

It certainly has the same essence, but just doesn't capture the size and mojo of the original. My point isn't to knock Tal (I am a fan and use their products), just chiming in with real world knowledge that the synth has a some extra "mojo" (lol) that the VST doesn't.Cheers for the info! I think I might give the TAL Baseline a go! To be honest I was actually blown away by the Roland emulation until I bought a real one. However, I do hear the difference with the real synth, and the difference is big enough enough that I replace the VST track with a recording of the actual 101. I think the Tal emulation is great (the U-No 106 is great too) and I do use it when writing, or traveling. ~2.5% CPU (Intel Core, 44.1KHz, 24Bit, buffer-size 1024 Samples).I have the Tal Bassline, and I own an SH-101.

Precise fader control while holding down the "Shift" button. MIDI automation for all sliders and pots. Simple Arpeggiator (up, down, one octave mode). 30 Hz, waveforms: sin, tri, saw, rec, noise). 18 dB/octave low-pass filter (resonant/self-oscillating). Sub-oscillator: square -1 oct., square -2 oct., pulse -1 oct, pulse -2 oct. Very fast, non linear envelopes are also a part of this synth. It's based on a robust core and has the usual controls of analogue hardware synthesizers.Ī unique -18dB low pass filter with a lot of asymmetric and random components introduce a warm and analogue sound. TAL-BassLine is a virtual analog bass synthesizer especially made for bass, acid sounds and effects.
