Dave Smith Instruments
FM VERDICT
9.0
Has the essential Oberheim
character/signature, crossed
with DSI’s sonic DNA – it
sounds tight/modern with a
nod to vintage Oberheims.
I/Os Round the back are a headphone
output, left and right audio outputs,
USB for OS updates and MIDI, MIDI
In, Out and Thru, plus footswitch
inputs for volume, fi lter, sustain and
sequencer/arp start/stop.
AFTERTOUCH/VELOCITY Aftertouch
can be routed to VCO1 and 2, LFO
amount, Loudness, Filter Frequency
and Filter Mode. Velocity can be
switched in to affect the amp and
fi lter simultaneously/independently.
UNISON/CHORD/PORTAMENTO The
OB-6 sounds great when set to unison
and you can set the number of voices
used for smaller or bigger sounds.
Unison also accesses chord mode and
the polyphonic portamento rocks!
PAN SPREAD A great feature, this
spreads out the voices across the
stereo fi eld alternately for dramatic
stereo effects, or to add subtle
movement. Really brings brass, pads
and unison sounds to life!
natural than the P6 as DSI have
loosened things up a little. If tuning
does go out then there’s an autotune
routine which is best performed at
several different room temperatures
initially, so that the OB-6 can best
learn/compensate its tuning tables
for all sorts of playing situations.
Killer dirty bass
So once you have two oscillators
detuned what can you do with
them?! Firstly, you can sync them
together (patch 007 is a great
example of a beautiful sync sound,
with the LFO slowly controlling
VCO2’s pitch). Next, VCO2 can be
decoupled from the keyboard voltage
for drones and can be used in low
frequency mode too, as a pseudo
second LFO. Then you can move to
the mixer section, push levels for
more saturation/clipping, add in
some white noise (digital) then add
the square wave sub-oscillator (more
ballsy than the Prophet-6’s triangle
sub oscillator). The OB-6 is certainly
a killer dirty bass machine, though
the P6 is equally so, just with a
creamier/thicker/slightly more
well-behaved character!
Next up is the 12dB-per-octave,
2-pole state-variable SEM based
fi lter and this is the key to the
distinctive Oberheim tone. It has a
precise yet fi zzy/gooey character and
by design lets more high frequencies
through compared to the P6’s 24dB
low-pass. The fi lter works well for
bright aggressive/driven tones,
drums, roughed-up leads, warm yet
harmonically present pads, rubbery
synth brass and growling unison
basses, but works beautifully for
softer sounds too, adding character
and welcome ‘break up’ to the highs
– add some delay or reverb and voila!
As the fi lter state is continuously
variable and modulatable from LPF
through Notch to HPF (there’s a
separate BPF too, modulatable via
X-Mod), this allows a whole host of
other-worldly textures to be achieved.
It’s a very bold-sounding synth,
although as the OB-6’s character is
so distinctive, it’s less ‘chameleon-
like’ than the P6. Notably, the fi lter/
resonance doesn’t self-oscillate and
instead highlights a chosen area of
your sound – as you add more
resonance it thickens and drives the
sound in a pleasing, almost vocal
way that picks out the harmonics
beautifully. It’s a completely different
experience to the P6 – think more
wiry, gnarly, fi brous, in your face,
textured and buzzier.
There’s also a fair complement of
modulation. The audio-rate-capable,
5-mode LFO syncs to MIDI and can
modulate VCO1, VCO2, the pulse
width of one or both oscs, the amp,
fi lter frequency and the fi lter mode,
so it’s pretty powerful. Then there’s
the polyphonic modulation section of
the P6, on the OB-6 called X-Mod.
Unlike the LFO which applies to all
voices globally, X-Mod allows
modulation per-voice for more
complex/detailed sounds and here
you can use the fi lter envelope or
VCO2 to polyphonically modulate
VCO1, VCO1’s shape/PW, fi lter freq,
fi lter mode and to vary from LPF/
Notch/HPF (normal) through to BPF
mode – a hugely versatile section.
Subtle or more wayward modulated
textures can easily be achieved
using this section and happy sonic
accidents are its forte! Finally, the
fi lter and amp envelopes (both have
bi-polar amount controls) are snappy
and very detailed, enabling extremely
punchy basses and cutting sounds to
be made with ease.
To sum up, the P6 and OB-6,
though built in (literally!) the same
mould, are very different yet
complementary-sounding beasts!
One is inspired by the Prophet-5, the
other by the OB-Xa/OB-8. The
bottom line is they both sound top
dollar but ultimately it comes down
to whether you prefer creamy, thicker
and hi-fi (P6) vs aggressive, raspy
I/Os
Round the back are a headphone
AFTERTOUCH/VELOCITY
Aftertouch
UNISON/CHORD/PORTAMENTO
The
PAN SPREAD
A great feature, this
and industrial! (OB-6), though there
is some crossover too! If you still
don’t know which to choose, there’s
only one answer – get both!
Dave Smith Instruments OB-6 | Reviews
89
FMU307.rev_dsi.indd 89 15/06/2016 18:12