The making of museplayer, A - concept, B- sampling gear – Muse Research MusePlayer manual v1.0 User Manual

Page 24: The result, English 24

Advertising
background image

The making of MusePlayer

A - Concept

We started the MusePlayer

project by surveying the

market of keyboards to

determine the most impor-

tant "meat and potatoes"

sounds required by most

keyboardist. We then sear-

ched the massive UVI sam-

ple libary for suitable ins-

truments, and if they

weren't there, we captured

them using various synthesizers, sample libraries, and live

players. The result is a mighty sound set that dwarfs what you

find in a typcial workstation keyboard, with over 2 Gigabytes

of the best synths sounds available. That’s what makes

MusePlayer unique.

B- Sampling gear

It's always surprising to disco-

ver how faithful sampling can

be. The unique character and

the power of each synth is

immediately heard. Our sound

designers used the best hard-

ware equipment to capture

every detail of the synth

sounds. Esoteric preamps and

converters were used to cap-

ture the samples. The synth audio signal was also massaged

with tube or class A compressors and equalizers, depending

on what sounded best. Sampling is really the best technology

available today for sounds that are larger than life.

All our expensive outboard gear will improve anything, it's not

just for million-dollar vocal sessions. The ultimate signal chain

employed has produced incredibly dynamic and lively synth

sounds, turning the heads of everyone who has heard them.

We've devoted about 4 GB to the vast array of instruments

that MusePlayer covers, from stellar Acoustic Pianos to searing

lead synths, to pop brass and electronic drums. Sampling

allows MusePlayer to cover an amazingly diverse panel of

synthesis technique and unite them in just one instrument.

Synthesisers used to create sounds in MusePlayer

Roland: Jupiter 4 & Jupiter 8, SH-101, JD800 & JD990 / Yamaha:

CS80, CS60, CS15, CS40-M & CS70M. DX1, DX100, TX816, FS1R

/ Oberheim: X-Pander, Matrix 6, 4 Voices, OBXa / Sequential

Circuits : Prophet VS, Prophet 5, Prophet One, T8 / PPG : Wave

2.0, Wave 2.3, Waveterm B, PRK FD, EVU, HDU & Commander /

Korg : PS3200, Trident MK2, MS20, M1, O1W, DW8000 / Casio :

CZ1, CZ100, VZ1 & VZ10M / Moog: Minimoog & Memorymoog

/ ARP: Odissey, ARP2600, Chroma / Waldorf: Pulse, Wave,

Microwave XT, Q & Micro Q / Misc: Synclavier II, Technos Acxel,

Mellotron M400, Acces Virus, Kawai K5000... and more !

Recording gear & software used for MusePlayer

Manley Massive Passive and SLAM with 192 kHz converters,

Langevin Dual Combo, Apogee Big Ben & Roseta 800, Lexicon

300, Focusrite ISA430mkII with 192 kHz converters, Publison

Infernal Machine 90, SPL Transient Designer & Tube Vitaliser,

Pro Tools, Digital Performer, MachFive, Bias Peak, WaveLab,

Infinity, Izotope RX2... and more !

The Result

MusePlayer is primarily a Wavetable synthesizer that utilizes

waveforms that have come from all types of synthesizers,

which are then combined with Analog synthesizer envelopes,

filters, and advanced effects. As such, MusePlayer is the "best

of all worlds" synthesizer that gives you immense amounts of

creative freedom without the drawbacks of having to create

complex waveforms from scratch. As a result, the soundset

covers all styles of instruments, from Analog Basses, digital

leads, FM pianos, additive organs, vector pads, and of course

remarkably detailed sampled instruments for pianos, strings,

horns, and other acoustic instruments.

English 24

Advertising