Categories:
- Home
- Music Software News (292)
- Plug-in & Sample News (511)
- Music Hardware News (316)
- Other News (229)
- Feature Articles (25)
- Freeware Music Software (7)
- Editor's Choice Award (104)
- 'What's Hot' from Dr Audio (12)
- Tom's Music Thing (101)
- Interviews (2)
- Competitions (2)
- Blog (23)
New articles:
» Weekly Editor's Choice Award - Aria Maestosa v1.2b3
» Tom's Music Thing - Ten awesome homemade guitars
» Image Line Software announces Edison
» FourTrack IPhone App updated to v1.2
» RiffWorks guitar recording and collaboration software updated
» Image Line Software presents Gross Beat with Xmas Sale
» Audio Ease releases Altiverb v6.3
» Blue Cat Audio updates Analysis Pack and launches Winter special offers
» G-Sonique releases Pultronic EQ-110P
Past articles:
» Vienna Symphonic Library releases Solo Strings II
16.12.2008
» Muse Research announces RECEPTOR 2 PRO and RECEPTOR 2 PRO MAX
16.12.2008
» Victor Cerullo releases Max Magic Microtuner 2.0
16.12.2008
Vienna Instruments announces Special Keyboards
The Vienna Symphonic Library team has announce the release of the new VIENNA INSTRUMENTS collection SPECIAL KEYBOARDS, which is now available from Vienna's worldwide network of distributors and dealers. The 8 GB collection offers a state-of-the-art approach to capturing these rare instruments: a harpsichord, a harmonium, and a prepared piano.
Sponsor
The harpsichord has a famously bright sound, rich in overtones. Typically a Baroque instrument, the harpsichord has played a minimal role in classical and romantic music. In modern literature, however, it has been rediscovered by a broad range of musicians, and is also used poignantly and effectively in film and TV music. In Vienna's own Silent Stage, the following single notes and repetition performances of a two manual harpsichord were recorded: 8' register solo, 8' double, and tutti (a combination of two 8' registers and one 4' register). The harmonium is a free-reed instrument, meaning that air streaming past reeds of different lengths causes them to vibrate. Unlike organ pipes, the harmonium's reeds produce more disharmonic overtones, creating a unique undulating sound. The prepared piano is a technique introduced in 1949 by John Cage, where objects like erasers, nails, wire, paper, etc., are inserted between a piano's strings in certain places, causing them to produce additional tones, harmonics, or percussive sounds. The Vienna team also treated the Bösendorfer grand piano with bare hands (e.g., glissandos over the strings) and with wood mallets in order to get a multitude of creative sounds and colors.
Like all Vienna Instruments collections, the Special Keyboards collection ships in the formats VST (OS X, Win XP) as well as AU (Mac) and also works as a stand-alone instrument. It retails for $385/EUR295. There are no Standard and Extended Library options, as in other Vienna Instruments collections; the Special Keyboards collection includes the full sets of samples along with the software instrument, featuring Vienna's exclusive Vienna Instruments engine.
For more information, please visit www.vsl.co.at
This is a Press Release
:
Views: 1065
Back
13.08.2007
