My new Moog One sound bank

Polyphonic Analog Synthesizer
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smv
Posts: 47
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My new Moog One sound bank

Post by smv » Sat Oct 12, 2024 3:12 am

Hello guys,
i hope you are doing good.
Here is my new sound bank for the Moog One.
Have a listen and please, leave a feedback.
Thanks 🙂

https://youtu.be/mhITCESUaXA?si=lxRWUjMcO0qrJOgC

Cat Butler
Posts: 10
Joined: Fri Nov 01, 2024 4:31 pm

Re: My new Moog One sound bank

Post by Cat Butler » Sun Nov 10, 2024 2:21 pm

I purchased your new bank and the quality and usability of the sounds in it convinced me to buy the rest of your banks as well- good work!

A couple of general comments for everyone developing patches for the Moog One:

* The Moog One is really crying out for someone to offer a set of traditional "meat and potatoes" sounds (e.g. Hammond organs, brass, strings, electric piano, etc for general studio and composition use. After spending $6-10K USD, the pressure is on for many owners to get their One generating money from clients ASAP. Everyone that's seen my (recently purchased) One immediately goes to play it...and everyone so far has quickly given up on it as the factory patches are all over the place sonically and stylistically. Having a unit loaded with a bank of sounds clients would use in typical pop / country / "radio friendly alternative" style compositions would be a huge advantage for many One owners.

* Please stop with the obtuse and cute patch names. I get that it's hard to come up with patch names especially when doing them in large volumes...but on a synth that can layer three seperate sounds, and can store an almost infinite number of patches, having a bunch of names like "Encouraging Tinkle Control" quickly goes from fun to frustrating as one tries to remember out of hundreds of patches what that might sound like.

* Please put better information in your read me files. I've purchased multiple patch sets for my Moog One and the read me files tend to be some combination of a "box graphic" (no need to market to a customer when they've already bought your product!!??), licensing information, and a simple list of the patch names (which I can already see from the patches and sort in more ways using my computer's "Finder"). Providing additional information like what the patch sounds like, how the controls like the mod wheel and XY pad are mapped, if the arp or sequencer is engaged or has patterns assigned for the patch, what effects are used and if there's additional settings to try that work with the same patch), etc., would be extremely valuable.

* Please include the same individual presets from your sets grouped into the One's .m1F "performance set" format so that purchasers can simply "one click" import your patches mapped to the patch buttons on the front of the One.

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smv
Posts: 47
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Re: My new Moog One sound bank

Post by smv » Wed Nov 20, 2024 8:25 am

First I have to thank you to purchase my sound banks and I am glad you appreciated my work.
About your requests, I understand you, but I have to say something.
About bread and butter sounds ( I hope I understood correctly what you are talking about), it is difficult to understand what people want. Sometimes I saw comments on bread and butter sounds on complex synths, blaming that on that synth they don't want to hear bread and butter sounds on such a complex machine. But I will take in consideration your request/suggestion for a future sound bank on The Moog One.
About the documentation, I saw on other sound banks that I designed, the 90% of customers, are not even opening the document, and often they ask me how to install sounds on a given synth. So I decided to reduce the work for something that people don't even look at. About the description on how to use them, maybe you are right, but anyway I think that is pretty simple to understand how a patch is working.
But thank you for your feedback and your suggestions. :)

nanalyly
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Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2023 3:09 am

Re: My new Moog One sound bank

Post by nanalyly » Tue Mar 25, 2025 2:49 am

Maybe experiment with splitting the timbres across the keyboard or layering them with different arpeggiator patterns for some evolving textures. Assigning the X/Y pad or mod wheel to tweak filter cutoff or oscillator detune could add some hands-on expressiveness too. Ragdoll Hit

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