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This compact, laptop-friendly Virus has fewer control features than its siblings, but the same awe-inspiring sound
The MusicRadar Team, Wed 19 Mar 2008, 11:02 am UTC
The Virus TI enjoyed huge success, but the original members of the family – the Desktop, Keyboard and Polar models – are pricey. So, we now have this more affordable addition to the clan, the TI Snow.
Casting an eye over the Snow, the first thing you notice is that the design tradition of previous Viruses is gone – this is a much more compact unit. The ‘wedge’ shape has morphed into a trapezium, and the Snow is only two-thirds (or so) the size of its bigger brothers.
In terms of styling, the front edge is a rather classy wooden panel with the Access Logo proudly stamped in the middle. The colour scheme is lifted from the Polar, so there’s a cream panel and brown legending, complete with bright white LEDs.
Overview
The most significant implication of the reduction in size is the number of front-panel knobs, which is dramatically smaller than on the full Desktop TI. Just six rotating dials adorn the bottom row of the panel, one of which is master volume.
Above these, function and value buttons enable access to the Snow’s inner workings, while a generous, bright LCD screen keeps you in touch with parameters, names and values.
The back panel is pared down too, with stereo jack inputs and outputs, MIDI In/ Out and the all-important USB port.
Fortunately, very few compromises have been made with the inner workings of the instrument. The Snow retains almost all the full TI sound engine and is sonically comparable to its siblings.
The main restriction is that the Snow is only four-part multi-timbral, but this isn’t too much of a drawback, as most Virus users are used to running out of polyphony long before they run out of parts!
The Snow’s polyphony is more restricted than that of its siblings, with 50 voices estimated as a maximum. With this in mind, there’s a section in the manual that explains how the Virus uses its voice allocation and how it’s possible to analyse the selected sound to see whether polyphony is running as economically as possible.
One small ‘physical’ frustration is that the left-hand (mono) output doubles as the headphone port. This seems a bit stingy – what if you need to use both at once?
The sounds
The Snow offers lots of sounds – eight banks of 64 in total. These are split, half and half, into RAM and ROM banks, though the lines have blurred here with the release of the latest OS, as both types can now have their memories overwritten.
Selecting sounds directly from the front panel is painless enough – you simply click the Bank button, select the bank you want, and then choose one of the 64 sounds via the two rows of eight buttons.
Alternatively, if you’re in full TI mode, with the Snow slaved to your computer via the USB port, choosing sounds is even easier, as a dedicated Browser exists for each of the four parts, enabling you to wade through the list, or narrow your search field to dedicated groups of sounds. Double-clicking launches your selection and then provides access to the software implementation of your chosen sound
If you’re working multitimbrally, you can then simply move down to the second instrument and start choosing all over again. Alternatively, if you’re sound selecting on the Snow’s front panel, a dedicated Part button ensures you won’t get lost.
Sonically, there’s something for everyone here. The Snow is capable of subtle and gentle sounds, but don’t make it mad, for it has a penchant for sheer, unadulterated brutality too!
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Not impressed .
I think it rocks, a great palette of sounds and pretty solid USB performance too
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Compact size but enormous sound. Very little compromise on features. TI software integration is wonderful.
Not as much hands-on control as its big brothers. Still fairly pricey.
It’s the Virus you’ve always dreamed about: sleek, sexy and offering that famous sound for a reduced price.
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.
Virus TI Snow
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