Simply said this little guy has some GREAT sound quality. Its got a very basic interface with all the standard controls.
The
thing that stood out to me right away was its sound quality. The filter
got my attention right away. Its something you learn to appreciate
after downloading loads of "freeware" products.
It comes with
some great sounding presets. Props to Linplug for this gem! Straight to
the point reliability and quality, not ground breaking but great promo
product and one of THE best freebies I have.
end
This
is one of the better free VSTi’s. Quality wise it matches up with
Triangle I and Triange II, both of which are mono. If you want that
LinnPlug sound and don’t have the money, try this synth. If you are not
sure how the LinnPlug sound will sit in your mix and don’t want to
create a song with demos, try this synth. I like it best for the softer
pads. The simple architecture does not have the modulation matrix of
Delta III or Albino, but it still sounds good for simple part, and not
every part in a song needs to be a complex pad. I also believe in using
the most basic synth for the part as to help with CPU efficiency, along
with the efficiency of the person writing the music.
Pros:
Free
Decent sound.
Good for basic pads.
Easy to use and learn.
Cons:
None for a free synth that works well and sounds good.
Robert
It's
a crime that this thing is offered for free. You've got a polyphonic 2
oscillator synth with effects, LFOs, and more routing options than a
MiniMoog. And they're using it just to promote their other products.
A warning: this review is critical. That's not to say it's a bad review. Actually, the product is great.
There's
a couple of nastinesses about the user interface. The full waveform
name isn't displayed. The knobs to my mind sit rather uneasily between a
2d and 3d look. The worst bit, though, is the preset manager, which
fails to open in the correct directory. This is, of course, a matter of
taste. I just don't much like it.
On the other hand, the interface
is simple and easy to use (unlike plenty of other synths). In
particular, the ability to octave-shift the oscillators is very easy to
play with.
Is the sound that "classic analogue"? To my ears, not
quite, but that isn't necessarily a bad thing. The presets don't
necessarily jump out at you, but there's a lot of workman-like, usable
stuff in there.
There are, however, a lot of waveforms, and the
jewel in the crown: polyphonic note stealing. Human played pads sound
wonderful with this (you can also achieve the effect through careful
editing, obviously...) It's a pity none of the presets have limited
polyphony to show this off immediately.
As you've probably
gathered, I use this thing for pad sounds. Synth basses don't really
interest me, and, good though it is, I think there are better free
synths for leads.
Feature-wise, I'd say it was "just right".
There's enough features to be useful and creative with it, but it
doesn't have the kitchen sink and if you want more, you can go buy
Albino...
Have to admit, I've never actually read the manual or
used the technical support, so I've given them 10. I've never seen it
crash either, so that's a genuine 10.
Value for money and value
for time is excellent. I guarantee that if you download it and start
messing around, it won't be an hour before you can find something to use
on a tune. I wouldn't have Alpha dominate the tune but frankly, too
many synths try to.
If you've got too many synths already, you
really don't need another. On the other hand, if you're starting out,
or you just want a different texture for one song, go get it, it won't
disappoint you. This isn't one of those free synths where you get what
you pay for. It's one of those that leaves you feeling like you've
stolen from the developer.
If
you have never worked with analog synthesis and want to learn the
basics, or if you have fond memories of those old Roland and Alesis
hardware synths from the 80s, FreeAlpha should be the first VSTi you
download.
This little gem offers warm analog sound, excellent
filters, a wide variety of waveforms to play with, and a very simple
layout that practically explains itself. It also offers room for growth
with its modulation matrix, which can produce some interesting results
with a little experimentation. Beginning sound designers can tweak to
their hearts content and find much potential here.
FreeAlpha is
usually my first call VSTi for synth bass sounds and saw leads, but It's
also quite useful for pads and square leads. The sound is full and
rich, and it's as rock-solid stable a synth as I've ever used. It
doesn't come with a wide array of presets, but really, with a synth like
this, you'll be making your own in no time. It's top-notch, it's easy
to use, and its free. What more could you want from a VSTi? Go click
that Download button.
The
freeAlpha is one of my favorite Juno/80's sounding synths. The feature
set is actually substantially better than the Juno but it has a warm
character that fits well in literally any type of timbre.
In
particular synth strings, basses, synth swells and synth pianos are easy
to program and have a certain 'rightness' to them. You have nothing to
lose trying freeAlpha, it's free and a small download.
Although
far from being a programming monster freeAlpha is fairly simple which is
in it's favor. In a cluttered arena of analog-like synths and one synth
does everything freeAlpha is refreshingly direct and highly effective
for the style of sounds it was developed to create.
High marks because I turn to this over shareware and commercial synths.
I
won't go into all the features on this little beauty, as it's already
been said, so I'll say why I use it so much as a solid workhorse for
stock analogue synth sounds.
a) it has an accuracy feature - turn
it down from 100% and you get progressively more subtle instabilities
in the sound - which gives a very analogue feel to it - it becomes far
less sterile than many VSTi's out there.
b) it's warm sounding -
no nasty bright high end (which many people like) but nevertheless
wasn't a feature on most analogue synths. The blurb says they tried to
get that warmth, and Linplug got this right. The filters lose some of
their effectiveness on high notes, but I like that - so do most genuine
analogue synths.
c) very easy to programme - it's laid out simply and sensibly - no menus and switching between pages.
d)The
mod matrix - excellent for a freebie. Not as many options as I'd like,
but it's free, so you can't expect the world. And it often surprises
with it's gritty edge if you modulate the oscillator symmetry - sounds
like a kind of oscillator sync (very useful) for leads.
e) the
filters - maybe it's just me, but I actually prefer the Freealpha
filters to the ones on their DeltaIII which is alot posher. DeltaIII
filters sound a but white-noisey in high resonance to me, but the
Freealpha ones self-oscillate comfortably and musically.
f) it's a
workhorse - you can get all the standard analogue sounds you need and
know that it will sit in a mix properly. The Roland Junos were popular
for this - thay weren't amazing, but you can find a use in any track for
it. Same with Freealpha - it maybe won't have your jaw dropping, but
you come back to it again and again, for basses, pads, e-pianos, brasses
etc.
It's one of my most used VSTi's. It won't sound like Darth
Vader, no arp, no amazing character, but it's very well programmed and
very musical and warm which is what makes a useable synth.
This
is another fantastic bit of freeware, and definately a must have in any
VST arsenal. It's fully featured and then some, with polyphony, glide,
a mod matrix, a huge selection of waveforms, and four different filter
types, not to mention a chorus! I mean really, as far as features go
this is one of, if not the most fully featured freeware synths. The
oscs are probably on the duller side, as they aren't as bright, or in
your face as some other synths, but it's a nice break from things. On
the flipside to that I'm not sure if the leads FreeAlpha produces would
cut through a busy mix without some help from other plugs. Also it
doesn't seem to alais very much at all at the higher frequencies, I
suspect the dull nature of the oscs could have something to do with that
though. The impressive thing here is really the mod matrix, which is
very nice to have around on a freeware synth. The GUI is professional
and very well laid out, featuring the stock Linplug look. The presets
are actually some of the better ones on a freeware synth, especially the
pad sounds, something about the seeming simplicity and mellowness of
some of the preset pad sounds really had me excited. I really think
FreeAlpha could really shine as a pad machine, for those times when you
really need something cool, but subtle to just round out a mix. All in
all this is an excellent analog synth, especially for newbies who can't
afford some of the bigger stuff. Kudos to Linplug for giving it away
for free.
this
synth has a very nice low end to it, which not many other synths have
compared to the high priced "professional" models. if you want bread
and butter type sounds this synth will deliver them. very stable never
had a problem with it crashing.
free alpha was used in cubase 5.0
p4@1.5GHz with 512 rambus
and a MOTU 828
Not
the sexiest synth out therem but extremely fat sounding analog sounds
out of this freebie. Great for bass, tons of waveforms. Excellent
on-board chorus. Modulation matrix is cool but the synth needs a second
LFO and a mod-destination for the LFO rates. Clean interface and very
stable. Presets are fine, but I prefer to program it.
Can't believe they don't charge for this one!
Well,
after the Release of the 2.0 version, it's time to revamp my first
review. FreeAlpha has become a wonderful, full featured and fat sounding
little tool. I instantly found some unfinished tracks where I could use
FreeAlpha. Next to my Everyday-Bass TauPro, this one seems to become my
favourite Analog-Synth! :-)
(My former review: My first
contact to VSTi's. Compared to Muon's Atom (for free, too) this one
sounds thin & plastic. Very digital filters and even the complex
modulation possibilities won't compensate for its "cheap" sound.)
Latest 10 reviews from a total of 10