Arturia V Collection & Keylab 🧻🧻🧻🧻

This is the old page for versions up to 8.

I once compared this software collection to the Smurfs. Let me update that slightly… It’s still the Smurfs, but with a hell of a lot of Gym hours.

HISTORY

Arturia’s V Collection has both the pride and misfortune to be one of the first to emulate known hardware. 200X era computers were not up to the task, and the required compromises pleased no one. My first virtual Jupiter 8 choked on a few notes, with no great advantage over no-name VSTs. The hardware Origin was needed to handle the polyphony.

Things have improved. It’s not that the collection has completely nailed authentic sounds but is able to work in a mix as the hardware would – not as an emulation but a substitute.

VERSION 5 introduced ‘circuit modelling’ with few details. Likely that they had something ‘near enough’ in the past but reached the luxury of the real thing. If you compare to Roland’s ACB you’ll see it can’t be nearly as hard on the CPU yet I don’t hear a profound difference. The Jup8 can produce many more voices than any of the Roland synthesisers, so Arturia’s TAE will have a different use to Roland’s.

The interfaces scale in version 5. The improvement is more significant than you might expect: the Modular V is for the first time usable – I’m not exaggerating – I’ve only now made sounds, and enjoyed using it.

The big addition for 5 was supposed to be the Synclavier. Frankly there’s a bunch of VSTs that do that sound (for example Morphine) and have less hopping between virtual wood grain and virtual green screen. Not dismissing it, but the highlight for me has been the Piano and the Farfisa. The modelled piano proves that NI’s endless array of sampled pianos are fool’s gold – lots of names no real distinction. I’ve also never seen organs as an instrument for my kind of music. The Farfisa takes the best features of the real thing – envelopes for example – and adds in more synthetic controls, including advanced additive synthesis. It’s very simple, it sounds great in a mix.

In VERSION 6 the CMI and DX7 were both ‘nice to have’ but really illustrate the actual value of the V collection in their inauthenticity. Both have added features way beyond the original device – the CMI has some wonderful sample modulation and DX7 has multiple waveforms, filters, pitch envelopes and more. The more Arturia bends and breaks the emulation the better. To be frank an 8bit CMI in 2019 is bullshit. But a 16bit sampler that modulates the loop point – that’s cool.

There’s also a Buchla Easel. Yawn. Do people really pay bank for this thing? It’s an overrated fart box. My Electro-Harmonix Mini Synthesiser was more fun (now available on iPad)

VERSION 7 adds the Casio CZ 1, which I thought everyone owned but sold once they could afford something nicer. I didn’t know it was anything special (I actually smashed mine to pieces on stage) but that must be a generation gap.

More cool’n’groovy is the EMS/AKS Synthi which in hardware costs at least $10,000 and leaves you wondering why you paid that much. (It’s like a V10 Jaguar car which is really a V8 because at least two of the cylinders are broken at any moment – true story.) By the time you’ve got a usable noise out of real Synthi the rest of the band have gone to dinner. This emulation is better than a real one if you’re trying to make music. Here also is a Mellotron, which like the CMI is better for the changes they made and features added than any authentic limitations.

VERSION 8 has arrived and they did not listen to my advice! They need to include things that failed as much as the successes. We need a FIZMO. How about a Neuron? Give me things I can say – thank god I never paid for that. Instead we have a newer version of the Jupiter 8. Jesus people, how many Jupiter 8 emulations does this poor world need? This one falls out of tune. It’s the Honky Tonk version. As does the OB-Xa which I guess was used by somebody on some record that I didn’t own and so my nostalgia factor is low.

I have no idea why the Emulator 2 is here. It’s a stodgy bodgy sampler. If you want a bodgy sampler but with useful additions get TAL Sampler.

The Vocoder is actually pretty interesting. Yes it’s a goddamn vocoder, but they are using it as a synthesiser, where that buzzy drone sound has some wider application.

The highlight – I am really surprised by the Juno 6. They’ve expanded it with extra envelope, LFO and voices such that it becomes a useful, contemporary but very controllable instrument.

VERDICT

The Arturia V Collection is for people who are not going to look too closely at each individual instrument, and would rather have an orchestra of things for a reasonable (given the quantity, yes reasonable) price. It is more for composers than designers. It may never satisfy a pedant, but it very often fulfils one’s musical needs. Pull out a DX7 and get working, you will have the result you need.

In every case the emulation is reasonable, but the expansion and augmentation – the breaking of the mirror – is the factor that lifts the collection into moments of greatness. Be weird Arturia! Break things!

2 comments

  1. And now it’s 9. Not much of an upgrade but some refined coding. Somebody at Synthtopia or maybe Youtube was also wondering why no Fizmo. Neuron is also possible given the software is out in the wild. Would Fry be yelling Take my money!?

  2. I can’t justify the entire collection. I have a lot of other things that cover the same bases. Both in software and hardware. But the CMI I ended up getting. I like that it’s a sampler that doesnt pretend to have a MOOOGUE PHILTRE on the output or any other kind of jazz.
    I had the trial for a week before I figured out how to do the modulation magic. That had me buying it.
    LFO>LFO2 speed>sample loop points. It’s how I do almost all the samples now. Previous sample programs like Alchemy can maybe do the same stuff, but I have to peel away all the subtractive synth layers first.

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