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Blasphemous Request for an opinion

Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-04 by Rawl

I know most of you are fortunate enough to OWN one of these great 
instruments but since I don't at the moment own one myself I would 
like to get the next best thing in the form of a sample library.

The thought of using a sample library instead of the real thing 
might sound Blasphemous to any Mellotron owner/purist but not all of 
us are lucky enough to own a piece of musical history and since I 
truly love the unique characteristic sound of a Mellotron and would 
like to be able to employ it in some of my sequenced compositions, a 
sample library is the only way I will be able to get even close for 
now.

Anyway, I would really like an opinion from anyone in the group on 
Emu's Mellotron (Vintage X Pro Vol 2) sample library if anyone is 
familiar with it.  Or, if there is a suggestion for a better sample 
library than Emu's for use with Emulator X which can read most 
sample formats.

So please, I am asking the group of folks most likely to be able to 
render a truly expert opinion.  What would you suggest?  (Be gentle)

Sincerely,
Rawl

Re: [newmellotrongroup] Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-04 by john barrick

Though I have no personal experience with them (I've heard a couple of 
the voices and they sounded pretty good), the general consensus of the 
list is that the best commercially available samples of the mellotron 
are contained on the Mike Pinder Presents CD.  The CD contains full 
length note for note Samples of  a wide variety of Mellotron and 
Chamberlin  tapesets and is available from Mellotron Archives - I think 
it runs something like $200.
Best,
john barrick
1407

Rawl wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> I know most of you are fortunate enough to OWN one of these great
> instruments but since I don't at the moment own one myself I would
> like to get the next best thing in the form of a sample library.
>
> The thought of using a sample library instead of the real thing
> might sound Blasphemous to any Mellotron owner/purist but not all of
> us are lucky enough to own a piece of musical history and since I
> truly love the unique characteristic sound of a Mellotron and would
> like to be able to employ it in some of my sequenced compositions, a
> sample library is the only way I will be able to get even close for
> now.
>
> Anyway, I would really like an opinion from anyone in the group on
> Emu's Mellotron (Vintage X Pro Vol 2) sample library if anyone is
> familiar with it. Or, if there is a suggestion for a better sample
> library than Emu's for use with Emulator X which can read most
> sample formats.
>
> So please, I am asking the group of folks most likely to be able to
> render a truly expert opinion. What would you suggest? (Be gentle)
>
> Sincerely,
> Rawl
>
>

Re: [newmellotrongroup] Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-04 by jeffc@netaxs.com

On Tue, 4 Dec 2007, john barrick wrote:

> Though I have no personal experience with them (I've heard a couple of
> the voices and they sounded pretty good), the general consensus of the
> list is that the best commercially available samples of the mellotron
> are contained on the Mike Pinder Presents CD.  The CD contains full
> length note for note Samples of  a wide variety of Mellotron and
> Chamberlin  tapesets and is available from Mellotron Archives - I think
> it runs something like $200.
> Best,
> john barrick
> 1407


i second that recommendation, as i'm sure many others will.
when it's inconvenient to use the real thing, it's the next
best thing. no need to apologize for looking for an alternative.

note that the CDROM is n akai format.
[not just the sounds, but the disc format itself.]
i don't know if the software you plan on using supports that
format or not - it's up to you to figure that out, though
there are a few translation apps around, notably cdxtract:

http://www.cdxtract.com/cdxtract.php

i have another CD of mellotron sounds and it's A W F U L !
i think it's called "the legendary m400" or something like
that. someone gave it to me. it's not even worth the space
it takes up.

best,
jeff

RE: [newmellotrongroup] Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-05 by Hessel Herder

Hi Rawl,
 
IMHO there's nothing wrong with using samples if you don't have one of these
beast in your studio ;agreed, not the same as the real thing,
but the most logical alternative.
 
Samplecollections come in all sizes and shapes, from great ( "Mike Pinder
Presents..." from Mellotron Archives ) to reasonable ( "M-Tron" )
to awful ( "Legendary M400 CDrom" ). 
 
I've used an EMU vintage keys unit during gigs and recordings.Not too crazy
about the sound.I think they stretch 1 ( looped ) sample over three keys or
something.Even more, it's stretched beyong the natural range of the Tron.
 
Cheers, H

  _____  
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Rawl
Sent: woensdag 5 december 2007 0:09
To: newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [newmellotrongroup] Blasphemous Request for an opinion



I know most of you are fortunate enough to OWN one of these great 
instruments but since I don't at the moment own one myself I would 
like to get the next best thing in the form of a sample library.

The thought of using a sample library instead of the real thing 
might sound Blasphemous to any Mellotron owner/purist but not all of 
us are lucky enough to own a piece of musical history and since I 
truly love the unique characteristic sound of a Mellotron and would 
like to be able to employ it in some of my sequenced compositions, a 
sample library is the only way I will be able to get even close for 
now.

Anyway, I would really like an opinion from anyone in the group on 
Emu's Mellotron (Vintage X Pro Vol 2) sample library if anyone is 
familiar with it. Or, if there is a suggestion for a better sample 
library than Emu's for use with Emulator X which can read most 
sample formats.

So please, I am asking the group of folks most likely to be able to 
render a truly expert opinion. What would you suggest? (Be gentle)

Sincerely,
Rawl

Re: Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-05 by Bernie

Squids Tron Collection is allegedly very good, although I've never 
tried it. It has Mellotron, Chamberlin and some other instruments as 
well.

Bernie

--- In newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com, "Hessel Herder" 
<hessel@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Rawl,
>  
> IMHO there's nothing wrong with using samples if you don't have 
one of these
> beast in your studio ;agreed, not the same as the real thing,
> but the most logical alternative.
>  
> Samplecollections come in all sizes and shapes, from great ( "Mike 
Pinder
> Presents..." from Mellotron Archives ) to reasonable ( "M-Tron" )
> to awful ( "Legendary M400 CDrom" ). 
>  
> I've used an EMU vintage keys unit during gigs and recordings.Not 
too crazy
> about the sound.I think they stretch 1 ( looped ) sample over 
three keys or
> something.Even more, it's stretched beyong the natural range of 
the Tron.
>  
> Cheers, H
> 
>   _____  
> 
> From: newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com
> [mailto:newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Rawl
> Sent: woensdag 5 december 2007 0:09
> To: newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [newmellotrongroup] Blasphemous Request for an opinion
> 
> 
> 
> I know most of you are fortunate enough to OWN one of these great 
> instruments but since I don't at the moment own one myself I would 
> like to get the next best thing in the form of a sample library.
> 
> The thought of using a sample library instead of the real thing 
> might sound Blasphemous to any Mellotron owner/purist but not all 
of 
> us are lucky enough to own a piece of musical history and since I 
> truly love the unique characteristic sound of a Mellotron and 
would 
> like to be able to employ it in some of my sequenced compositions, 
a 
> sample library is the only way I will be able to get even close 
for 
> now.
> 
> Anyway, I would really like an opinion from anyone in the group on 
> Emu's Mellotron (Vintage X Pro Vol 2) sample library if anyone is 
> familiar with it. Or, if there is a suggestion for a better sample 
> library than Emu's for use with Emulator X which can read most 
> sample formats.
> 
> So please, I am asking the group of folks most likely to be able 
to 
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> render a truly expert opinion. What would you suggest? (Be gentle)
> 
> Sincerely,
> Rawl
>

Re: Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-06 by thinkingalouduk

--- In newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com, "Rawl" <rawl@...> wrote:
>
> I know most of you are fortunate enough to OWN one of these great 
> instruments but since I don't at the moment own one myself I would 
> like to get the next best thing in the form of a sample library.

I've used a combination of M-Tron and the Mike Pinder Presents (Mellotron Archives - 
www.mellotron.com) samples in my own stuff, and it is (to my ears, at least, as a fellow 
non-tronner) acceptable.

In both cases the ranges are fixed to that of the Mellotron, although I have on good 
authority (this little lot) that some of the M-Tron's samples have been tweaked to get rid 
of some of the more dodgy notes that featured on the original Mellotron.  Generally M-
Tron has a softer sound than MP Presents, but I trust MP Presents as a more accurate 
sound source.

So I'm afraid yet another with no opinion of Vintage X Pro!  Sorry!

Owen

--
http://www.thinking-aloud.co.uk/

Re: [newmellotrongroup] Re: Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-06 by Mark Pring

As another tronless member, I think M-tron is better
than nothing, you can produce some quite nice sounds
but definitely something missing. The choirs and
clarinet are quite good, the flutes pretty poor and
all the string samples rather disappointing. Still
it's cheap I reckon including the VST host it costs
about 2% of what a mellotron would cost.

Mark

Still saving for one all the same!

--- thinkingalouduk <owen@thinking-aloud.co.uk> wrote:

> --- In newmellotrongroup@yahoogroups.com, "Rawl"
> <rawl@...> wrote:
> >
> > I know most of you are fortunate enough to OWN one
> of these great 
> > instruments but since I don't at the moment own
> one myself I would 
> > like to get the next best thing in the form of a
> sample library.
> 
> I've used a combination of M-Tron and the Mike
> Pinder Presents (Mellotron Archives - 
> www.mellotron.com) samples in my own stuff, and it
> is (to my ears, at least, as a fellow 
> non-tronner) acceptable.
> 
> In both cases the ranges are fixed to that of the
> Mellotron, although I have on good 
> authority (this little lot) that some of the
> M-Tron's samples have been tweaked to get rid 
> of some of the more dodgy notes that featured on the
> original Mellotron.  Generally M-
> Tron has a softer sound than MP Presents, but I
> trust MP Presents as a more accurate 
> sound source.
> 
> So I'm afraid yet another with no opinion of Vintage
> X Pro!  Sorry!
> 
> Owen
> 
> --
> http://www.thinking-aloud.co.uk/
> 
> 
> 
> 



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Re: Blasphemous Request for an opinion

2007-12-08 by fretless_ib

Hi Rawl,

I, like you, would love to have a real Tron.
Unfortunately.....can't afford one, so I have the "Blasphemous M-Tron."

I tried "Squids Tron Collection." 
IMHO, it didn't come close to the M-Tron.
The quality of the sounds were just unusable.
However, the folks at "IK" gave me a discount on their Miroslav CE 
collection, which has very nice samples.....no Trons though.

Hope that helps.

Fretless

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