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A brand new synth from a company that's been around the block a few times. Can it hang with the kids?
Computer Music, Fri 21 Oct 2011, 12:35 pm BST
Not the best-known developer in the business, discoDSP has been around for some time. It hasn't released a totally new instrument in over seven years, though.
Corona - a VST/AU subtractive synth with a twist - finally breaks the silence.
Each of Corona's three oscillators can generate a VA-style waveform (saw, parabola, saw, triangle, sine, square, noise) or one chosen from a highly impressive list sourced from some of the finest synths ever made, including Moogs, Rolands and countless others. There's a vibrato section and unison option too.
"The synth's stand-out feature is the multitude of ways in which the three oscillators can be combined to create novel tones."
The synth's stand-out feature is the multitude of ways in which the three oscillators can be combined to create novel tones. Options include addition (ie, mixing), subtraction, multiplication (ring modulation), logical operators such as AND and XOR, and more synth-esque ones like Sync, PM (phase modulation) and Broken PM. There are also modes for tweaking oscillator phase or tuning; analogue drift of internal parameters; and "leakage" of oscillators 1 and 2.
The results vary from subtle and irresistible to dramatic and borderline unusable, offering a huge variety of timbres, including standard basses, leads, some very current glitchy flavours and distinctly additive-sounding patches.
Onto the filters, and here we have seven types, including all the usual band-, low- and high-pass types, plus a 'band-smash' lo-fi filter. There's a filter LFO and envelope, too.
It's pretty standard stuff, and very easy to use. There's also a handy option to apply the filter section before the volume envelope - most useful considering the filter has a Drive knob for saturation effects.
At the bottom of the interface lurks the modulation section (matrix, LFO, envelope) and effects, which are both similarly easy to follow.
Regular discoDSP users expect good presets; for example, Discovery replicated the entire Nord Lead preset library.
Corona does have some good presets: we found about 15 or so that we thought stood out, but out of four banks of 128, that isn't much. While there are good ones in every bank, there are also a lot of fillers - as if too many were made with the Randomizer function.
The banks also feel a little rushed, suffering from inconsistent naming conventions and, in some cases, empty spaces where a patch ought to be. Considering the interesting textures made possible by the oscillator combination system, this seems like a real waste.
Another issue - and one that's not particular to this synth - is the lack of a global effects off. The effects are OK, but there's too much delay on many presets. This means you can't audition the patch properly, particularly in a mix context.








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User-friendly with cool oscillator combinations, wide pitchbend range, mouse wheel knob support and a simple modulation matrix.
No global FX off, not enough inspirational presets.
If you're a total beginner, a habitual synth-fiddler or after digital grit to complement your existing synths, try Corona out.
All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.








Corona