An electronic ping sound of some sort, made by (if I remember right) both filter and osc FM. This one's pretty sensitive to individual tuning, so watch out.
Mike Peake's Cantus Firmus remains the King of the Analog Choir patches :). This was my attempt to do analog choir, thanks to that patch for ideas. It came out rather differently in the end, but I like the results. :)
This patch shows how thick two voice unison can sound. :) A very dense sounding synth pad. This is great for those times where you need a thick filler.
One osc, some filter mods, sequencer. Piece o' cake. Mod wheel controls resonance, ribbon controls the filter frequency.
A fun gated sequencer ditty, this one is designed for chord sequencing. Touching the ribbon controller turns off the sequence and increases the "echo" portion of the sound. Moving the mod wheel up closes the sequencer filter.
This was my attempt to do a "string synthesizer" based on descriptions that I heard on AH. Two sawtooth oscillators are modulated (frequency wise) with sine LFOs at .6Hz and 6Hz, respectively. While not really string synthesizer-like, it sounds very nice. The other nice thing about this patch (seemingly, based on a recording I did) is how it reacts with the standard "Dolby Surround" system (the sound will be in both the front and rear speakers). Neat. :)
This is a rather nice sounding PWM square patch, with a lot of modulation around. It really sounds best played with long holding chords, playing one note at a time means a little too much "hearing" of the modulation. Because the modulation is a little more audible, I usually juice this patch up with the Dimension C chorus and then add some back reverb on top of that.
Standard analog bandpass sweep sound. Neat.