There’s only one major issue with Omnisphere 2, and it’s an obvious one: the cost.
It’s a hugely powerful setup, and again that’s before we’ve even touched upon the less glamorous but equally important options such as the wide range of effects, improved arpeggiator and updated Orb modulation section.
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Zoom into the filter section, for instance, and you get full control of both filters for each layer, with 32 modes available for each. Omnisphere wisely avoids trying to cram everything into a single window user interface, instead choosing to include a handful of key parameters on the main page, with the deeper options hidden behind ‘zoom’ buttons. The easiest way to get to grips with the synthesis options in Omnisphere is to start with a preset and then navigate your way around the interface to discover the features. Persing’s claim rings true here, with the granular synth option in particular qualifying as a hugely powerful synthesis approach in its own right.
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Omnisphere now also allows you to import audio files as custom soundsources, hugely expanding its potential for creating sample-based instruments, but also tying into synthesis options such as the improved FM and ring mod options, Harmonia and the granular synthesis sections, creating a uniquely powerful synth. It’s a measure of Omnisphere 2’s power, depth and flexibility that we can only really scratch the surface of the synthesis options in a review. Perhaps the biggest and most impressive updates come in the oscillator section. For each layer, the oscillators can be set to Sample or Synth mode, with the former allowing you to choose from the thousands of built-in samples (‘soundsources’) and the latter offering hundreds of modelled synth waveforms (everything from analogue classics like the Minimoog and Juno-106 through to digital wavetables and analogue ‘timbres’). Each of the two layers features two filters, six envelope generators (one for amplitude, one for filter cutoff and four per part for modulation), six LFOs per part and an extensive modulation matrix. Far from it. It’s worth taking a step back and considering how Omnisphere 2’s synth engine works in order to understand what it can do. At its heart, Omnisphere is essentially a highly specialised dual-layer synth with sample- or DSP-based oscillators feeding into what can be loosely interpreted as a subtractive synth architecture. Thanks to the extensive preset options, you could almost be forgiven for thinking Omnisphere was all about presets, but you’d be missing out on the bigger picture. It’s true to say that you could easily spend a good few months doing nothing but auditioning factory patches, but it’s not just a plug-and-play preset machine. The same is true for other categories, with a huge, varied selection of strings, synths, percussive sounds and brass among others. Altogether there are more than 4,500 new patches, bringing the grand total to over 12,000 (the updated areas include a huge new ‘Spotlight – EDM’ library).Īt its heart, Omnisphere is a dual-layer synth with sample- or DSP-based oscillators feeding into what can be loosely interpreted as a specialised subtractive synth architecture A quick look through the presets explains why it’s such a hefty install: the sheer range of sample-based instruments on offer is almost overwhelming. There are, for instance, 26 different categories (Types, in Spectrasonics-speak) of bell sounds, from Bells Analog to Bells Digital (and a separate Digital Bells category), via more obscure options like Bells Gothic and tempo-synced BPM Bells.
The overwhelming majority of that disk space is of course required for sample content.
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Omnisphere is supplied on a mere eight DVDs, requiring 64GB of free hard disk space for an installation process that can take up to five hours. To say that this is a heavyweight synth is an understatement.
While there’s still a huge amount of content that will lend itself to cinematic use – dramatic strings, ominous atmospheres and the like – Spectrasonics have broadened the remit substantially for version 2, not only in terms of the styles of sound on offer, but also the synthesis options themselves.
Omnisphere is a hybrid synth which is probably best known as a go-to option for soundtrack composers. Spectrasonics claim it'll take a lifetime to explore the possibilities of Omnisphere.