Most Realistic Free Analog Vst Synth

Surge is an opensource Synth VST that sounds fantastic and is probably the best synthesizer plugin currently available. It is a hybrid subtractive synthesizer with a dual synthesis engine. Each patch contain two ‘scenes’ which are separate instances of the entire synthesis engine that can be used for layering or split patches. With its warm pads, fat bass sounds, and analog leads, PG-8X is the free synth VST instrument of choice for synthwave, vaporwave, and other 80s-inspired electronic music genres. For more analog synthesis nostalgia, take a look at the OB-Xd virtual synthesizer VST plugin by discoDSP.

Cherry Audio Surrealistic MG-1 Plus is a free VST/AU/AAX plugin emulation of the Realistic Concertmate MG-1 analog Synthesizer from 1981.

Vst

In 2020 we can be lucky that synthesizers are affordable and more accessible than ever. In the past, there were also inexpensive instruments, just not in the same abundance as today. One of the best known in the field of cheap analog synths was the Realistic Concertmate MG-1. A full analog synth that Moog developed for Realistic (Radio Shack). A synth for the home with relatively basic features and with a solid, classic Moog sound.

Now you can get this entry-level Moog of the past as an emulation for your PC and Mac. And best of all: it’s free for a limited time.

Cherry Audio Surrealistic MG-1 Plus

Cherry Audio is dangerous for Arturia when it comes to emulations. If they continue at the pace, the young American company will have overtaken the V Collection by next year. The biggest difference, however: Cherry Audio has only emulated so far analog synths: DCO-106 the Juno-106, CA2600 the ARP-2600, and now the Realistic Concertmate MG-1 that was sold in Radio Shack stores in the ’80s.

The emulation has all the functions of the original. Two oscillators (sawtooth, square/pulse) + noise source, one 24dB filter, a contour (envelope) section, mixer, and ASR envelope. Like the original, you can play in mono perfect for fat analog basses/leads but also in polyphonic. The latter uses a unique divide-down square wave generator that is routed to the VCF and the VCA. Further, it has a bell-tone ring modulation, glide, auto-repeat note triggering, oscillator sync, and a number of other improvements. It ships with over 130 ready-to-use presets.

The demo shows the original in action. Not extraordinary, but pretty basic analog sound. However, one with its own character and charm.

Most Realistic Free Analog Vst Synthesizer

Features

  • Ultra-accurate analog modeling
  • Dual oscillator monophonic plus polyphonic oscillator bank
  • Super fat 24db “ladder” filter
  • Over 130 presets
  • “Bell tone” ring modulation
  • Tempo syncable LFO
  • Expanded octave ranges
  • Multiple note priority modes including legato and retrigger
  • All controls MIDI-assignable
  • Full DAW automation of all controls

In this video, Mitchel from Cherry Audio guides you through their plugin emulation.

All in all, this is another no-brainer deal for Black Friday. After Vital yesterday, this is another must-have.

Surrealistic MG-1 Plus Synthesizer is available now as a free download for a limited time (regular $29). It runs in AU, VST, VST3, AAX, and standalone formats. During Black Friday, Cherry Audio also offers the Synth Stack bundle that features all the recent plugins including Voltage Modular 2, CA2600, DCO-106, and Surrealistic MG-1 Plus for just 78,99€

More information here: Cherry Audio

A guide to ten of our favourite analogue-sounding soft synths, from light on the wallet to heavy on the CPU...

By most accounts, the first plugin synthesizer was Steinberg’s Neon, a single-oscillator instrument that came bundled with Cubase 3.7 in 1999. It’s telling that when the boffins at Steinberg decided to create a synth from scratch for their DAW, they went not with wavetable or FM or additive but analogue-modeling. The desire to recreate analogue synthesis in all its woolly, hairy, imperfect glory has remained a constant, with some manufacturers more successful than others.

Free Trap Synth Vst

With recent improvements in computer processing power have come more realistic soft synths, and it’s getting to the point where it’s become harder to tell the difference in the mix. Couple this with the astronomical price of vintage gear, not to mention things like upkeep, or even studio space, and it’s clear to see the ever growing appeal of analogue-style plugins.

In this list, we’ve chosen ten of the best-sounding analogue-style soft synths. While things like flexibility, complexity, and ease of use are all important, we’ve chosen to home in on the sound. Does it sound suitably “analogue”? Would you have trouble identifying whether it was software or hardware with your eyes closed? Does it have that coveted warmth that hardware analogues do? That’s what we’re looking (indeed, listening) for.

Best Free Synth Vst

As always, this list is presented in order of ascending price, and we start with a freeware version of a Korg classic.