Octatrack review: Elektron's sampler after the first week


The Octatrack has caused quite a buzz since its introduction. We got a new collaborator on board, he's one of the lucky early owners (and not new to Elektron's stuff, by the way). We asked him to tell us his impressions after the first week with this new instrument (and we also got him to take a rough "demo-performance" video while doing the test).
Here we go...


As you may know, the Octatrack it's a 'performance sampler', a kind of swiss army knife of samplers, designed to make audio mangling, looping, and so forth easy; and to facilitate live performances for electronic musicians, enhance DJ sets, and the like. Realtime slicing and tempo changes, pitch shifting and time stretching, and a variety of filters and effects are onboard, and all at one's fingertips thanks to the (relatively) simple controls. You can read about the specs at Elektron's website, or, frankly, all over the internet, so I won't rehash that here.
Instead, I'll give you my impressions of the first week or so I've spent with it, and cover the good, the quirky, and the bad of this fascinating piece of equipment. I'll start with the bad, and work backwards.


The bad

First things first, early adopters of the Octatrack are in for a few unpleasant surprises: there is no MIDI sequencing functionality in the shipped Elektron (there is a MIDI clock out). It is running V.099 of the software. Elektron has a great history of refining and providing updates to its products, and have promised the 'MIDI machines' in Q1 of 2011.
In addition, the promised 'real time sampling' is a bit confusing and not quite what it seems; there's a large series of steps needed to create a sample from a 'realtime' source, and it's not the instantaneous experience it should be. Again, this is something that can be rectified with a software update, but in the meantime, be prepared to do a little preparation to sample things 'in real time'.

Also, I found the manual confusing. Elektron products all have similar operating metaphors (you have what amounts to a 16 step sequencer, each sequencer is connected to a 'machine' which performs a specific function, etc), but it's often difficult to figure out exactly what button combination to press to work some of the Octatrack's magic. For example, It's possible to set the crossfader to select specific slices of a given sample very quickly, but the method for doing this isn't made very clear. Part of this comes from an insane amount of flexibility, and the manual is geared towards describing generalities (it's possible to set up the crossfader to control almost ANY parameter, and even specify the range it controls). I think a few specific examples would help things.

The good
Having said all that, this machine is deep, powerful, and very cool. I've spent a week with it, and I am just coming to terms with it's possibilities. There are two main machines for sample playback- "flex" and "static". Flex machines load right into the onboard RAM, whilst static stream from the Compact Flash card. Flex machines offer additional parameter choices (right now, this is limited to the sample start position). True to Elektron form, each parameter can be "locked" at each step, allowing you to make changes to individual steps in a sequence, or even changing a sample for a given step.

Almost everything can be assigned to an LFO, as well. Flex machine based samples can be sliced, for example, and then the 'start play' position can be set onto an LFO, making instant glitchy beats. Adding slices and LFO-driven filters to melodic samples transform them rapidly into unrecognizable new sounds. Careful manipulation of these parameters open up new possibilities, and it's fairly easy to find yourself playing with very simple sample sets for a long period of time. Here, I've taken a familiar sample, sliced it, placed random slices on the individual steps, then lastly added a filter with an LFO controlling one of the paramaters; by the end, the sample is completely transformed. Note that this was done in about a minute, and is more 'demo' than 'performance'.



It also works very well as a simple 'playback' or looping machine. Loops can be made to fit the tempo, or within a certain number of bars; artifacting of the sound only begins when the samples are timeshifted to an extreme degree, meaning adjustments to backing tracks or lengthier samples can be done without worrying about off-sounding music. Here I've taken a death metal song, and slowed it down then sped it back up so you can hear the timestretch in action. This was done with one of the "Static" machines, which is capable of holding very long samples.



The honeymoon goes on
Combine some straight forward samples with the Octatrack's audio mangling possibilities, and you can create 'on the fly' remixes of yours or other's material; use the optical fader to control parameters, tweak settings and add in some of the onboard effects, and, with minimal preparation, your sets can really go places. It's ideal for someone like me, who makes computer based music, and is looking to take it live without being stuck behind a laptop. But I can also envision it working well in a studio setting for quick 'pattern breaking', creation of breakbeats, or as an effects box.
Even without the promised updates, the Octatrack has a lot more to explore. I haven't worked too much with the effects, outside of the filter and the two equalizers (a 'DJ' style and Parametric EQ), or used the 'Neighbor' machine (which allows larger effects chains) at all, and I am just coming to grips with the LFO routing possibilities. It's really an amazing set of tools, in one compact package. There are a few gotchas, as but once the updates arrive, I'm fairly confident this little box will become indispensable. As it stands right now, it's simply awesome.

By Todd Elliott
You can find Todd's music on his Bandcamp page and follow him on Twitter

iZotope Nectar review: all in one Vocal Production Tool


iZotope is one of those software companies who keep bringing us well designed, dedicated tools that when we have them, we think how did we live without this!
Just check out the detailed review of the Izotope RX plugin we did and look right back to the early release of sample manipulator pHATmatik PRO to see how these tools they are producing are specific but extremely versatile. I for one still love and widely use the pHATmatik, and now they bring us Nectar. The all in one vocal production package (Windows/Mac, VST, MAS, Audio Unit, DirectX) which turns out to be no exception from the rest of their tools. Im sure I will be using this one for sometime yet.



Styles and Genres
Nectar neatly comes with 11 diverse vocal production effects and styles right inside the plugin that provide us with key starting points depending on the type of track you are working with. This ultimately gives you one plug-in that's designed to give you immediate results utilising automatic pitch correction, manual note editor, breath control, a gate, compressors, saturation, EQ, a de-esser, doubler, a limiter, reverb, and delay. Each preset takes these and provides you with the correct settings, ranges, modules and parameters in order to get a vocal sound within that particular style. Often I found that these were good starting points and I almost started editing them immediately to taste and in some cases the genres didnt fit at all for what I was doing. iZotope give us a randomise button for this ad let these modules do some talking of their own!



Here are some examples:

Stadium Rock Vocals


Large reverbed vocal preset


Autotune style


Radio effect


To view and edit any particular module (effect), single click on the individual module buttons on the left hand side of Nectar's interface and by clicking on the orange power icon on the right hand side of each module will turn the corresponding module On and Off. What I found particularly useful was the ability to Solo each module to hear what it is doing on its own without any other processing and the ability to re-order the modules by simply clicking and dragging couldn't be easier. Like most of us, we want ultimate control over the way we produce anything and iZotope are not shy to this within any of their plugins. Switching to Nectar's Advanced View provides you with direct access to all of Nectar's processing modules and their controls.


Modules available include:

DE-ESSER
The Ess slider will allow you to define the amount of De-Essing that will be applied to your incoming audio. Nectar's De-Esser will apply the same amount of Ess reduction regardless of the incoming audio level and as such, there is no need for threshold or level based controls.
BREATH
Once the vocal take is saturated, compressed or limited, the singers breathing can become loud and abrasive while the vocal take itself might be just the sound you're looking for. The Breath Control module can allow you to reduce the gain of these brea ths, while keeping the sung vocals untouched. The Breath Control module will automatically detect breaths in your vocal takes and suppress them. This can be an essential tool when trying to get a very intimate or aggressive vocal sound that requires the singer to be very close to their microphone. This is a real killer feature and although I was slighlty jubious atbout how this would actually affect the audio sonically I was mighty impressed. This will save me a lot of time drawing in automation data to supres any unwanted breaths.



Here is the Stadium Rock Vocal but with the vocal suppression


GATE
You can raise the Threshold of Nectar's Gate in order to reduce the gain of any low level signals in your audio.
PITCH CORRECTION
"iZotope has leveraged years of research into pitch shifting to develop high quality automatic and graphical pitch correction. The result is natural sounding correction with simple user controls for making subtle adjustments to tuning or reworking a melody."
Allows you to access Nectar’s Automatic pitch correction. Use these controls to adjust the correction speed as well as the scale and root note that your incoming vocals will be corrected to. You can also click the Manual Editor button in order to capture and manually edit any particular note in your audio just as you might do with other autotune plugins.. 


Enhance
Reconfigured depending on your chosen Genre and Style, use these modules to bring out and sculpt your incoming vocals to fit your session and style.
LEVELS
Use the Preamp and Loudness sliders to adjust the settings and timbres created at the beginning of your vocal chain.
Increase the Preamp control in order to bring up the initial gain of your vocals as well as add in extra color to fit your chosen style. Depending on the Style, this can be achieved by Saturating the signal with certain harmonic profiles, adjusting certain aspects of the EQ contour, or with style appropriate compression controls.
The Loudness slider is most often used to bring up the overall comparative loudness of your incoming vocal audio. In most styles, this is done by adjusting varied compression parameters and other dynamics controls such as Limiting in order to even out your audio’s dynamic range.
SPACE
Whether with added Reverb or Delay, the Space module’s controls can help to add depth and shine to your dry incoming audio. The particular flavor and timbre of the spatial processing that is added will be tailored to suit your particular chosen Genre and Style.
Use the controls to adjust how much processing will be added, the size of that processing, and how dark or bright the added space will be.
"CREATIVE"
Unique to each Genre and Style, the “Creative” module of Nectar’s Main View can represent any number of different audio processes, all designed to further enhance or bring your particular style in a new direction. Using combinations of doubling processing, EQ contours, creative delays and echoes, extra dynamics controls, or varied saturation profiles, the “Creative” controls act as a compliment to the Levels and Space modules.
Equalizer
Adjust any of Nectar's EQ nodes in order to shape your sound to fit into your mix. Click and drag to alter the frequency and gain of any node, and use the node brackets or the mouse-wheel to adjust the Q of that particular node.



Mixing and Tracking

In order to achieve accurate and high quality processing inside of Nectar, certain modules require a larger amount of cpu usage and imposed latency (delay) upon your tracks. In general, this imposed latency is compensated for by your host audio application, aligning your tracks and preserving the timing of your audio with respect to your session. I noticed when using Nectar that it was instantly a heavy load on the processor I wondered how we would be hit in terms of latency, especially if I wanted to track with the plugin in action! Thankfully Nectar comes with both Tracking and Mixing modes which configure Nectar's algorithms under the hood for exactly this.
Mixing
The default state of Nectar, all modules will be available for use and higher quality but more cpu intensive processes will be used.
Tracking
If near zero latency processing and lighter cpu usage are required either in a recording or live scenario, engaging Tracking mode will configure Nectar to run quickly and efficiently.
In Tracking mode, the following changes will occur:
Pitch Correction - Only Automatic Pitch Correction will be available and a streamlined pitch correction algorithm will be used.
Doubler - A lower latency and less cpu intensive doubling algorithm will be used.
Limiter - The underlying algorithm is changed to a zero-latency Brickwall
Breath Control - This module is disabled as a high latency is required for its operation. When in Tracking mode, the Breath Control module will automatically be bypassed.
In order for the Breath Control module to have time to perform its analysis, it must incur a good deal of latency. The result of this latency is that the incoming audio is delayed in time with respect to the other tracks in your session. When tracking (recording) your incoming audio, if Nectar is in Mixing mode and the Breath Control module is engaged, the latency of the Breath Control module will cause a delay between when the audio comes in to your computer, and when it passes through Nectar. In these instances, be sure to switch Nectar into Tracking mode.
I, being interested in the misuse of many items in my studio, decided to run some drum samples through the different presets just to see what this would do.

Rock Drums


Nice Drums


Motown Drums


HipHop Drums


Conclusion
Nectar is definitely a comprehensive and well engineered plugin. Ultimately this is aimed at vocal production but I feel that this has a place within any instruments heart. The preamp and saturation capabilities would work really well on bass, and I could use the pitch shifting for tight and concise synth lines. The reverb to me is a little 'white noise' sounding, a little like those low end plugins which do not necessarily add room to your sound but white noise instead. The delays are excellent and the ability to change the order of the effects is a cool feature. Like I said - how did I live without this plugin?

Price
$299

...Nectar is definitely a comprehensive and well engineered plugin…


Product page

PROS
  • Excellent range of effects to get the sound you need
  • All in one package, no need for other processing
  • Sounds great

LOVE IT OR HATE IT
  • You may already have your own way of producing vocals and a set of plugins you tend to use, then you may find this slightly alienating
CONS
  • Hard on the processor
  • Reverbs sound a little cheap
  • Not cheap, but it may help you saving quite a lot of precious time

Bowed Grand Piano review: not your usual piano sample library


Tonehammer is fast becoming one of my favourite sample library companies that consistently provide fantastic, innovative and unique-sounding products, at a very fair price to the consumer.
One of the later additions to their Piano family is the bowed piano, which is what it says - a piano that has been bowed (amongst other things) with 3 metre fishing line, instead of played the more traditional way, with fingers.

The "package"
The pack is a download only software, weighing in at 1.4GB, and will work on Native instruments Kontakt player version 4 and higher.
The installation process is simple, (although leave some time for the download, especially if your internet access is not the best), this time operating through Native instruments Service center, where you activate the library. It then shows up in the list of libraries in Kontakt.
There are 3 main bowed piano instrument sets - one with a long release tail, a shorter release, and a staccato set. Each of these three have 'lite' versions, to conserve CPU if you're running a tight ship. Additionally, there are FX and Drone Folders, with an extra 34 sound sets between them.

How it sounds
The main sounds are absolutely fantastic. Recorded with the same piano as the Emotional piano they are smooth, deep samples, and in the usual tonehammer scripting brilliance, they are easily tweakable from the performance GUI right there in Kontakt. As you might suspect from a piano, bowing the strings creates piano-like sounds with a slow attack, and are extremely resonant and harmonically rich. One nice addition is a performance legato mode - which enables you to play very smooth phrases even though it would be impossible in reality. Other changeable parameters are the attack and release, pedal dampening, and some dynamic control.



The drones were perhaps my favourite of the soundsets. They are a mixed bunch - predominantly all fairly dark intense pad sounds. But there are some that are more ethereal and I could see a lot of these blended with other pads to create some beautiful atmospheric soundscapes. They are very tweakable, and for the brooding tense atmospheres you might be in need of creating, these sounds are just perfect. Loads of organic grit, subtle distortion and drive, evolving paddy type sounds. One little performance script I loved here was the use of the Mod wheel as a swell. It enables a lot more expressive use of the drones in performance.

The FX are classed as 'bonus' material to the main library, but I thought there were some excellent sounds in there. They are mostly various types of glissandos, running various articles (picks, fingers, nails, mallets) over the strings. There is a set of hits - the sounds of parts of the piano being tapped, slapped or shut, creating an interesting bunch of clicks and hits. The use of keyswitch here is excellent. For a lot of these sets, each note is a different sample entirely (a totally different hit, or scrape, etc.) So the bottom half of the keyboard is devoted to keyswitching - enabling you to set the key of any of the samples that you play, so that they fit harmonically in whatever music you slot them into. You can also tweak the keyswitch to suit your needs. Very nice.

The convolution reverb is very tasty for the included price, and the various rooms simulated, such as the slightly more quirky 'stairwell' as well as the obligatory 'catherdral' all have very distinct characteristics that draw plenty of differences out of the sounds.

Conclusion

The tones, timbres and crazy harmonics that are created from this library are just phenomenal. Some really eerie, haunting sounds emanate from the various patches available in this library. For something that creates long sounds that are organic, familiar, but not instantly recognisable - this is a great sample set to have up your sleeve.

Price
$79

... They are very tweakable, and for the brooding tense atmospheres you might be in need of creating, these sounds are just perfect...


Product page

PROS
  • Unique sounding samples for use within a wide variety of genres, not least film, TV and video game stuff
  • Brilliant price
  • very flexible - lots of parameters to mess with/ great convolution reverb
LOVE IT OR HATE IT
  • If you're looking for unique ambience and atmosphere for your music, definitely worth the try.

CONS
  • compatible with Native instruments Kontakt player only
 

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