{"id":41985,"date":"2021-01-21T23:35:22","date_gmt":"2021-01-21T18:05:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/worldfreeware.com\/?p=41985"},"modified":"2021-01-21T23:35:22","modified_gmt":"2021-01-21T18:05:22","slug":"kirk-hunter-studios-lyric-series-string-quintet-kontakt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/psd-ly.com\/kirk-hunter-studios-lyric-series-string-quintet-kontakt\/","title":{"rendered":"Kirk Hunter Studios Lyric Series String Quintet KONTAKT"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Kirk
\nWhile there are plenty of good-sounding solo string libraries out there, I found it interesting that for me, a professional string player, it took a lot of \u201cfiddling\u201d with the instrument to get really musical phrases and melody lines. It was easy to get nice \u201cpads\u201d and \u201cfillers\u201d for sure, but I really wanted a believable single, melody line. Nothing out there, not even my older libraries, seemed to capture that certain essence you hear when listening to a professional player unless you took a lot of time to tweak whatever you were working on. And live-playing? No way. Not \u201cout of the box\u201d anyway.
\nINTUITIVE, STRING-ORIENTED LEGATO TRANSITIONS<\/strong>
\nLegato Discussion \u2013 Valiant efforts have indeed been made over the years using all kinds of \u201clegato\u201d and \u201cinterval\u201d tricks and whatnot. Some are very nice, but still fall short. Others do capture the right \u201csound\u201d, but the resulting performance always, at least to me, sounds \u201cclunky\u201d, \u201cbumpy\u201d or only sounds good when played at certain tempos.
\nSo in analyzing what string players do, it seems that a myriad variables came to play\u2026so to speak. Bowing, slurring, vibrato (amount, speed and fade-in time), string crossing, left-hand-shifting, and more. With so many of these variables, it is hard to recognize a pattern so as to emulate this in a digital instrument. In fact, at this point in time, it\u2019s impossible. However, certain occurrences take place often enough to tell the listener, \u201cyes, I hear this as a professional stringed instrument performance.\u201d, that one could, in essence, focus on those, and implement them judiciously. It\u2019s like putting in a few \u201caha\u201d features that make for realism.
\nSo how has this been emulated so far? The best of them go to great lengths in using \u201clegato\u201d technology. That\u2019s great, except that with string players, it\u2019s never the same. Sometimes, there\u2019s a string crossing, sometimes a hand shift, sometimes a bow change.. and on and on. The easy ones to mimmic are the \u201cslurred\u201d or \u201cfingered\u201d transitions. That\u2019s because the player does not \u201cbow\u201d the interval, and does not shift the left hand during small intervals. So the \u201clegato\u201d transition is easy to capture. The trouble begins during the many transitions that happen during separate bowing or when a player shifts the left hand.
\nWhile there is no easy way to capture all of these details, the one thing that seems to be loudly apparent is the sound that happens when string players play larger intervals on the same string. (Especially cellos) It\u2019s not really a true portamento and does not always happen. It seems to occur most when the players need to move their left hand up or down from it\u2019s current position to achieve the note. We have calculated certain probabilities of this happening during certain types of playing styles, and have successfully, to a point, implemented them into the instruments of the Lyric Series String Quintet. And it\u2019s all very dynamic depending on the way you play.
\nUNRIVALED VIBRATO CONTROL<\/strong>
\nAnd then, there\u2019s the issue of vibrato. I know of no professional string player who uses the same vibrato amount, speed or fade-in time statically. In trying to capture vibrato, most of the time, (if handled at all) it is by means of assigning vibrato to a controller. Usually, this is just the amount of vibrato and nothing else. That can become clunky due to having to ride the controller back and forth without affecting incoming or outgoing notes, which can be quite difficult to do, and rarely comes off as very natural. Another way of handling this issue has been to have the samples be \u201cbaked in\u201d with the performer\u2019s own vibrato. If you happen to love that particular performer\u2019s style, then you\u2019re set. If not, you have no options. Sometimes, some \u201cno vibrato\u201d samples are included whereby you can transition to and from them. But most of the time, one can hear the crossfades and thereby loses the \u201csoloistic\u201d desired sound.
\nThe Lyric Series String Quintet instruments (except the Romantic Guarnerius Violin) all analyze your playing style and handle all three vibrato parameters (amount, speed and fade-in) accordingly so as to give you the closest approximation of a real string player\u2019s style.
\nREALISTIC BOW CHANGES<\/strong>
\nThen there is the bowing. As stated before, there are some decent \u201cfingered\u201d or \u201cslurred\u201d legato treatments out there. However, the ones that attempt to handle separate bowing suffer more, especially violins. The problem is that most ears out there want to hear smooth fluid transitions with little or no separation. But go listen to real performances with separated bowing. They\u2019re not usually fluid, especially at faster tempos. It seems that the few libraries out there which have tackled this problem with some, if little, degree of success have been met with negative critique, falling to claims that the \u201clegato\u201d is too abrupt or bumpy. The Lyric Series Strings Quintet instruments provide you with realistic bow changes. By default, they are markedly separate and distinct. But if you prefer, you can certainly \u201cconnect\u201d the bowing for a more \u201cfluid\u201d phrase if you want. And of course, \u201cslurred\u201d or \u201cfingered\u201d legato is also available.
\nI want to send a special thanks to HR Strings for their contribution to the Gagliano Cello.<\/p>\n

Unique Key Features:<\/h2>\n