Computer Music

Garritan Personal Orchestra 5 £99

This all-in-one orchestral instrument has a great pedigree, but how will the latest version fare in a market that’s more competitiv­e than ever?

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Garritan Personal Orchestra (AAX/VST/AU/ standalone) is an all-in-one orchestral library aimed at those wanting to program convincing symphonic parts on a budget. Version 4 (9/10, 147) included a 2GB sample set (piano, woodwind, harp, percussion, pipe organ, brass and strings), around 300 instrument presets, and 28 ensemble presets.

GPO5 ups the ante somewhat with a 12.5GB sample bank and just over 500 instrument­s, including everything in GPO4 and new additions across all categories except woodwind. There have also been a few improvemen­ts to Aria Player, which has a new look, drag-and-drop patch loading, and improved dynamic transition­ing between sample layers (a system dubbed Sonic Morphing).

There’s also a new Convolutio­n reverb with 27 sampled spaces, including six concert halls, and various chapels, ballrooms and scoring studios. This shares Aria Player’s one auxiliary send with the existing Ambience algorithmi­c reverb, which also gains proper high- and lowfrequen­cy EQ and Damping. Although both reverbs are of good quality, the single send and basic Mixer features (Level, Pan, Mute, Solo and Send) are GPO5’s one major weak spot.

String machine

Among the significan­t additions to the GPO5 sound library are three new Steinway pianos – a well-balanced Concert D, a mellower Concert D, and a very lively Studio B. Two new sets of timpani provide a bright and a more rounded option, while a set of four orchestral toms with single hit, roll and flam articulati­ons further expand the percussion palette. The new pipe organ, Custom Organ Console, includes 74 stops, and the choir sample set now includes a selection of Aah, Ooh, Oh and Eeh articulati­ons across six sections (soprano, alto, tenor, bass, boys and children). Among the main brass instrument­s (trumpet, French horn, trombone and tuba) are some excellent solo and ensemble marcato, staccato and sustain patches courtesy of Project SAM. Oh, and there’s a new harp (Concert Grand), which uses MIDI controller­s to mimic the pedals of the real thing.

The biggest addition, though, is a significan­t chunk of the original Garritan Orchestral Strings library, comprising a vast array of sonically consistent articulati­ons, both as individual and keyswitche­d patches, and ranging from solo instrument­s and small sections (two to six players), to much bigger ensembles and a full orchestral string section. Throw in first and second violins and you have the sort of sonic flexibilit­y that’s often lacking in string libraries at this price point. What’s more, with quick loading (the whole Garritan Orchestral Strings bank is a nimble 4GB), string programmin­g feels even more achievable and fun.

GPO5 is a solid if not earth-shattering update, and although the mixer could be more powerful, at this price, that’s by no means a deal-breaker. The dynamic transition­ing in GPO4 was already good, and the improvemen­ts to it are subtle but welcome. Overall, version 5 continues the software’s tradition of value and flexibilit­y, and is a superb option for the thrifty producer looking for quality orchestral sounds in a flexible, easyto-use package. Web www.timespace.com Info Upgrade from GPO4, £38

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