1.000 oscillators?

Not only: plus 200 filters and 200 LFOs plus an 8 track recorder and surround spatialisation (2 or 4 channels).

Obviously to take advantage of such an arsenal you need a lot of computing power, and for this reason it is recommended an Apple M1 ARM-based processor (Windows version still on build) but no one forces you to really use 1.000 oscillators, obviously.

Mille (this the name of the synth) can create amazing dense and evolving drones that sound very huge, and is designed for stereo or quadraphonic surround sound, meaning 500 or 250 oscillators per channel, Imagine the wall of sound you can create.

There is no VST version understandably, nor ever will be, but you can export later single tracks, stereo or quadraphonic files, according to your needs, or connect the audio output directly to a daw using an audio router as explained here.

The presentation video is exhaustive and well done, if you are interested in this type of tool (it only works stand alone, and that’s good) I recommend watching it. It’s not a freebie, but it costs a fair and low price like all the other special tools produced by Gleetchlab.

Before buying it, try the synth on your PC, a demo version is available.

Mille, introduction and presentation
Mille, demo and tutorial
Selfie after half hour of use


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