Subscribe to RSS feed

Physically Modeling The Player

December 1st, 2009

An ongoing trend for sample libraries throughout the years is that they are always getting larger! Musicians demand better quality samples, more articulations, finer control, and overall more realism in their virtual instruments. The two prominent methods of synthesis for instruments are wavetable-based libraries and physically modeled ones. While the first option offers more attainable realism, the latter ultimately has more flexibility.

Sample libraries have become more extensive, including more and more articulations, usually accessible by keyswitches. New technology has emerged to improve realism, such as release samples and round-robin alternating samples. Physical modeling has become more elaborate, reproducing more detailed sound models and accounting for more aspects of physics. However, both sampled instruments and physically modeled instruments face the same dilemma: the performer itself must be modeled.

Read the rest of this entry »

Strawberry Electric Guitar EXTENDED

November 17th, 2009

While recording samples for the upcoming Strawberry Rhythm Electric Guitar, we’ve decided to record more articulations for the Strawberry Electric Guitar sample library. This will be released as an extended version, which can be purchased as either an update or complete product.

Read the rest of this entry »

KSP: K2 Sample Start Inconsistency

November 9th, 2009

If you want your Kontakt sample library to support Kontakt 2 as well as later versions, there are some format differences that need to be considered. This article explains an inconsistency in the “play_note” function’s sample offset value.

Read the rest of this entry »

KSP: Making The Most Of Groups

November 6th, 2009

When mapping in Kontakt, sometimes you want to map articulations to be selected by the script. This could be used for scripted keyswitches, round-robin, and much more. Scripting how articulations are selected gives you a lot more power than using Kontakt’s native group selection conditions. This following trick will show you how to efficiently map the samples into groups.

Read the rest of this entry »