Native Instruments' Elektrik Piano
Native Instruments' Elektrik Piano is a blast from the past. Are the sounds
classic or past their sell-by date...
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Information
Product: Elektrik Piano
Manufacturer: Native Instruments
Price: €199.00 $229.00 £149.99
Web: www.nativeinstruments.com
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There's no end to the wonderful things you can do with a sample
engine and some custom samples. Native Instruments has lately been found at the forefront of new soft instrument developments, partnering with
East West and Zero-G to create several sample-based instruments (links to follow). Now the company has developed its own instrument, complete with Teutonic Ks - the Elektrik Piano containing four
classic electronic pianos.
The box contains both PC and Mac software, and stand-alone and plug-in versions for VST 2, DXi, AudioUnit and RTAS. Installation
is easy. You select the plug-ins you want to install and the routine searches your hard disk for the correct folders. In typical NI
fashion, the program will stop working unless you register it although you do get a more sensible 30 days to do this rather than the five
days of some other NI software. However, registration is essential anyway in order to download the Direct From Disk extension which you
need to get the most from the software.
Wurlitzer one for the money...
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Go direct
Elektrik Piano contains a lot of samples and to hold them all in RAM would require an unfeasibly large amount of memory.
NI's DFD (Direct From Disk) extension can stream the samples from hard disk in real time allowing you to use
large-sample instruments on small-RAM systems.
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The program features the following piano sounds: Fender Rhodes Mk I and Mk II, the Hohner Clavinet E7,
and the Wurlitzer A200. The samples that make up these instruments have been carefully created with each note containing several velocity layers
and release samples. None of the samples use loops. The Mk I, Mk II and E7 feature five velocity layers and release samples while the A200 has
seven. The on-screen keyboard covers a six-octave range. The
original E7 and A200 keyboards weren't quite so large so these instruments have had their keyrange expanded to fill the six octaves. NI reasoned
that it was better to do this to give users the option of using a full six octaves than to limit the range for historical accuracy. And this
certainly makes sense as you can freely switch between pianos without worrying whether one is going to
run out of notes.
In addition to normal tuning, there are stretch tuned versions of all four
pianos. The human ear perceives tones in the upper keyboard range as being flat even though they may be correctly tuned. Piano tuners
compensate for this by 'stretch tuning' the upper notes.
The user interface is cute, generic vintage electric piano with Tuning, Pan and
Volume controls on the right. In the middle is an 'LCD" display which shows the current instrument preset and on the left are four control
knobs that vary according to the preset. For example, with the standard Mk I preset the controls are Speed, Stereo, Release Volume and Reverb.
Select the Mk I Saturator preset and they become Bass, Treble, Drive and Speed, while with the Mk I ADSR Envelope preset they become,
naturally, Attack, Decay, Sustain and Release.

Although the controls are fixed for each preset - you can't add a Phaser control,
for example, to the standard sound - the additions greatly increase the range of sounds each instrument can produce far beyond what was
possible with the raw original instruments. The ability to tweak the controls lets you customise the sound still further. If you really want
to play fast and loose with the sounds, you can import the samples and presets into NI's Kompakt sampler for full tweaking and editing
although that probably won't be high on most user's priority list.
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