

It works in standalone, VST 2.4 (32-bit/64-bit), VST 3 (32-bit/64-bit), AAX (32-bit with PT 10.3.8, 64-bit with PT 11), Audio Unit (32-bit/64-bit), and NKS.Īfter you’ve installed Synclavier V, you have to register it with a serial number and unlock code. To install on a Mac, you’ll need OS X 10.8 (or higher), four gigabytes of RAM, 2 GHz CPU, and an OpenGL 2.0 compatible GPU. To install Synclavier V on a PC, you’ll need Windows 7 (or higher), four gigabytes of RAM, 2 GHz CPU, and an OpenGL 2.0 compatible GPU. Arturia worked out a deal where they were able to use the original source code of the Synclavier audio engine, and mixing this with a new user interface, as well as some new and improved features, the Synclavier V was born. The one I am focusing on for this review is a new addition to the collection. In this latest incarnation, they’ve added some new products to the collection and updated the interfaces of many of their older ones. During the 1980s, it had some competition in the form of another product called Fairlight CMI.Īrturia has just released their new collection of software instruments called the V Collection 5. It used FM, additive synthesis, and sampling technology with sample rates of up to 100 kHz. Some of these musicians included Chick Corea, Michael Jackson, Frank Zappa, and Stevie Wonder. It was an expensive system for the average musician, way out of reach for most, but there were some well-known artists that had worked with it. The original Synclavier was a digital sampling/synthesizer workstation which was first released by New England Digital Corporation in the late 1970s. We check out its feature-laden interface and see how well it holds up. Arturia recreates yet another classic, and this one takes after an expensive, legendary instrument from the early 1980s.
