Monica 3 Is A FREE Layered Synthesizer By Fanan Team Pro

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Fanan Team Pro releases Monica 3, a freeware dual-layered 90’s style synth VST plugin (64-bit VST2/VST3) for Windows.

Before Monica 3, Fanan Team Pro released Monica, then Monica Evo. Monica 3 is a dual-layered synth featuring two high dynamic range oscillators.

See also: Free Synthesizer VST Plugins

The structure of having two contrasting oscillators has remained from Monica Evo. Oscillator one is wavetable based with 50 wavetables and an additional 50 wavetables for morphing. Oscillator two is a retro eight waveforms pad oscillator capable of creating classic 90’s pads.

Thinking of 90’s pads brings to mind the Korg M1 and Roland JV-1080, Jungle/House music, and airy strings.

The most notable oscillator difference from Monica 3 to Evo comes in oscillator two. Monica Evo was designed to emulate 90’s mono synths, whereas Monica 3 focuses on massive 90’s pads.

Each oscillator has its own chord-driven pattern sequencer. The sequencer is a 16-step arpeggiator with various tweaking options. You can adjust the time signature, gate, speed, DAW syncing, and step count ( up to sixteen). Playing with the time signature could be pretty cool for creating moving/evolving pads.

Where Monica 3 starts to pull away from Monica Evo is in the modulation options. There are six LFOs, three per oscillator, with 50 wavetables and BPM sync.

You also have MIDI-Clock Motorized Modulation (MMM), which allows you to create interesting motion through effects.

The included effects are Unison (up to eight voices), Cabinet, Wah, Chorus, Phaser, and Delay. All effects have two send channels (one per oscillator) and can work in global mode.

It seems that Monica 3 is a more significant plugin than Monica Evo. But, with different personalities, I imagine it’s worth checking out both.

I’m not a Windows user, so I have no first-hand experience with Monica 3, but I’d like to hear more. If any readers make some music or with it, please feel free to share links with me in the comments.

As well as making me think about vintage synths I wish I owned, it had me reminiscing about something less musical. At first sight, the GUI reminded me of my Sega Mega Drive days, with its cutting edge (90’s) 16-bit graphics. I’m not ashamed to say it had my interest immediately.

On a more serious note, if you’re interested in that 90’s sound, Monica 3 seems pretty cool, and Fanan Team Pro seems dedicated to it.

You can download Monica 3 in VST2 and VST3 plugin formats from the Fanan Team Pro website. The download contains both an EXE installer and the individual plugin files for manual installation.

More info: Monica 3 (98.1 MB download size, RAR archive, VST2/VST3 plugin format for Windows)

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James is a musician and writer from Scotland. An avid synth fan, sound designer, and coffee drinker. Sometimes found wandering around Europe with an MPC in hand.

9 Comments

    • about corrupted zip files I usually fix the mess by using 7zip instead of other tools like universal extractor. And then it works for monica synth (you’re right universal extractor fails to open it).

  1. The Fanan plugins have ranged from supposed physical models that sound more like cheap keys or any random substractive synth rather than a real instrument being emulated to oddities like a Nord Organ Preset (!). It’s rare to see complete disconnection between description and ambition (physical modelling orchestral ensembles!) and the actual work (unstable saw waveform generator).This new synth seems like more of the same all the way from the hyped-up description with the usual bizarre phrasing (a “high dynamic range oscillator”? seriously?) to design oddities (two oscillators with one reserved for retro waveforms, like whaat?) but this time with some trendy nostalgia. It’s so unreal it borders on outsider art but without reaching the “so bad it’s good”. It’s just bad.

    Idea sounds somewhat like Full Bucket WhispAir which focused on 90s Hybrid synthesis, although that synth could be used for any both mono or pad sounds, featured three oscillators any of which could use either original, user imported or retro 90s synth Korg DW8000 waveforms and has never caused my DAW to hang (that applies to all of FBM synths, opposite applies to half of Fanan synths). I have a feeling that there’s nothing this synth can offer that Whispair can or does better and without hanging so I’ll be sticking with Whispair when I need a 90s-sounding pad.

    • I have no idea what you’re talking about. It does what it promises pretty good and their GUI is just stellar. It never hanged as well with reaper so you might being using older version that already fixed since then. I created some really nice patches with monica and this little thing rocks with an unbelievable hot signal – yet zero clipping and monstrous effect section. I have no idea what full bucket do, because I’ve never tried them, but I’m definitely going to keep this monica thing in my arsenal.

  2. The Fanan plugins have ranged from supposed physical models that sound more like cheap keys or any random substractive synth rather than a real instrument being emulated to oddities like a Nord Organ Preset (!). It’s rare to see complete disconnection between description and ambition (physical modelling orchestral ensembles!) and the actual work (unstable saw waveform generator).This new synth seems like more of the same all the way from the hyped-up description with the usual bizarre phrasing (a “high dynamic range oscillator”? seriously?) to design oddities (two oscillators with one reserved for retro waveforms, like whaat?) but this time with some trendy nostalgia. It’s so unreal it borders on outsider art but without reaching the “so bad it’s good”. It’s just bad.

    Idea sounds somewhat like Full Bucket WhispAir which focused on 90s Hybrid synthesis, although that synth could be used for any both mono or pad sounds, featured three oscillators any of which could use either original, user imported or retro 90s synth Korg DW8000 waveforms and has never caused my DAW to hang (that applies to all of FBM synths, opposite applies to half of Fanan synths). I have a feeling that there’s nothing this synth can offer that Whispair can or does better and without hanging so I’ll be sticking with Whispair when I need a 90s-sounding pad.

  3. Writing a review about a plugin that you admit you haven’t heard or used is really… hm… a bit stupid, isn’t it? :-(

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