Cinematic Guitars From Sample Logic

US Kontakt based guitar instrument      18/08/10

Buying Choices
Affilliate Links help support the site

 

Aimed at film, TV, game and electronic composers, Cinematic Guitars has 9GB of sounds derived entirely from true electric and acoustic guitar recordings by guitar guru Steve Ouimette. It is an  extensive collection of atmospheres, instrumentals, and percussive sounds.


CINEMATIC GUITARS FEATURES

 

  • Over 1,000 instruments and multis recorded and processed at 48k/24 bit, delivered at 44.1k/24-bit.
  • 9 GB sample library (uncompressed), 5.8 GB via Kontakt’s lossless sample storage compression.
  • Instruments include:
  • Atmosphere/ambient soundscapes and stinger construction kits.
  • Morphed guitars, synths, and pads.
  • Melodic and percussive tempo-synced loops.
  • Melodic and percussive arpeggiated/gated instruments.
  • Percussive impacts, big hit ensembles, and kits.
  • Swipes, scrapes, and reverse transitional effects.
  • Performance-ready multis (playable interactive preset templates made from multiple instruments).
  • Over 125 score-ready multis.

 

Available to pre-order for $399.99 USD. 

Shipping September 15th, direct download version will be available September 22nd.


 

 

 



< More From: SAMPLE LOGIC
Even more news...


 

Want Our Newsletter?



More...

Featured Video

Brand new super-synth from UDO


Featured Video

Virtual knobs and jacks controlling over 160 virtual modules


Featured Video

Now ready for preorder


Featured Video

The sampler pedal that listens and moves with you


Featured Video

The Mantis has arrived


Featured Video

Bi-timbral noise-based soft synth with a wide range of possibilities


Software Synths that Became Hardware! 

Sometimes, the soft becomes hard


VST Live 2 and Live Performing


Competition: WIN FabFilter Bundles & Plug-ins! 

Prizes worth over €1100! Enter now


New developments for Waldorf's M 

Waldorf's hybrid synth has quite the development story


And more


5 Minutes With - Wavesequencer Hyperion 

Modular soft-synth