pyerbass wrote:Hi Peter,
Could we know a bit more about the story behind miroslav2? Where those new sounds come from? where when how recorded them? is this some sounds from the original Miroslav Vitrous library, or is this freshly recorded sounds, if so what is the role of Mr Vitrous in the making of this new library?
Many thanks in advance for your answer
This information is posted on the Miroslav Philharmonik 2 pages:
Each of its instruments have been captured in glorious stereo audio at the prestigious CNSO Orchestra Studios in Prague, home of the Czech National Symphony Orchestra and a space that’s been used for recording by such legends as Andrea Bocelli, Ennio Morricone, Lalo Schifrin and, of course, Miroslav Vitous himself.
Each new sample has been expertly recorded and optimized for playback from a keyboard — they’ve all been hand edited and voiced by musicians so they retain that same emotional and musical characteristics and quality that made the original Miroslav Philharmonik such a mainstay classic.
Of course Miroslav Philharmonik 2 also contains all of the samples from the original Miroslav Philharmonik virtual instrument that provide additional strings, brass and windwinds but also choir, keyboard instruments, chromatic instruments and percussion. And all of the new instruments plus the original Miroslav Philharmonik instruments are SampleTank 3 compatible for seamless integration into your existing SampleTank music production workflow.
Miroslav was the producer / originator / brains behind the whole thing, directly involved, and the quotes from him on the pages are specifically about this new version. The 45GB of new sounds mentioned elsewhere on the site's Miroslav Philharmonik 2 pages means just that - new sounds (listed on the Sounds tab under "New Instruments"). There are also sounds from Miroslav Philharmonik that are included (and that is also mentioned on the Sounds tab "Of course it doesn’t stop there: In addition to the newly recorded instruments above, you also get a majority of the instruments from the original Miroslav Philharmonik library (we removed a few of the redundant ones for easier navigation)").
I hope that helps.