Frodo wrote:On the VSL front, I actually have the new VSL Virtual Instrument!!! That's one investment which pleases me greatly. It set me back a "nickle or two", but I've been with VSL for a while. The new 24-bit series was about half price with my upgrade path.
I think you have to be an Austrian CPA to figure out these discounts. Peter Alexander, who was coordinator of the L.A. Beta test team for VSL said as much in his review of the VI:
http://www.soniccontrol.com/reviews/details.php?ID=99
I finally asked a dealer I often order from to figure it out for me. Has the Performance Tool been replaced, or is it still necessary?
I love tutorials-- the good ones, anyway. Too many of them stop short of being no more than product overviews rather than offering much in the way of true tutoring. As I watch and wait for more info on MachFive 2, K2 is sounding increasingly attractive, a great tutorial is a major plus. Granted, some may argue that no formal tutorial may be necessary for M5, but I'm not a believer in the term "document saturation". Bring it on!!
Nice to meet a kindred spirit. You definitely won't be disappointed in the K2 tutorial. I think I must have every book and tutorial ever produced on Logic, yet I still suffer its indignities. Martin Sitter's tutorial on the Environment reduced my anxiety level a bit, but when I set up Logic to interface with Gigasampler, it took several days and much handholding on various forums. George Leger has a good video on Logic, a bit on the elementary side, but very thorough and solid. No BS.
The other thing about K2 is that if it runs as a standalone, there is FINALLY a good reason for me to max out my RAM to 8GB. Getting add-ons to run outside of DP's 3-4 GB limit has been one of my biggest concerns.
I finaly bit the bullet and installed 8GB, but as you suggest, a lot of software can't take advantage of it. I think that standalone samplers like Kontakt can store unlimited amounts in RAM, but when they come up as a plug-in in DP or Logic, the host software calls the tune, as it were.
Now- Spectrasonics Trilogy, eh? Yours is quite a quote: And if you ever wanted to get just that right bass sound but couldn't find it.... Just checked out some of the demos. VERY nice ear candy!!
Yeah, it's absolutely addictive. I didn't know there could possibly be that many fine gradations of bass sounds.
I was thinking that it would be great if Roland (of all companies) would develop a software version of their XV-5080 with all of their expansion card libraries. For a piece of hardware, a loaded unit contains a vast amount of data that would be well-served by computer software management (I've had enough of the hard-to-read front panel buttons and menus). I still make great use of many of those sounds.
I don't have a lot of experience with hardware samplers, but I still have a Kawai K-5 that I bought a long time ago with a 2-square inch panel. You know, those weird dreamy and funky analog syth sounds are coming back, much to my surprise. I thought they had died with disco, but I'm hearing them in all styles of pop, rap, house, etc. I think I might have even heard some on Sergio Mendes's recent cut of Mas Que Nada with the Blackeyed Peas, one amazing production. Who would ever have thought of puttting those two together. Talk about different styles! But it works. I downloaded the whole album from iTunes.
So much to buy. So little cash.
Amen, brother.
Bill
G5 Dual 2GHz 8 MB RAM, Edirol UA-25; WIN P4 2MB RAM, RME 96/8 PST Pro; Giga Orchestra, MachFive, Kompakt2; EWQLSO Platinum XP, Colossus, RA; VSL Opus I & II; Project SAM Brass, True Strike; Sonic Implants Symphonic Collection; 1st Call Horns
DP 4.6; Logic Pro 7.1; Cubase SX 3