Armageddon wrote:(Addendum: I figured out a great way to make more disk space for my sample-set acquisitions, too: trash the MOR instruments I'm replacing. I figure, I have them on the installer disc if I need them and MOR works fine without them. So far, I've trashed all my drum kits, thanks to EZ Drummer, and once I get the new bass working, I'm trashing all my basses. Once I snag Acoustic Guitar, I'll probably throw away the Gibson J-160, and I'm sorely tempted to trash all the electrics -- aside from the Telecaster -- that I'm not copping DI effects from)
I guess you have to do what your personal preferences tell you to do, but I wouldn't be so quick to start trashing things. Obviously, if you are determined to never use the instruments again, then there is no point in having them take up space, but on the off-chance that they might come in handy for something, why not just get a bigger dedicated sample drive?
There is no reason why it has to be one library over another all the time. Sometimes the neatest sounding things can come from mixing and matching things. No matter which of the acoustic guitar libraries you use, perhaps there will come a time where your song demands a doubling of a guitar strum, and the Gibson J-160 might be the perfect sound to do that with.
And for all the limitations of articulations with the MOR bass and other instruments, they still sound good. If you had the "Dynamic Spectrum Mapper" plugin, you could easily match the tonal qualites of the Fender Precision bass in Scarbee Pre-Bass with the one in MOR. Sure it is a little more work, but it is an opportunity to have numerous additional articulations to work with.
It would be nice if we could have perfect plugins that were the only ones we needed for all the jobs at hand, but since each instrument has its strengths and weaknesses, the best solution, imo, is to find the tools which will make them all work together (and DSM, mentioned above is one of them).
Armageddon wrote:Admittedly, I'm still on the fence as to whether I want the Pettinhouse set or the Indiginus Acoustic Guitar Collection (
http://indiginus.com/index.html), which is only $40 and apparently takes up very little real estate on your hard drive.
Thank you for mentioning this. I'm not sure I need to spend the $40 (although I might) since I already have RealGuitar, and other acoustic guitar VIs (and because I am focussing on recording "Real" guitar tracks with my newly re-strung instrument).
But I did go to the Indiginus site and they have several other instruments a
$5 each. Imagine that. There is even a pair of nice sounding Electric Pianos for $5 (i.e. $2.50 each). I decided to try one of the $5 purchases and ordered the Nashville Electric Guitar, and am really thrilled with the product. It is limited and doesn't have articulations, but it sounds pretty damn good and was actually perfect for the song I am working on today. ALSO... it was the easiest PayPal experience ever. From the moment I added the Instrument to my cart, until the moment I was playing the instrument in Kontakt 3 was about 5 minutes or less. Real simple... and no authorization process required.
Thanks for turning me on!
