I agree, the Moogs are surprisingly hard to place in a mix. They’re just so damn loud.
I’ve had a Tempest for about a year and a half now, and a Rytm for a couple of months. I use them together extensively, and the one can’t even come close in replacing or doing the other’s duty. They’re just not the same kind of instrument.
It might say Analog Drum Computer on the Tempest in blue letters and all, but this is what it is - a six voice synth with a killer architecture and a groovy sequencer to boost, best goddamn pads out there and killer live fx and features. It’s well suited for drums and percussion, but it’s crammed with options for making pure synth tracks, with bass, leads, pads, arps and whatnot. It’s not a matter of finding a way to do it, it’s built that way. It is a synth.
The one thing that goes against the Tempest is that it’s a bit tricky to get it to sound good, just like that. Dial up something on the A4 or a Moog, and it sounds great almost at once. Tempest requires some work. It’s also dry, with only list and comp as internal fx.
But it really stands on its own and you can’t find anything that sounds like it, once you’ve tamed it.