The dream synthesizer did not seem to exist: a wavetable synthesizer with a truly high-quality sound, visual and creative workflow-oriented interface to make creating and altering sounds fun instead of tedious, and the ability to “go deep” when desired - to create / import / edit / morph wavetables, and manipulate these on playback in real-time.
Based on our record, Serum should be more popular than Magenta Studio. It has been mentiond 30 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Check out Magenta on Tensorflow https://magenta.tensorflow.org. It can generate, interpolate or continue midi files, which can be inserted into Ableton. Source: 11 months ago
Yes, most models these days, except the exceptionally large ones, are possible to train on a laptop. Of course it helps if your laptop has Nvidia CUDA GPU, but even if it doesn't you can rent an AWS 4 core/16GB GPU instance for 0.5 cents an hour. 24 hours of training time would be quite a lot for most models, unless you're trying to train a FB any to any language type model, but typically the big huge models are... Source: over 1 year ago
Sounds like you're referring to this https://openai.com/blog/jukebox/ or this https://magenta.tensorflow.org/. Source: over 1 year ago
Google Magenta has also put out interesting neural net experiments with music like a VST which can blend sounds together to become an instrument, and a Google Colab notebook which attempts to make a MIDI from an audio file. Source: over 1 year ago
Magenta is an open-source Python package built on top of TensorFlow to manipulate image and music data to train a machine learning model with the generative model as the output. To learn more about Magenta here you go. - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
What matters though is choosing a good synthesizer. I personally use Serum (~190$) for most things, since it's easy to use and has a big community with a lot of free and paid presets. Source: 9 months ago
One of the problems I am currently facing is having a large lookup table. I want to have a large set of predefined sound waves that can be manipulated like programs such as Serum. Is this still possible with an MC instead of an MCU? (Calculating the waves in real-time instead of using a lookup table might be too computationally intensive for most budget options). Source: 11 months ago
You'll have to find some other alternative for your Text-to-speech needs. Serum has a basic speech synth, Vital uses Amazon's TTS solution, and you'll find plenty more with a quick google search. Source: about 1 year ago
You can also download Vital for wavetable emulation. https://www.discodsp.com/obxd/ You can also buy Serum https://xferrecords.com/products/serum for I think $190 or get it off Splilce for $10 a month until you pay it off. Source: about 1 year ago
Then all the synths are serum, in previous projects I have used magical 8 bit and tb_peach. Source: about 1 year ago
Sampulator - Make (and record) beats on your keyboard
Vital - Vital is a spectral warping wavetable synthesizer with drag'n'drop modulation workflow and animated preview of the synth's inner workings where needed. Comes with many modulation sources (including audio-rate), MPE support and FX chain.
Splice Beat Maker - Make and share beats in your browser
Omnisphere - Piano, pad and synth VST for DAW's.
Mubert - Craft high-quality content using next-gen royalty-free music powered by AI.
Surge XT - Open-source subtractive-hybrid synthesizer formerly sold commercially as Vember Audio Surge.