Space Age Pop! - Walkthrough (version 2)
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- Опубликовано: 19 окт 2023
- A full walkthrough of the Kontakt instruments included in Space Age Pop!
Learn more about the library here:
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How to use the WAV format construction kits.
• Space Age Pop! -- Usin...
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0:24 Introduction
1:36 Construction Kit player
5:52 Percussion Kit player
6:58 One-shot player
8:53 Checkout out some of the one-shot content
15:13 Basic instruments overview
16:41 Bass
17:09 Bossa guitar chords
17:47 Drums
19:02 Organ chords
19:25 Organ sustains
20:21 Percussion ensemble 1
21:34 Tips for programming percussion
22:46 Percussion ensemble 2
23:32 Solo trombone
24:14 Solo trumpet
25:08 Timpani - Видеоклипы
This is on my Christmas list. Getting the actual vintage articulations is so hard to actually do with most libraries, even specialty ones (see Swing!, Swing More!, and Glory Days). Great job!
Great work! Mixed (shaken not stirred) with Space Age Rhythm and you got yourself a real hep time machine!
Is there much crossover between this and Space Age Rhythm? (That I own and love)
Great question! The two libraries definitely inhabit the same musical world, and were recorded simultaneously so that the tone of the instruments will match perfectly.
The main difference is in the sampling approach: Space Age Rhythm is all playable multi-sample patches, whereas Space Age Pop is loop and phrase-based. There's essentially no overlap in terms of the actual samples. A few of the basic instruments in S.A. Pop are like "lite" versions of the S.A. Rhythm instruments.
The other difference is that Space Age Rhythm only has rhythm section instruments, while Space Age Pop also has horns, strings, harp, vibraphone, and woodwinds....but presented in the form of loops or phrase/one-shot samples. I hope that answers your question. Maybe I should do a video about the differences....
When you’re using one shot mode is that sampling the instruments in key?
Hi there, check out this section where I demonstrate this. The lower yellow keys play the unmodified version of the sample at its original pitch, while the upper yellow keys play the sample pitched to the key you've played. You'll notice that the single purple key in that upper range moves for each sample, to let you know what the original root key for the sample was (so you have an idea of how drastically its being pitched up/down). ruclips.net/video/N7pr-ru7JRo/видео.html
@@authenticsoundware purchased. Thank you and keep making amazing products!