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Frequently Asked Questions: Software
- What software do you use?
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- Logic Studio
For my main framework, I use Logic Studio for 19 out of 20 projects.
This software is amazing and deep. The built-in samples are great, and
the effects are enough to do most things out of the box.
There are a few glitches here and there, but overall - I give Logic a
9 of 10 rating.
Should you buy Logic? No idea. There are other products that do a lot
of the same things.
Even the lowly GarageBand is a very capable editor for a lot of projects!
Use what you like; the framework (Digital Audio Workstation - DAW)
software means less than you think.
- Sample Libraries
The DAW software does the work of capturing and arranging notes, but
to make things into sounds - that takes synths and samplers.
- Logic Sounds
Logic ships with a giant selection of samples. Many of these can also
be purchased in Jam Packs for GarageBand.
- Pianos - Bad - They ship 4 standard "pianos", Boesendorfer, Stainway,
Yamaha, and Pop. None of these sound real. There are a selection of
"warped" pianos, like an olde timey piano, and ghost piano. These are
usable (for when you need highly effected pianos)
- Acoustic Bass - Reasonable - These aren't bad, but I have better ones
in other places.
- Electric Bass - Quite Good - I can almost always find one of these 20
basses for any given project.
- Acoustic Drums - Ok - I rarely use these, but they are not bad.
- Electronic Drums - Reasonable - There are a lot of electronic drums
in here. Many of the really nice ones are found in the dedicated
"Ultrabeat" drum sampler. This is a deep-featured sampler, and it is
difficult to use. Don't expect to do mush without putting in a good 8
hours of learning.
- Electric Pianos - Very nice - These use the EVP88 synth, and the
sounds are great.
- Organs - Brilliant - The Hammond sound is well captured in the EVB3
synth. I think this is better than the official Hammond synths.
- Vibes and Marimba - Meh - Also not terrible.
- Synthesizers - Excellent - There are hundreds presets of pads and
leads and basses. In addition to that there are 6 different software
synths where you can make your own. I personally enjoy the ES2
synth... and like the Ultrabeat - it takes a while to learn.
- Pop Strings - Meh
- Pop Horns - Meh
- Acoustic Guitars - Reasonable - Guitars are difficult to simulate,
these are 'ok' basic samples.
- Electric Guitars - Meh - For synths, these are fine. Most of the
time, they will sound like synths. These samples are well supported by
the amazing effects that are set up in the presets.
- Orchestral - Okay - I'm not going to rate everything in here, because
I don't use any of these anymore. I used to use the strings a lot.
They have that hyperreal hollywood high-end bite to them that is
really fun to deal with. Same with the brass.
- World Instruments - Nice - These are easy to play, and reasonably
well done samples.
- Loops - Excellent - Logic also ships with 15,000+ audio loops. This
is significant, and can make sketching amazingly fast. I use these all
the time in finished products as well..
- Trillian
- Holy moses, this has bass. Electric, acoustic, and synth basses. I have always found something perfect in this set.
- West Africa
- Just when I thought I knew a bit about West African drumming, I got this and discovered a whole lot more.
Great for... exactly what you think it would be great for.
- Studio Drummer
- If you've always wanted live drums - this one if for you. You can adjust darned near everything in these three very deeply sampled kits.
Three doesn't sound like a lot - but the diversity of processing makes it feel like dozens... plus, you probably only need a couple.
- Garritan
- Steinway Piano - Brilliant - Nothing better. Anywhere. From anyone.
- Violin (discontinued) - Reasonable - This is the best live
performance violin synth I've ever played. The engine behind it is
magical. It somehow knows the articulations you want. Very fun. (see
"dance macabre" to hear what this can do)
- Concert and Marching Band - Reasonable - I like the field percussion
in here. Additionally it has some exotic instruments like Helicon and
Mellophones that you just can't find anywhere else.
- Jazz and Big Band - Very nice overall
- Latin percussion is great.
- Drum kits are great.
- Saxophones are very nice.
- Other woodwinds are reasonable.
- Brass are good, and very expressive to play live.
- Guitars are clean and reasonable.
- Basses are great.
- Piano is quite reasonable.
- Vibes are good.
- EP is good.
- Personal Orchestra
- Woodwinds are very good - expressive, and a joy to play live.
- Brass is the weakest part of this set, not so good except in
specific applications.
- Percussion is very reasonable; good mix of items.
- Piano is pretty good.
- Pipe Organ is nice. I can imagine a more flexible one, but this
covers most situations.
- Strings are realistic and easy to play expressively. Don't expect a
huge dynamic range out of these, but they are very servicable.
- Kore Player items
- Kore Base Library
50 preset synths, I have 5 of them marked as ok, and one as good -
Hey, it is free - can't complain!
- Compilation Vol 1.
Also free, 92 presets. I have 9 marked as ok, and 7 marked as good.
- Paranormal Spectrums
Not free. This has 100 presets which are each a mix of up to 8
elements. I have 6 of these patches marked as "good", but that is only
in relation to everything else. Most everything here has a sort of
late 90s, early 21st century feel to them.
- Heavyocity Evolve - Brilliant
This one is kind of expensive, but it is a LOT of fun to play with.
Very modern and deep sounds. (See the Ghostpocalypse series to hear
what this can do. It was built almost exclusively with Evolve.)
- Heavyocity Damage - Brilliant
Big, big percussion. The oil drum is so well sampled... I need to find a use for that.
Super control of all the samples in volume and stereo field. Oh, and the 3 recording positions means you can fit these right in your mix.
So, so, so good.
Warm distortion. Easy built-in compressor, reverb, delay.
- Zero-G - Carnival Drums
This is an ESX24-based instrument, not deeply sampled, but well sampled. Cheap and fun if you have explicit need for street drumming.
- EastWest
- Symphonic Orchestra
- Brass - Very good. They are sort of unplayable live because of the amount of articulations you get, for recordings they are reasonable.
- Woodwinds - Very Good. Also, difficult to play live, but they sound wonderful.
- Percussion - Brilliant. My favorite tympani and bass drums are these.
- Strings - Very good. Lots of recorded extended techniques, and easy to play large ensembles that are very reasonable sounding!
- Misc
- Celesta - Nice!
- Harp - Also nice.
- Glocks - 2 kinds, both nice.
- Xylophone - Cutting and great for film score-like things
- Symphonic Choirs - Brilliant. Word Builder (the back-end software that allows you to 'play' whatever text you like)
and Logic don't get along well out of the box - so this takes some time to set up. After that - Word Builder is still
a bit difficult... but it does something that NOTHING ELSE CAN DO. On the simple side, oohs and aahs are very easy.
- Goliath
- Drum Kits - Very good. There are a nice variety of kits in here, and they are all very servicable and realistic.
- Acoutstic Guitars - Pretty good. Both the steel string and nylon string guitars are well sampled and very playable.
- Choir - some ooh and ahh bits from the Symphonic Choirs pack as well as a couple of the solo voices from Voices of Passion.
- Electric Bass - Reasonable. I don't work with bass a lot, so I can't comment too much.
- Electric Guitars - Bad to Brilliant. Sometimes there is exactly what you want here, and sometimes there is nothing close.
- Electronic Drums - Good. Just, solid nice to good with the occasional perfect.
- Ethnic - Very nice selection of percussion, string, and wind instruments.
- General Midi Bank... Wait... This exists!? okay, thats 128 more instruments that I have to try out now.
- Keyboard Mallet Instru - This is a decent catch-all selection of intruments - most of which seem to be included in more complete forms in other packages I own.
- New Age Ensembles - Fun patches that are good enough to record quick improvisations with.
- Orchestra - Nice, but not as complete as the Symphonic Orchestra pack.
- Pianos, E Pianos - Some interesting effects, but I prefer Logic's EVP88 for the EPs.
- Bosendorfer 290 - The king of pianos. This sample set actually goes down to the looooow C, so if you need those notes - then you need this sample set. It has the character of the Bosendorfer pianos' dense overtone series. I can't put my finger on why this isn't my favorite - but long notes seem lacking. Fast bright passages work great.
- Pop Brass - (and also saxes) I've not used these much, but they seem nice for very specific things.
- Stormdrone - Great soundscapes. It will take a long time for anyone to understand what is all in this.
- Synth Bass - A good pile of new samples to compliment Logic's synthesized basses.
- Synth Leads - 11 distince synth lead samples
- Synth Pads - Yes indeed. Dozens of them.
- Vintage Organs - Logic's built-in EVB3 is better and more versitile than these samples, but you do get a Farfisa - which Logic does not have.
- Gypsie
- Ra
- Silk
- Stormdrum - I have to comment on this. It has the biggest cleanest drum kit I have ever heard, I love using this thing. There are a lot of other great drum samples in this also, but I use the kit over and over again.
- Voices of Passion
- Hollywood Strings
- This sample set is amazing. Amazing. Did I mention amazing? It ships on an installation hard drive because it has to -
the install runs over 300 gig. This set has no solo instruments, but the section articualtions are brilliant.
- Hollywood Brass
- Another amazing sample set. For the first time - a reasonable brass sound is possible. This set includes solo, and groups.
This is the first time I've seen a sample of a cimbasso. If you know what that is - you'll know why you want it!
- Steinberg Virtual Guitarist
This is the only instrument I've abandoned. The pain in working with this is no longer worth the result.
This document is part of Incompetech.com.
Most Everything ©1998-2012 Kevin MacLeod
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