I'm mostly a lurker here, but I've been a pulsar2-user for several years.
Lately I've been looking for a good hammond-clone keyboard which sounds credible. Unfortunately, that seems to be difficult. I've tried out a few keyboards, for instance Roland VK-760 (supposed to have the same hammond-engine as VK-8). I was immediatly disappointed with the fake-sounding percussion and creamy, soft distortion effect. My goal is to get something close to Keith Emerson's early sound, and everybody tells me I need a real modified hammond etc.. Then I turn on the B2003 together with Celmo's guitar amp modeller, and that great hammond sound is right there (more or less). Slightly thin/sharp when overdriven, but still organic and rich in timbre. (A overdriven hammond should definately NOT sound creamy and soft! And don't get me started on B4...not impressed.) Let's face it, a hardware synth version (not module. but with keys) of any of Creamware's recent emulations would be superior to everything else out there on the market.
That got me thinking, why doesn't Creamware start to make hardware synths using their top-notch emulations? I'm not taking about another Noah. The problem with Creamware's products, is that they are so complex that
most people don't "get" them, and thus the market potential is rather limitied.
By starting to release more simple keyboard versions of their digital emulation, they could actually compete with Korg and Roland in the vintage-emulations market. To get their due recognition, they need goodlooking
and playable keyboard-instruments, not difficult-to-grasp studio sound-modules.
What about a few examples to illustrate what I mean:
1: A hardware version of B2003 with 5-octave keyboard, onboard drawbars and reverb, with inbuilt tube preamp/overdrive. This keyboard would completely crush every other hammond clone on the market.
2: A nice looking 4-octave Classic-synthesizer with lots of knobs etc.. (think Alesis - Ion) using creamware's minimoog, odessy and pro one emulations and having a polyphony at 6-8 voices. Also with a tube-
preamp/overdrive.
..or better yet, something close to Electro, but using digital realtime emulations of all those classic
electromagnetical keyboards (hammond, rhodes, wurlitzer, clavinet).
If Creamware went in this direction, they could become a major player in the keyboard-market, instead of being an obscure software-company making products for a fairly small customer-base (I've read about very limited sales of their excellent emulations of the pro one and prodessy. Something is wrong with this picture...)
If Creamware would start to make this kind of products, instead of complex and obscure sound-modules like Noah (sorry..overstating to make a point), they could in the long term increase their revenue a tenfold. They
do make the best synth/electromagnetical-keyboard emulations on the market, and if these were released as solid and nice-looking keyboards with inbuilt tubes...wow.. (I cannot express the impact of running a keyboard/synth through a tube preamp enough, the sound improvement is huge. I have a minimoog voyager, and I always run it through a tubepreamp.)
Some may think this is pretty geeky thing to write down, but I'm just tired of the big companies like Korg and Roland releasing inferior products time and time again, when Creamware makes stuff that sound way better. We need a new "major" player in the keyboard market to shake up the competition a bit!

It's funny, I've never gotten chills down my spine and gone "wow!" when tweaking/trying out a Roland keyboard, but I get that feeling all the time when playing around with my pulsar2 emulations. The problem is that using a laptop on stage with very complex software isn't a good solution for me, and for many others I would assume. I really think Creamware is missing out here. Something to consider..?
IMHO of course...
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: music251 on 2004-04-27 10:41 ]</font>