Thanks for the review. Great job as always!
All sound amazing
this is nice, i'm gonna try it out.
Hi. You are amazing. You load up a VST, hit the keyboard, and it sounds like awesome.
As a metal drummer hobbyist musician - kind of .... - exploring the edrum and VST, music production world I am at a point where I grab these instruments and just having fun to play with then. I mean for 29$... even if I just use it one single evening and try out different things a couple of hours. Nice, like other guys go to cinema or whatever. Haha.
@HLEET Yeah. But it is. Here in Germany the movie is 12-15$, plus a drink 5$ , popcorn 4$, nachos 8$ plus parking and fuel....
Haha. And for my family I have to multiply everything by 5.
I'm no flautist, but I'm pretty sure Spr Rvrb is spring reverb, not super reverb 🙂 Also, Tightness seems to be dulling the attack (the initial transient) of the short samples, making them softer/duller. Keep in mind, I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice!
Does it have Duduk?
It sounds really good in the video ! I like the fact that you can play 2 keys at the same time (which is not commonly available on other flute vsti).
It's just that for 29$ ... why now ? I already have a bunch of other flutes that doesn't sound as good as this one and costs 10 times this price each. I feel ripped-off by Native-instrument, amplesound and audiomodeling companies :/... Anyway, let's buy it lol. By the way they have a lot more "original series", interesting.
@@HOBBITSODYSSEY Okay, I admit that Amplesound have a lot of variation that you can key trigger. But at the end, who really cares ? Listeners might not even notice the difference, maybe only the super nerdy elite music listener can appreciate the difference between the two.
@@hleetAs far as I know, SWAM is the only one that doesn’t let you play polyphonically. Ample Sound’s flutes have keyboard mode which lets you play polyphonically. What I like about rare flutes is that it’s just a plug and play instrument that you can quickly pull up to add some nice sound to your track. Ample Sound’s flutes are professional level instruments that are highly expressive and can be programmed to replace the real thing in most scenarios. They’re both good in their respective contexts, but Ample Sound’s is definitely at another level.
@@hifimidi Thanks for the precisions. I have the Original Rare flute now in my library, I was disapointed by the fact that most flute doesn't have any way to stop the Vibrato ! It's very annoying to have constantly the vibrato on the flute ... I don't know if it's some kind of V1.0 thing that will change in the future ... or maybe it's a way to tell you to upgrade to their much expensive software instead ! As you said, rare flutes is a plug and play instrument that can quickly put some nice sound on my tracks, so it might be useful... but man, vibrato all the time and can't switch it off ? geez ... what were they thinking !?
I have bought Spitfire Epic Choir and it's also amazing for $29.