

- #Native instruments komplete 9 ultimate d16 Patch
- #Native instruments komplete 9 ultimate d16 pro
- #Native instruments komplete 9 ultimate d16 series
#Native instruments komplete 9 ultimate d16 Patch
Think about that work flow: You craft up your song with many tracks using NI sounds/synths controlled from your NI controller(s), then you have to go back and duplicate all of those tracks with just the raw plugin just so they will load the patch when you open the song? Nope. You're (hopefully) a better company than that. Now that that's been completed, the patches still won't load? Come on, NI.
#Native instruments komplete 9 ultimate d16 series
It took a long time to simply get the S MK1 series keyboards set up and the KK ADG instrument rack for Live 11. The real questions is Why Wouldn't You Want To Have KK be the Default On All Your Tracks? I have Live songs with 20+ tracks that all have KK on them, because I want my S-88 MK1 keyboard to be able to show me my Battery splits, my Damage 2 ensembles, my Kontakt key assigns, etc. It's actually ludicrous that KK wouldn't simply load up your patch automatically in Live 11. Combined with you favourite DAW this package is almost unbeatable, though quite whether you will get around to using every element is another question entirely.I have the exact same issue. Whatever genre of music you work with you’d be hard pushed to find something here that doesn’t enhance your writing or production. The hard-disk installation format is far less painful than feeding DVDs into your computer for hours on end, and allows this collection to be uncompromising in its kompleteness. Komplete 9 Ultimate is double the price (but would weigh in at an eye-watering £7,600 in unbundled form) and is outstanding in terms of depth and scope. Remember also that existing users of Maschine, Kontakt and Reaktor get a favourable crossgrade discount on both versions of Komplete.


In fact, bought individually the components would value over £3,000. Who needs ‘real’ musicians anyway?! Everything you’ll ever need?Īt €499 (about £425), Komplete 9 isn’t a pocket-money impulse buy, but when you take a close look at what is actually included in terms of both instruments and effects as well as raw content it increasingly appears as extremely good value. For percussion purists Ultimate includes all five of the Abbey Road Drummer packs and all the Scarbee Bass libraries. Komplete 9 Ultimate adds six other new libraries taking in horns, film scoring, bass and drums. Both of these are straightforward to use and capable of great results. Two new premium libraries are included in Komplete 9 – Session Strings (a string ensemble with an ‘Animator’ section for automatically creating riffs and phrases in multiple styles) and The Giant (a detailed recreation of a Klavins Piano Model 370i – the world’s largest upright piano – that also includes unusual plucked, kicked and scratched techniques). Kontakt is now the go-to sampler for any serious third-party sampled instrument provider, and many of these libraries have been developed with outside assisstance, but don’t forget that even the basic factory content is over 40GB in size. Almost without exception these are sonically excellent and make use of Kontakt’s customisable interface and advanced low-level scripting.
#Native instruments komplete 9 ultimate d16 pro
Komplete 9 Ultimate users also get the Premium Tube Series (two EQs and a compressor developed with Softube), Reverb Classics (emulations of a selection of Lexicon reverb favourites) and the Vintage Compressors bundle alongside existing Komplete effects – so nearly everything you’ll need in a mix session is covered, especially when you also get Guitar Rig 5 Pro and the FX-only versions of many of the included synths (even in the standard Komplete bundle).īy far the biggest hard-drive muncher in Komplete is the Kontakt sample content, supplied as individual multi-gigabyte libraries. Previously these plugins were only within a Guitar Rig shell, so the fact they now appear as standalone AU, VST, RTAS and AAX plugins is very welcome. NI are certainly not the first to do this, and I’m not going to claim that they sound exactly the same as the originals or even other emulations, but they do certainly capture their spirit, and make light work of core mixing tasks. The Solid Mix Series is the big news here, consisting of three plugins – Solid Bus Comp, Solid Dynamics and Solid EQ – that aim to capture the sound and spirit of their famous Solid State Logic (SSL) hardware counterparts. Now we turn our attention to dedicated effects plugins, a relatively new venture for NI.
