![]() One especially strong quality for Leonid Bass is how well it handles quick legato passages. Perhaps the first other thing you’ll notice when comparing it to the other instruments is that vibrato on Leonid Bass comes in just one flavor (compared to five for each of the other instruments) but it also sounds notably more natural than any of the vibrato flavors for the Blakus Cello when comparing the same pitch in each instrument, and that the vibrato rate range has been well selected to omit extremes that would easily sound synthetic. The Leonid Bass has a rich tone with a surprising amount of air and a more effortless tone than the other instruments in the library, and having the choice of both mono and stereo patches (true for each of the instruments) is especially helpful when mixing such a low register instrument. ![]() While I’ve previously reviewed the other three instruments in the Embertone Intimate Strings Solo bundle (from the original Friedlander Violin, to the updated Friedlander Violin 1.5 and the Blakus Cello, and finally Embertone Fisher Viola) and you can refer to them to learn more about the other instruments in the collection, there’s no denying that Embertone’s Leonid Bass benefits from being the youngest library of the group. If you really like to perform solo strings lines and want a bundle of solo strings that can be tailored to your style as well as played in a virtuosic fashion, read on. Embertone Intimate Strings – a bundle of solo strings that is both flexible and allows virtuosic sounding performance.Įmbertone Intimate Strings Solo Bundle ($375 USD from ) is a bundle of four individual solo string libraries (one instrument each for violin, viola, cello and bass) each with the company’s distinctive vibrato control and use of both fingered and bow-change legato (among several other articulations). ![]()
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