vid, I say, why settle for orange, when you can go full warm with hot red waveforms
The orange has a less uniform wave form then the peak. The first time this guy shows the sine waves He says they look the same but I disagree.
@@HOLLASOUNDS mm, noted. Personally don't feel as if I really know a wave, till I've sat down and had some tea with it.
@@midnightsocean2689 I know that the Hydra wave is something I would need to do additional processing to get rid of those spikes or its going to muddy up the mix.
@@HOLLASOUNDS Ooh! yes yes indeed. I had to do that on the high end of many synths I used. It's just my opinion but a truly epic synth shouldn't need loads of post processing every time you use it.
I own a Peak and from a value perspective must admit that the Hydrasynth is hard to beat for what it offers. Thanks for doing the comparison, that was not easy.
Funny ending! :)
However, the warmest modern synth is probably the Moog One with its fans switched off.
Not only does the Peak sound incredible, it is a striking piece of hardware. When I look at it, I'm hit by what synthesizers have become. This clean, refined, compact, box that can do it all and sounds glorious. Look at all those knobs!
i have the summit, which is essentially two peaks and a keybed and i absolutely love it. Its been my main driver ever since i got it.
@@kesnielchan8082 Just type "Novation Summit"on the search box man...
Hydrasynth has adjustable curves in *all* envelope stages (from exponetial thru linear to logaruthmic) Meaning you could probably precisely match the Peak's envelopes with some tweaking.
Did you watch the video lol… he literally does that
You are an invaluable asset to people trying to figure out what kinda gear to get and how to get the most out of it. We don’t deserve you!
I'm sorry you didn't enjoy making this, but I, for one, thoroughly enjoyed watching and listening
Thank you for making this video... It's pretty clear that there's no real winner or loser in this as the word "warmer" can be a bit subjective. There were nice tonalities coming out of each one and really, at the end of the day, it's how the musician is able to create a tone specific to the song or jam they will be playing to. We're better off sometimes not spending so much time and energy on trying to answer unanswerable questions and investing the time into creating. Thanks again!
Thank you for the huge amount of work for such a nerdy (and wonderful) thing. It's nice to see these two so directly compared.
The Peak has keyboard filter tracking turned on by default, which can make waveforms sound a bit less bright on lower notes.
Right. When he starts out, we’re listening to a filtered sawtooth.
He says key tracking is at 100 on both
Hey thank you so much for making this video (despite finding the question so repulsive! Which I can understand) I'm so intrigued by the possibilities of the Hydrasynth, this breakdown has helped me a lot - it's great to hear the stripped back, raw tones of the synth as you've done here - thanks again!
Excellent comparison video. Enjoyed watching and listening Jake. Indeed very subtle differences. I played the Hydrasynth at NAMM 2020 and loved it. Very versatile synth.
After three watches all you've done is convince me that I need both, when I can afford them. Brilliant and thanks for taking the time to enlighten me.
Thanks for doing this test, Jeremy👍 And I must say *thanks a million* Novation for making the Peak so awesome❗️I really think you did a lot of very smart choices when you were designing it. 😃
My favorite thing about the Hydrasynth (keyboard version) is the polyphonic aftertouch and the ribbon controller. I think it's totally criminal that those are rare elements in a synthesizer. The degree of nuance and control you can get from polyphonic aftertouch makes the Hydrasynth one of the best synths for me to come out in many years.
Amen
I have the Peak but I like the look of the Hydrasynth with its pads.
I'm Not a performer, as a sound designer i do not need a keyboard, that's why many synths are desktop.
There is something about the Peak that is more musically pleasing to my ears. While the Hydrasynth is phenomenally powerful and capable of huge sound design, there is still some sort of intangible quality about the Peak that is very compelling.
I swear there's magic inside FPGAs
An actually analog filter goes some way to masking its digital (FPGA) oscillators …
I know you hated making this video. But I wanted you to know I enjoyed it. Your expertise and approach are appreciated! Also, the actual temperature check (and cat) at the end are fantastic. :)
"I know you hated making this video". Yeah right mate. I'm sure he hates the 50K views the video ha$.
Great video. I was deciding between these two a while back, and kept reading users saying things like "I struggled to make the Hydrasynth fit in my mixes", while also complaining about how cold and shrill the sound was. I eventually went with the Peak due to this. Maybe the new(er) warm mode makes a big difference, but comments like these strike me as pretty ridiculous now. The differences are so minuscule in this video that in a full mix of a track there's no way you could tell. Makes you wonder about our biases on analog vs digital (analog = warm, digital = cold) and how that ultimately influences our opinions of the sounds we're hearing.
I think a huge factor that rarely gets mentioned is how responsive a synth feels to things like moving knobs and sliders. If a synth responds like an instrument, if you feel you can make it sound like you want, I would take that over glorious sounding analog oscillators and filters. I’ve had warm sounding analog synths that responded coldly and I’ve had digital synths respond warmly.
@@geephlips 😐 … if ‘warm’ hadn’t lost all meaning before, it certainly has now … 🙄
Thanks for nailing the description about the Peak being in a pocket, or sounding compressed. It's almost like the sonic equivalent of silly putty, you know when you cut silly putty with a knife and you get a very well defined snap cut. That is what the Peak sounds like to me. Personally, it's this quality that keeps me from choosing it. But I keep coming back to listening to examples of it because it seems so capable and high quality.
Really enjoyed this, I don't give a crap about one better than another, just like to geek out with synths and 'tests'. It's never the car, it's the driver ;) My favourite thing about hardware synths is they NEVER require me to plug them into the internet to prove I bought them and didn't download them illegally, hahahahah
Couldn't agree more 👏
Yeah, the Peak does analog tones a bit better, which makes a lot of sense since it has some analog parts. But buying a Hydrasynth for analog tones is like buying a Nintendo switch to play the classic Mario games. The Hydra is for people who want a sound design box that’s comparable in flexibility to something like Zebra2 or Pigments.
A couple observations... Peak has fantastic on board effects. Hydra’s range from very good to so-so IMO. But there’s plugins for that unless you’re trying to record DAWless.
Peak always sounds slightly saturated to me, even when it’s not going through the filter. Maybe there’s something to that. I know my Sub37 saturates when the oscillators are cranked past 50% or so.
Agree 100
I have the summit and I absolutely love the on board effects. They are surprisingly amazing. If they sold it as a standalone effects pedal I would likely buy it just to be able to use it on another synth at the same time. I never have high hopes for built in effects but these blow me away.
Awesome! I appreciate what this video ended up demonstrating. I'm not too familiar with wavetable synths in practice, and demos tend to get really wild really quickly. This grounded the ASM's capabilities in more sonically familiar territory. I have a much better understanding and appreciation for the Hydrasynth. I always thought it was a really cool synth, but I find it far more appealing now. I may have to grab one. 😬
I own both the Peak and Hydrasynth. I have had the Peak for about a year, and the Hydrasynth for a couple of weeks. Both are extremely capable synths and offer a very wide palette. I completely agree about the Peak sounding like it's in a well defined space. For some sounds, the Peak fits in perfectly, and for others it needs more work to make it fit. The Hydrasynth I feel needs more work to get it to sit right in the mix. I haven't been able to deep-dive the Hydrasynth FM synthesis yet, but I am not disappointed in owning both. They are amazing pieces of hardware. I do most of my producing in the box, so the only 3 pieces of gear that I have are a fully analog Deepmind 6, a hybrid Peak, and a fully digital Hydrasynth. I wanted to have these 3 sonic palettes to add something extra to my arsenal while producing/sound designing.
Thanks for doing this. as someone who doesn't own either, it's fun to listen to them and get GAS for both.
This video is just what I needed. I was concerned, but not so much about “warmth”. Just that the Hydrasynth sounded thin in comparison after a few other reviews I watched. I do hear a small difference and obviously since this video is focused on sound and they’re side by side, it’s easier to tell but if they were not, it’s very likely I wouldn’t notice the difference. Thanks for clearing this up for me! Great video!
I think it is a very good test.
Your point of view on the envelope is solid,
and it is also my main concern when it comes to synthesizer sound creation (Especially the attack changes).
The difference in waveforms was very informative, and Peak's design is good.
Thank you.
Keep up the good work.
Apart from that ringing in the chorus test and an associated lack of detail from the hydra ( a little muddy) in only that test. I felt that the hydra is an amazing sonic equivalent to the Peak and at half the price that’s astounding. Hats off to you in getting those patches matching so closely you must have had one dinger of a headache at the end of it all. The main take out- two very accomplished ‘warm sounding’ synths.
I can't agree more with the conclusion. Hydrasynth can do so much more, but if you really want the sounds of the Peak "pocket", yes, Peak sounds refined in that area, and the reverb is designed for that space. Very good answer to an impossible question.
Thank you SO MUCH for this! I had asked about warmth on HS on your previous videos. Appreciate it, even if you hate the topic ;)
Great video. Right off the bat I thought the Peak had a more pleasant sound. The “warmest” digital synths I’ve ever played are the Nord Lead 4 and A1. Two really great distortions per patch, very harmonic filters, filter drive, all the good stuff.
Big fan, too, of the Nord Lead series--my 2X and 4 both lovely and so full of character.
Excellent insight, thanks for doing this comparison! Hydrasynth is extremely impressive, especially up against the classic Peak
The fact that you literally took their temperature earned you my thumbs up. Thanks for the video.
There's just something about the PEAK that just sounds amazing i am absolutely stunned, if money was a no factor i'd always get the peak i guess... but hydrasynth explorer for half the price is just a steal of a deal
That's somthing Navation sythersizors do.
This was great. I learned so much just listening to you talk through your thoughts as you shape the sounds.
This is a cool comparison, and as a guitar guy who has recently gotten into synths, it's great to see how these match up. On the other hand, I have a little bit of a practical streak(thankfully, helps with the GAS), and rather than asking "Would I rather have a Peak or a Hydrsynth?", the correct question seems to be "Would I rather have a Peak or TWO Hydrasynths?"
Just gonna make a thread with myself... so, I'm at work, and not on the best headphones, but in many cases, I can hardly tell when you switch synths. The Peak seems really cool, and I know Novation makes great stuff(looks slick, too), but... at about 11 minutes I've seen what I needed to see: Hydrasynth. I can always double track with an entire second Hydra if I want :)
Correct answer: you want a Summit.
Korg Minilogue OG sounds "colder" to me than both of these.... And it's all analog!
Go with the sound that resonates with you.
Totally agree, I have the Minilogue XD and I feel it even lacks the warm bottom end often heard with pure analog. I own the Novation Summit and it's an awesome synth on all levels, oscs, controls, pristine effects & saturation nodes.
@@MattiasHolmgrensummit creeeeeew.
I have both and I played the hydrasynth everyday for almost 2 years. When my Peak came in the mail, the difference between the two was striking. It didn't sound "different," it sounded better. Much better. Its like comparing two expert singers that both have 20 years of experience and perfect technique and both have the exact same range. Chances are if you take a pole, one singer is going to be much more popular than the other one, and there will be no debate that they sound different.
What a cool video, Jeremy! I have both of these synths and they both sound pretty awesome. I find the ASM Hydrasynth is able to sound much more otherworldly, while the Peak nails the traditional sounds beautifully.
Anyway, I'm enjoying watching this video. (It's still playing, while I write this)
I should mention, while the reverb on the ASM Hydrasynth is good, the one on the Peak is absolutely dreamy.
I'm about 12 and a half minutes into the video and so far, the Peak has sounded warmer, more full.
As a lucky owner of both, worrying about "warmth" is indeed silly, as Jeremy says. If you know how to program synths, either one can do almost anything you can imagine. If you want to simulate an analog sound, watch Marc Doty's Intro/Analog Sound video on the Pro 2. I can guarantee you that if you program a bit of pitch instability into a patch, almost anyone will think it is analog.
I think this is a great point. When I got my Hydrasynth my immediate reaction was that it was very harsh. However, I quickly realised that there was simply a learning curve, and I had to learn how to tame it. It can sound really lovely.
good comparison - I already have a bunch of great Novation stuff and the Hydrasynth keyboard will give me more options as well as an amazing control surface (plus ribbon and MPE) and very little menu diving - scribble strips rule (like on the Solaris)
the new features are great too like Scala microtonal options and more
some amazing patch makers out there now for HS that sound incredibly warm and lush, but I also love digital synths (PPG, Blofeld, CZ-1, DX-7, etc.)
Enjoying this . Commenting as I watch, turning snap off in the voice section of hydrasynth would help to get those envelopes a tad closer. The hydrasynth with snap on has sub ms envelopes extremely fast. With snap off it’s more akin to traditional synths.
I know you used it here for demonstration purposes, but having two different synths play very similar sounds and each panned completely to one side sounds really cool! Now I want to try it out in actual music but dang that's a lot of money for a stylistic device.
Thanks for making this. They're both great synths and I really enjoyed this head-to-head comparison. Great angle!
I've wanted a Peak for about four years now. One day you will make noise for me!
Nice share bro! So close in warmth. So subjective. Well done. And agreed... the low pass gate on bass was SICK on the hydra! Also liked that Steiner Parker 12 on the Hydra bass. And yes... the physical temp test was... Hysterical.
Great video! Very impressive sounds - I want both. Now!
I love that in the methodology you're having to make sound design limitations on the Hydra to match the inherent limitations on the Peak... regardless of warmth, that is instructive in itself.
No sythersizor can actually be compared it's all down to personal preference.
@@HOLLASOUNDS - then why are you even watching this video?
@@hostnik777 Because I want to hear and see how this youtuber was going to do it and it entertained Me. Also I wanted to have a look at the Hydra Sythersizor.
@@HOLLASOUNDS they can absolutely be "compared" what are you talking about? What is better is subjective but they can absolutely be compared and ARE being compared in this video
@@neonblack211 They are different and even when two synths of similar abilities are put side b6 side its completely subjective to the person. I choose the Novation Mininova over the Arturia Mini Freak, but most people would disagree.
More people need to use your final method of testing on synths. It's important to know, regardless of whether it worked out the way you wanted it to or not.
Novation really knocked it out of the park with the peak. Still prefer my rev 2 but man the peak is a beast!
Fully analog FTW.
@Kieren Moore eh not necessarily since the oscillators are FPGAs but it sounds indistinguishable imo
@@Skarlet_Overdrive I was referring to the Rev 2 … which IS fully analog …
Yes, the Peak/Summit has FPGAs … I have a Rev 2-16-KB and a Summit … love both, but they are very distinguishable …
The Rev 2 does a better job of imitating vintage Oberheims and Prophets … and the Summit does a better job of imitating vintage Rolands/Synthwave/Synthpop … and each has 16 voices; or 8 when split/layers …
If you can only have one fully analog poly synth, or one hybrid synth, these are the ones (best bang-for-buck value, for sure!)
I’m planning to add a Hydrasynth Deluxe - for edgy digital sounds (and that poly AT/ribbon, which I can use with my other poly synths!)
My other synths are a Matriarch, MS2000B (relatively warm digital/early VA) and a Pro 3 SE.
I would have loved this video right about 5 months ago. Got the Hydra because of the interface which I really gel with, I actually thought at the time the Peak sounded a little better, there's one other video floating around comparing them that I based it off.
I just got a Peak and video is interesting, I'm not planning on getting a Hydro
Interesting Friday afternoon demo, Jeremy, though I agree it is a bit of a waste of time. I find them both very capable machines and the results can seem quite nuanced. Some of the differences are lost on TH-cam, especially noticeable in the reverb demo, the Peak's is so lush with a very sweet tail. My own workflow doesn't really revolve around sound design, so I don't use the Hydra as often as I should. My holy grail is for a pristine sound rather than lots of variety. (I love the Moog Sirin, very basic, but sounds beautiful). I use the Hydra mainly for sampling of fill FX when I get the time - usually noodling in front of the telly, while my wife's Summit (Peak) is the workhorse in our wee studio as it does everything that we need very well. As an aside , I'm using the UDO Super 6 at the moment, which is looovely sounding, though on paper is less capable than either. With a foot on the GAS pedal, a synth I think is interesting is the Dreadbox Typhon, though I've not tried one yet.
The cat experiment is the only valid test :D in all seriousness, I'm totally blown away by the Hydra. I've been GASing for a Peak for ages now and this could be the pretender to the throne. Damn :/ well, I'll add the Hydra to my audition list for this year (if we can ever go back to in-store browsing. Meh)
Apparently Brahms had synaesthesia and used to ask the orchestra for "more pink". So I think the question of which synth is warmer is probably quite sensible by comparison! I have a Hydrasynth, and I was curious to discover how the PEAK sounded. It sounded great! Mostly I thought the two were very evenly matched, and it probably comes down to how fussy you are and what type of sound you're trying to make. Good video, thank you.
Seriously I wanna know which one sounds "Colder".
The other one.
There's a lot of truth in this, after all they're digital synths
A follow up video on which one sounds more "Rich" or more importantly which is more Rounded & Full?
Modor NF-1 is beautifully icy. I know it’s neither of these but it’s a cool (ha!) synth.
@@jshell mordor? isn't it warmer?
"Sounds like I'm on Nitrus" Brilliant I new exactly what you meant, and then it did.
Just like to add that I use a MicroFreak along with the Hydra Desktop for layered sounds (you get 2 octave poly aftertouch and 2 octave ribbon control by using the little Freak as a controller). These two combined are slightly lower priced than Peak here in Europe - they make a combo worth considering.
That's definitely good to know. Thanks.
@@positionnormal I love your music!
Both of these synths sound phenomenal. I sold a DSI Pro 2 and picked up a used Peak in the spring. I feel like the Peak has a defined character and the Hydrasynth is more neutral after watching. I think if you're going for the Peak sound then it's probably a bit easier to get that character, but as you've shown the Hydrasynth can come quite close and is able to do some stuff the Peak can't.
Dude you are the absolute best.. I love your personality, based on the videos, i bet you are even better in real life. I appreciate your work to the highest. I've learned so much from you. Never stop please!
Love from Sweden (:
Thanks for a very useful and informative video - I think you've really highlighted the differences well.
For the Peak/Summit, the Diverge and Drift settings are the single things that add the most "warmth". I'm not sure if the Hydra has something like that or not. If you compare these to any VCO based analog Poly like the Korg Prologue or Prophet 5, you will hear this subtle smearing and detuning of the sound because the oscillators aren't completely perfectly in tune. Additionally, I always find analog synths have a bit of extra drive to their oscillators. So, it is important to compensate that with drive on digital synths. Peak is great for that. For me those two things are a big part of what warmth is, and why, without diverge/drift and drive, digital synths still are missing something.
I think warmth as people perceive it stems from even harmonics (usually produced by analog saturation of tubes) and cold is the sparkly odd harmonics of digital saturation/distortion. Or so I heard
Fun comparison! .. I'd love to see a 'warmth' comparison done choosing either of these 2 'digital' synths compared to the Black Corp 'analog' synths that are know for their 'warmth', like the DDMk2 or Xerxes. It would be interesting to see if there is anything significantly noticeable to warrant the 3x price tag.
Great video. I love your remark about hating the "which is warmer" question. You gotta get what sounds good to you!
Hydrasynth is awesome for the price. I would have had a rough time deciding between the two. Glad I was lucky enough to buy a Peak at launch.
Lol yeah I’ve been spending weeks trying to decide and still on the fence
I own the Peak and enjoy it for what I would consider that more compressed, smooth tone. Listening to the ASM it had more edge to it that would be useful in more aggressive patches. But the reverb is on the Peak is on par with some of the more high end reverb pedals out there
Hydrasynth is about a cool $600 cheaper. What's the warmth per dollar rate here? LOL
I guess the other thing you can do on both synthesizers is just find an interim wave in the wavetable if you want your saw to be bassier or your triangle to be brighter, and then there's other waveshaping besides. There are just so many options on both, and getting where you want to go is glorious.
You mean an initialize empty patch? Yes you can do that on the peak easy.
@@HOLLASOUNDS No, I just mean using a wavetable to get an in-between wave that you like instead of some wave that you might think is "too bright" but hey, both machines have filters.
@@MichaelRohaly In video He shows the two waves and says they look very similar but I dont think they do, Peak has a cleaner looking wave. I noticed that Hydra as spike like peaks and for Me that's the short of wave shape that creates problems with clipping and clashing sounds and I would need to use additional processing to smooth that out.
@@HOLLASOUNDS The point is you can, on either synth. But I don't remember where in this video he actually shows the waves. I think you're talking about the display of what's going on with the envelopes.
My guess is by "warmth" people are referring to pleasing analog or analog-like harmonics, distortion, presence, space, and a gentle rolling off of high frequencies, and on the flip side a lack of digital harshness or flatness. Converters and processors can make a difference, even in comparing digital synths. The Hydrasynth at times (but not always) sounds a little bit flat in comparison, although it has nice bass. I would say the Peak sounds warmer much of the time, but it's close.
I’m finding, esp. in the early comparisons, that I prefer the Peak’s sound, but I’m not sure I’d have ever noticed what I “don’t like” about the Hydrasynth. It’s only in the light of one that I feel anything “bad” about the other. Which is to say, I’d LOVE to own either one!!
"Warming Cat Test" is the only valuable synth test protocol :)
I was also in doubt which one to buy.
I had my mind set on the Novation peak, but if I look closely and listen, the hydrasynth can do a lot more than the peak can. Well the reverb and chorus sound good on the peak, but for in the studio that is not so important as there are very good vst's reverbs..... on the other hand, the hydrasynth has very good filters, many choices in envelope shapes, good low end and is considerably cheaper.
The Hydra has drum pads? But what is the alot more you speak of?
@@HOLLASOUNDS way more types of synthesis algorithms and filters. Also more envelopes for complex modulation. You can go a lot deeper with sound design. Whether or not you really need to make such complex patches to make good music is a whole other discussion, but it’s nice when creating a really big lead patch that is going to carry a track without much else going on.
@@HOLLASOUNDS drum pads...😏
Awesome comparison!
I own both, love both. But must admit, as I have the keyboard version of the Hydrasynth, that I tend to use that one the most.
Poly AT FTW! You can use that with the Peak via MIDI, tho’, right?! That would be great!!
@@kierenmoore3236 Yes! Peak responds to PolyAT. 😀
First, thanks for video, very interesting test.
The Peak sounds like a Peak... It is a unique sound because the machine does not try to offer ten thousand of complex options. The designers focused on making the machine consistent with itself. In the Hydrasynth you feel that there is more power but the temptation was too great to add tons of parameters everywhere, forgetting a little about the coherence of the whole.
In fact, the Hydrasynth is very surgical on all levels: the sound is a bit less warm, higher, more digital, the adjustments take longer to make but can be very precise and you can manipulate more parameters, etc.
The Peak has been designed as a whole and this is its strength. The Hydrasynth relies on the quantity of parameters by letting the user do a lot of fine adjustments himself. The Peak by avoiding this pitfall and by proposing some limits guides in a way towards a sound that will always be that of a Peak. One can escape from it less.
But the sound of the Peak is magnificent, so why try to escape from it? :-)
Disclaimer: I am a happy owner of Peak and inevitably this analysis is very subjective!
(And to be totally frank I find that my old MS2000 Korg, entirely digital of a time when the processors were much less powerful, has more basses and more warmth than the Peak and the Hydrasynth, so even in digital world, vintage is better. And this is something very surprising that I would not have bet a cent on if I did not own an MS2000)
I have a Summit and an MS2000B … Great synths (and both sound warmer than the Hydrasynth, which I’ve played with quite a bit - but for edgier, industrial sounds, which is where it excels …).
@@kierenmoore3236 Good machines. Among some others I(ve got a Peak and a MS2000R, I love the "vintage digital" sound of the latter.
I listen to your videos in the car a lot (audio only), and I just keep seeing the cat talking in my mind.
I have a Hydra keys, and I think it's actually really good as a warm-sounding VA if you want to do classic subtractive sounds. I've struggled to make it sound good in other contexts though, something about the wavetables seems to fatigue my ears in a way that the PPG/Waldorf synths don't.
I also have a Hydra keys, and I've had the reverse experience. I've never tried using is as a standard VA, because I wanted the way it worked with wavetables. I love my Blofeld, but I don't like it as much as the Hydra.
@@Michael_Smith-Red_No.5 I don't use mine as a VA, either. I bought it to make weird sounds and to mess with wavetables. It's just that, for whatever reason I find the VA waveforms coupled with the excellent filter models sound great and the wavetable/fm/etc is very hit-or-miss.
I'm going to buy the Hydrasynth because it can incorporate into Eurorack modular. How cool or warm is that ?
@@constantineapokis445 I mean, how warm/cool is CV.
Music education is fundamental. Great job!
I thought this was a really interesting walkthrough - thanks for putting this together. Respectfully, I dont think "warmth" is a stupid question. I think every oscillator and filter implementathc has its own "character", whether implemented in hardware or as algorithms. I know in my eurorack system that each of my five go-to"filters sounds different, and I choose which one to use based on what kind of soudn i'm looking for - sometimes i'm looking for a sound i think of as edgy, hollow, open or electronic, and sometimes i'm look for a soudn I think of as warm, compressed, or saturated. I think software- based synths face the same challenge, which has to be played out in a) the choice of algorithsm, b) the implementation, and c) the choice of hardware 9where appicable. So I really appreciate your approch - to try to dial in the same "patch" on each device and compare it "character" - I think it simportant to understand what range of voicing a synth is cabable of delivering, and your walkthrough provides some very interesting ideas on hwo to make that assessemrnt.
I think this is a great Video Jeremy, I think the take away here is to get both. To be honest, im getting both I love them both. and HA the hydra is totally hot.
Thumbs up for the Novation Peak!
There is something about the Peak that makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside that I haven’t found in the Hydra here. Don’t know if it’s this mythical “warmth” but definitely some complexity that keeps me hooked every time I hear it. Hydra is IMO just more one-dimensional in comparison.
Workflow, aesthetics, maybe minor differences in sound that you like. Oscillator architecture and behavior also matters.
@@wickeddubz I only meant the sound - workflow seems more robust on the Hydrasynth but sound samples don't impress me over VSTs that I've got in Ableton or on my iPad.
Warmth or not... but i definitly think the PEAK is richer and has more "power" in almost every example. The HYDRA is very "surgical" what can be of course also put to good use.
I agree, but I will I raise your richer and more powerful and go all in with "better" in every patch...that thing kinda warms my heart....which is the organ we use to "hear" warmth if we are getting technical. Also, yes, for digital hardness, or surgical cutting...the hydrasynth sounds like it was made for the job.
Hydra seems like it would be a powerhouse for edgy Industrial … whereas Summit (Peak too?) can imitate warm Vintage Rolands amazingly well …
They both do other things, but these are their fortes imho …
What I found is that basically Hydra's factory patches do sound glassy and brittle, but there shouldn't be any surprise, - this is what its creators were aiming for and marketing, this crispy exactness of digital wavetable synthesis. Many people complained that it sounded "too digital" based on nothing other than factory patches, but I think they have no idea what they're talking about, Hydrasynth can engineer almost any kind of sound, and it being digital is no deal breaker, I've owned some digital synths which sounded way warmer and more bassy and voluminous than analog synths. Many times it's all in th eye of Beholder though.
EXCELLENT stuff. I have both, I like them both, probably as much, and apparently, like you. "Refined & Defined" vs "Wider & Wilder"? Sometimes I think the Hydra has a slightly "metallic" edge to enhance or dial out depending on what I want, and you perhaps hinted at this too. But even if you hated making it, this is a great demo of how often sounds are about the maker, as much or even more, than the tool.
Final section ... 34 mins ... JUST BRILLIANT! A delightfully appropriate answer/response to the question posed ... B)
I got a peak used from my local store in perfect condition for 1400cad which was a really good price even for the time. The peak is a really attractive looking and great sounding synth!
I gotta say as a previous owner of the peak, it had incredible sounds and was constantly useful as an instrument but I ALWAYS had to do some kind of EQing after the fact due to the most annoying feature in the universe, it didn't have a way to cut any lows if you used the filter in low pass mode. Like a non resonant high pass or low cut eq or anything. It was a deal killer because if you're onstage playing with anyone else or any backing tracks, it just took too much bass space. It sounds so impressive by itself but there is a reason this is a common feature in most synths. Even the Juno 106 had a non resonant high pass. That was why i eventually sold it. Its great in the studio but boom boom on the stage. /rant
interesting!!
This is why they have EQs on FOH mixer boards...
@@EvilDragon666 yep works right up until you want to play a bass patch.
Loved the heat gun bit - and the kitty test 😅
Thank you, thank you, thank you... I hope this will put the stupid question to rest!
Im not sure but I would bet the novation is driven hard at the D/A-Converters.
That would explain the "clipped" or saturated, compressed and warm sound.
In my opinion the Hydra sounds more free and clean but with less analogue randomness and grit.
By the way: They complement each other pretty good! :o
That is some seriously specific and in depth synth nerdery and I love it. It's surprising how much you can actually hear that slight exponential to the Peak envelope, and how it almost has a tail too. If you didn't have them side by side and so specifically dialed in like this I don't know that I'd ever catch things like that, but that just makes all the work on this close comparison even more useful.
Unfortunately what I take from it is I want to own both. But...
Dig the video, when adding in Analog Feel and Warm Mode, did you also enable Random Phase in the Voice menu? That would prevent some of the unison-phasing-esque sounds when doing chords for the 'Soft Triangles" part of the video.
Great video! I feel like the hydrasynth has the training wheels removed compared to Peak. You can go to some really crazy places on the hydrasynth. Love mine!
One thing I've noticed over the years of using so many synths is that I can only take so much of the warmer sounds, especially in headphones. My ears resonate and ache after a while. So I can only listen to synth music for a certain amount of time. (But I've been playing since the 1980s). Funny thing is, my acoustic guitar and piano never fatigue my ears. Those lower tones really hurt sometimes. LOL!
22:20 Warm mode boosts the bass. Quick way to get extra oomph on bass patches without eating an effect for EQ
Wavetables can do this too. An interim wave between saw and trisaw (or anything less fizzy than the saw) adds a lot of punch.
This video is great and I am glad you made it.
Also I am glad, you.
Stupid question but understandable. Thanks for doing this.
cat aproves of hydra...
i press buy, NOW!
@21:12 "Oooh, won't you take me home tonight? Oooh, down beside your red firelight."