Instruments - Loops

Best of 2010

As we look back on a productive year of loop library and virtual instrument releases, there are a few that stand out. We’ve picked the top ten products based on sales, reviews and customer feedback. Here is a look at the top products for 2010.

 

Electri6ity

 

 

Kings of the South: Dirty Crunk Kits

  • #1 selling loop product in 2010

 

 

Detroit Soul

 

 

Ambient Skyline

  • Top Five selling loop product in 2010

 

 

MOJO: Horn Section

  • Top Five selling Instrument in 2010

 

 

Studio Guitars: The Michael Ripoll Project

  • Sound On Sound 25th Anniversary Award Nominee
  • Top Five loop product in 2010

 

 

R&B Swagga

  • Top 10 product in 2010
  • #1 R&B product in 2010

 

 

Cinematic Percussion

  • Sound On Sound 25th Anniversary Award Nominee
  • Top Five loop product in 2010
  • #1 loop product three months
  • 5/5 Sound On Sound

 

 

Impression Jazz Construction Kits

 

 

Violence

 

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General - Instruments

Q NOW SHIPPING!!!

Vir2 Instruments’ Q, a massive sound design and scoring instruments library designed for the unique needs of television, film, game, and media composers and music producers who want to add a fresh and previously unheard dimension to their sonic palette.

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Instruments

Introducing Q; Instruments and sound design for the big screen!

Vir2 Instruments has announced their next release, Q. Q is a collection of musical instruments and sound fx designed for the unique needs of television, film, game, and media composers and music producers who want to add a fresh and previously unheard dimension to their sonic palette.

Q will begin shipping on November 15, 2010. More information is available at Vi2.com.

Check out the first tutorial video for Q:

To watch the other Q tutorial videos, head over to Vir2.com

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General - Instruments

Vir2’s Electri6ity receives review and two awards from Computer Music.

Electri6ity continues to impress and receive rave reviews from critics, producers, musicians and composers. Take a look Computer Music’s review below and read why they gave Electri6ity their Editor’s Choice and Performance Awards.

We crank it up to 11 with this multisampled library of eight classic axes, including built-in amp simulation

The workstation guitar patches of yesteryear typically used a handful of feeble-sounding samples, or, even worse, cheesy FM synthesis.  The results were thoroughly unconvincing, but the tables have since turned, Vir2’s new Electri6ity sample library being a case in point.

It’s in Kontakt format and comes with the Kontakt Player, so you needn’t be a Kontakt owner to use it.  Over 24,000 samples make up each of the eight guitars.  At the twangier end of the scale, you’ve got a Fender Strat and Tele, with their natural enemy the Gibson Les Paul at the other.  There are two LPs, in fact: one standard and one with P90 pickups.  Jazz cats will lap up the dulcet tones of the Gibson ES-335 and L4, while indie jangle and fizzy pop can be had with the Rickenbacker and Danelectro axes.  All are played with a pick – there’s legato playing, of course, but no fingered plucking.

There are four main views – Performance being the default – with sliders for basic parameters like pickup (front, rear or both), strum speed, vibrato type/strength/speed, etc.

Oh, the humanity!

Electri6ity’s behind-the-scenes scripting does a lot to interpret and ‘humanise’ parts – it’s a bit like having a virtual guitarist to go along with your virtual guitar.  For example, play a chord and it detects this, rapidly triggering the notes in sequence, just as a guitarist would strike a chord.  Chords are converted into guitar voicings and picking direction is handled automatically.

All of the ‘artificial intelligence’ features can be disabled or further configured in the Settings panel, which offers a ridiculous degree of control over the characteristics of strumming, picking, vibrato and so on.  There are also extra features, such as sympathetic resonance (unplayed strings softly ring when playing chords).  Any Settings parameter can be assigned to any MIDI CC.

All guitars have been recorded dry and direct, for running through an amp sim plug-in.  There are also ‘Amped’ patches, with an extra panel for effects (delay, reverb, modulation), a Tube Screamer-alike and a straightforward amp sim.

So, the sound.  You’ve heard an electric guitar, right?  Well, it sounds a lot like that, and is good for pretty much any style: rock rhythm, smooth jazz comping, screaming metal leads, twanging clean tones – you name it, Electri6ity can handle it.  We weren’t expecting much from the built-in amp sim, but were pleasantly surprised – it’s thoroughly usable.  It’s also a lot of fun to try out different guitars mid-session, layer them, etc.

Omissions are that the Strat doesn’t have all five pickup positions sampled, and there’s no full-on detuned metal axe either.  All guitars do go down to a meaty C, but an EMG-loaded seven-stringer would’ve been nice.  Creating convincing parts is fairly painless, with the humanising features helping a great deal.  It’s worth tweaking their settings – the release noise types and so on – to suit the piece.  If anything, Electri6ity can sound a bit too proficient at times:  for instance, fast runs in the Solo/Legato mode are very clean, and we found it sometimes sounded more authentic to program them in Poly mode and overlap some of the notes a bit.  Still, what you’ve got is essentially a super-tight session player on tap.

This is the most comprehensive virtual electric guitar package we’ve seen, doing for guitars what Superior Drummer and BFD did for drums. – Computer Music

Technical Difficulties

Articulation switching is mainly handled through the extensive keyswitching system, which is easier to use then it might appear. The three main keyswitches to get down are those for Poly, Solo (picked) and Legato modes. Others offer trills, tremolo picking, pinch haronics, muted playing, hammer ons, pull ofs and slides. There are also FX like whammy bar dives and pick slides. Toward the top of the keyboard are keys for right-hand motions such as strum up/down and picking of individual strings.

Vir2’s AMT (Articulation Morphing Technology) enables you to seamlessly blend articulations using velocit or a MIDI CC. The same Vir2 morphing technology is also used for velocity layers. It’s not simple crossfading, nor does it use Kontakt’s AET morphing – Vir2 has cooked it up themselves, and it soundss very natural.

Verdict

For

– Can sound very convincing

– Eight distinct guitars

– Good built-in amp sim

– Extensive articulations with morphing

– Articulation/velocity morphing

– Fine-grained control over AI behaviour

Against

– No deep-tuned metal guitar

– Doesn’t offer all Strat pickup positions


– Doesn’t offer all Strat pickup positions
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General - Instruments

Electri6ity users show off their skills on youtube

It’s cool to see some our Electri6ity users posting their own youtube videos.  Nicely done!  We hope to see a lot more of this so feel free to drop us a line if you’ve got a video of you using Electri6ity that you think we should check out.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lu6pkkqwyfQ&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_OLB-cog9o&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpMHS364DD4

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General - Instruments

Moto-X video features Electri6ity

Hans-Jörg Scheffler puts Electri6ity to use in a Moto-X video on Vime

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