In Session Audio – Desert Guitars (WAV, RMX, REX, AIFF, KONTAKT)

By | June 9, 2024

 

Publisher: In Session Audio
Website: insessionaudio.com
Format: WAV, RMX, REX, AIFF, KONTAKT
Quality: 24 bit | 44.1 kHz | stereo


Description :
Desert Guitars is a library of loops designed for creating music that evokes images of the American Southwest. Ominous baritone guitars, twangy electrics and puffiness have become rounded with acoustics, resonator and mandolin, creating themes that are haunting and powerful.

Content :
Size: Approximately 1.2 GB for each format when uncompressed; inclusive of the Bonus Set.
Parts: 396; inclusive of the Bonus Set.
Sound: Dry. Kontakt users have a menu of reverb types and other effects that can be applied and modified.
Quality: Stereo 24 bit 44.1kHz
Available Formats: Kontakt, Apple Loops, Acid Wav, REX, Stylus RMX, Wav. Additional format information is available here.

Additional Information :
Desert Guitar is a loop library designed to create music that evokes images of the American Southwest.
Ominous baritone guitars, twangy electrics and swelling steel are rounded out with acoustics, resonator and mandolins, creating themes that are haunting and powerful.
Desert Guitar is the perfect companion for any composer writing for lonely highways, gunfighting outlaws, whiskey in the saloon, and more.

PRODUCER’S NOTES
“With the sounds of Ry Cooder and Ennio Moriconne in our heads, we set out to capture the musical vibe of the desert with our guitars.

The American Southwest is a wide and varied place, resulting in a range of suites with titles like “Tumbleweed Oasis”, “Bottom of the Bottle”, “The Showdown” and “Across the Border”.
Each suite combines three different stringed instruments that can be used individually or played together.

The Kontakt interface has been designed for the “desert guitar sound” by including a dual reverb signal path allowing the guitars to go from a “spring” verb into a studio/room/chamber sound. And of course there’s tremolo!

All acoustic instruments were recorded with Neumann KM 184 and Royer 122 microphones into Chandler Germanium preamps.”


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