The Tyrell N6 has a nice classic vibe, a sort of a Juno-ish sound, and is one of my favorite instruments. In this video I’ll walk you through how to set up Cthulhu to use with a synth that I like, the Tyrell N6 (c urrently available as a free download here). But it finally clicked for me that Cthulhu is acting like a surrogate midi controller (sort of like a virtual keyboard) and THAT is what would control the synthesizer’s sound… not the other way around. For the longest time I would get it backwards and try to set the synthesizer as Cthulhu’s input. The trick is that you have to set Cthulhu as the input on whatever synthesizer you want Cthulhu to work with. Cthulhu does have a sound generator that you can use to test with, but I would always forget how to get an actual synthesizer to run through Cthulhu. When I first started using it I always got bewildered as to what actually produced the sound in Cthulhu. I’ve been playing around with Xfer Record’s Cthulhu a lot lately, and one of the things that was always confusing for me when I started learning how to use it was how to get it to actually produce sound in Studio One.
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