Obscurium is something strange and new to behold. Just look at it. Those rainbow-coloured blobs. The scientific-looking markings… What could possibly be going on in this picture? Doesn’t it intrigue you? It does me.
There are three parts to this new offering from Sugar Bytes – firstly, it’s a generative and morphing sequence creation and manipulation environment; secondly, it’s a fully featured synth completely plumbed into the former; and thirdly, it can host plugins and subject them to the madness of its whims on a parameter level.
Organized Chaos
The general modus operandi of Obscurium is to create and manipulate chaos. Every facet of it has been set up to facilitate happy accidents, experimentation, and bold leaps into the unknown. In a nutshell, there are 16 graphs which you can draw and manipulate, which control things such as pitch, chord type, oscillator configurations, filter cutoff, etc. Each one is colour coded and all are superimposed on the graph in a way such that the selected entry has rings around its markers and can be edited simply by clicking and dragging or by using special parametric drawing tools for generating sprays, lines and waves in the data.
With regards to pitch, there are two ways of working. The standard mode takes each MIDI key-press and uses it as an offset to drive the sequencers which graphically modulate pitch, chord type (from a selectable table of many chords) and polyphony. MIDI Only mode ditches all of that and runs all the timbre sequencing stuff whilst using the notes you play.
This kind of set-up gives you something like a cross between wave-sequencing, morphing synthesizers, arpeggiation, sequencing and chording all in one. Oscillator sync, filter sweeps, LFO rates, envelope triggers, pretty much everything you’d expect to find on a synth can simply be drawn onto the screen using a complex but surprisingly easy to use interface.
Layers Of Complexity
That would be complexity enough for most people, but not so for Sugar Bytes. We aren’t even really beginning. Double the whole thing and allow morphing between two scenes either manually or via the envelopes, LFOs or a sequence. Now individual notes and articulations can be thrown wide open and bent around in unpredictable, emergent ways.
Then there’s the Shift Fader. This is a sort of internal shuffling morph for each scene, where the data for each lane is rotated through all available lanes, either smoothly or abruptly. You might have your pitch data suddenly playing the LFO rate or dictating the filter profile. All of these changes are represented graphically in real-time as you tweak, which looks absolutely beautiful… Patterns shift in and out of aural focus as coloured dots fly around in tandem with what you hear in a gratifying synaesthetic display.
Lanes can be opted out of the party, allowing you to funnel the chaos intelligently. This is really what stops the whole process from falling into cacophony, and gives stability to what you generate. Each lane also has a miniature modulation mixer which pops up and can set modulation amounts and bracket them into a range that you like. An 8-step sequencer, LFO and envelope with trigger sequence can all be tied to parameters in a semi-modular way with the minimum of fuss.
Even something as simple as the clock pulse used to drive the sequences can be “obscure-ified” by rotating through different note values from a table you can edit. Nothing is spared.
The Death Of Specificity
I haven’t covered all of the unique features that Obscurium holds, nor would it be wise to discuss, manual-like, how they all work and influence each-other. Hopefully I’ve given a fairly good overview of what it’s all about and how it feels to use, though. In a similar manner, Obscurium itself seems designed to eschew specificity and definite goals, and rather offer an almost play-like experience of setting up patterns, mashing them into each-other, and then selectively scaling back and pruning the chaos until one arrives at an interesting place.
The manual and presentation of the GUI are excellent, and everything you need to know about what is a rather complex audiovisual playground is well laid out and itemised. The step-by-step tutorial was appreciated and much needed, making the possibilities clear. These are the people who designed Turnado and the WOW2 filter – they know what they are doing when it comes to GUI and user experience.
Guided By Voices
So, how about that internal synth I mentioned earlier? The one that actually makes all these sounds at the behest of the GUI? Well, it’s pretty good. It has everything you’d expect in a small to mid-sized synth, and the sound is competent. Oscillator sync and PWM is involved, so that’s always a plus. Crazy FM mods can get almost formant-like and the filter can morph through its modes. I’ve always preferred the sound of Sugar Bytes’ effects and filters to their oscillators, but these ones sound very nice when the unison is brought in – if perhaps a bit lacking in sonic girth and power compared to dedicated synths.
Of course, the most fascinating thing about the synth itself is that it’s completely enslaved to this modulation and sequencing monster! But here’s where the hosting comes in – you can put any plugin inside Obscurium, provided it’s not an effect, and easily have it learn a bunch of parameters (or have them randomly picked by clicking on the dice). This puts the plugin on another level and opens up all sorts of crazy possibilities, such as using it to trigger a sampler or drum machine, or of course just to tie your favourite synth in knots!
Conclusion
Obscurium is a highly novel and powerful tool with a playful interface which can be used to create far-out sequences, unusual morphing sounds and riffs, arpeggios and percussive figures, or be used to power your favourite synth. While it’s possible to use it to get certain premeditated results, its very DNA is geared towards taking patterns and themes and peturbating them along a continuum of hitherto unconsidered variations, and then iterating, modulating or randomizing the process over and over with your guidance. Mind-bending stuff!
More info: Obscurium (product page)
Sendy’s music: Bandcamp / SoundCloud
The Giveaway
We are giving away one FREE copy of Obscurium to one lucky BPB reader. Many thanks to Sugar Bytes for the support! To enter the giveaway, simply leave a comment below. The winner will be picked by a random draw on October 5th and announced on this page (we will also notify the winner via email).
And the lucky winner is our reader cat f, congratulations! :)
We have more freebie news, giveaways, product demos and top freeware plugin lists coming soon, so stay tuned and thank you all for reading BPB!
Sugar Bytes Obscurium Review
Obscurium is a highly novel and powerful tool with a playful interface which can be used to create far-out sequences, unusual morphing sounds and riffs, arpeggios and percussive figures, or be used to power your favourite synth.
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Features10
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Workflow9
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Performance10
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Design9
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Sound7
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Pricing8
78 Comments
gogi
onYeah !
NikoBW
onLooks awesome!
Sebastian Mehl
onAwesome.
Brage Viken
onI would like to be able to go into obscurium for a while now and then…
Stefan Lang
onI am a user of Turnado and Effektrix, both are excellent. Seems that this one also is very much fun!
Salvo B
onGreat plugin! As always when sugar bytes is in the deal!
Count me for the giveaway ;)
Jk
onVery cool, thanks for the review!
Elio
onIt looks insane! And I love it!
Keita
onIt’s great!!
DreddLbkc
onSeems interesting… I Hope I’ll win.
Albert
onI like to get orderly chaotic. Good Luck to everyone here.
Ninja Mode
onLooks promising!
Dmitry
onYep!
sylnox
onkewl
nojoe
onYEAH! Give it to me, now! ;D
David Smith
onEntered!
William
onYes, please.
Nils
oncomment
VIPER
onPretty cool!
VIPER
onLooks cool
Bannazkit
onThat thing looks awesome!
Robert Hays
onI <3 plugins that do weird unexpected things to sound – this sounds perfect…
MmMouse
onLooks weird. I like it!
ERASERHEAD FUCKERS
onwould love to win :~)
Stéphane
onWell, I’d be down for giving it a try…
Funkeorne
onGood luck to everybody!!!!!
Walter Matthau
onOooh lord this looks great!
Simon
onI’m in!
svrc
onOh yeah!
BB
onCool review, thanks!
Paul Evans
onLooks great!
Francesco
onLet’s try again!
Thijs
onThat looks fun!!
Thomas Wayne
onSugar Bytes is good at thinking outside the box, so I’d enjoy trying this out!
Isaac
onThanks!
Memory Splice
onMy fingers are crossed, thank you!
Dev
onThanks… For nice review..!
VasF
onGreat review and giveaway!
C--kri
onChaos everywhere!
Matt
onLooks great!
dave thomas
onlove it.
horneusz
onFajny! :)
Andronoid
onvery interesting!
Joseph
onWow.
MATTMATIX
onWow this looks far more confusing than any other piece of software I’ve ever seen xD
Henri Augusto
onNice! I’m in!
Julian
onHello World!
Audio Vitamin
onLooks cool.
redundant
onWould love to play with it…
Versianni
onSugar bytes has been pushing the envelopes (pun intended) like no one else. Bravo! I want it now!!
Darryl
onlooking good
jee
onwow! i need this so bad!
Jay
onLooks awesome!
Marcell Dudas
onThanks for this opportunity and good look to everyone!
bx6
onObscurium spelled backwards is Muirucsbo, which is also the name of the spaceman in my attic.
Mark
onDamn.
Carlos
onIt’s beautiful
blortblort
onas addicted as I am to SB product, this one in particular would match my shirts nicely!
phil
ontotally love this plugin <3
Jeremiah
onLooking forward to this one!
Igor
onSink or swim…
Astor Braz
onOsbcurium is the Black Monolith from “2001: a Space Odissey” if it was a plugin… Astonishing! 10/10
Vitali
onSugar Bytes thinked up a lot of synths and effects.
Paco
onmmmmm….their plugins are more & more creative, really like it
Priswalker N
onAh need inspiration…
…and ah need it now~~~
looks crazy
onlooks crazy
luc
onWow
I’m In.
Lucas Oliveira
onI’m lacking creativity on the last weeks… i NEED somethig like this… hope its not too late to participate !!!
tomgrimmer
onOne must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star!
Zorge
onit would be very interesting to experiment
IAMAM
onThis looks very promising!
ZachT
onYoo
sn
onIt looks wonderful, and it seems very interesting.
James Gross
onBetter than era?
vm
onThis sounds amazing. Very interested.
Ho Shui Win
onfor me the interface is between clear and chaos,hey but be creative and experimental with Obscurium!!
Perry Staltic
onI’m in…
serg G
onTerrific, creative monster My only advice is, if you are in readymade things do not get this.