Spitfire Audio is proud to announce availability of LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES —
accessing an awe-inspiring aircraft hangar for facilitating a recording process like no other on its second collaborative
venture with the internationally-acclaimed London Contemporary Orchestra (LCO), served up as a sophisticated collection
of constantly-evolving organic textures to truly expand anyone’s sound palette.
Following in the hard-to-follow footsteps of the critically-acclaimed and continually commercial LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA STRINGS, Spitfire Audio’s
next
collaborative venture with the LCO — one of the UK’s most innovative and
respected ensembles, promoting the best new music and cross-arts
collaborations to an
ever-widening audience — had to be something even more extraordinary.
End-game? An ambition to collectively create something that no one in
the sampling
world had done before. But surely that’s easier said than done? Perhaps.
Partly
inspired by the LCO’s work with Brit alt-rockers Radiohead’s frontman
Thom Yorke on his music for Italian director Luca Guadagnino’s 2018
remake of fellow
Italian director Dario Argento’s assertive horror masterpiece Suspiria,
‘Spitfire & Co.’ took familiar, pre-existing organic instruments
and combined them in unique ways
to create indefinable, expressive, and modern sounds and textures — much
like an artist using an array of disparate colours to create a new,
multi-tonal palette,
marrying together the LCO’s world-class performers and 10 years’ worth
of experience in the contemporary classical music and film world with Spitfire Audio’s
superlative sampling expertise and experimental Evo Grid technology.
Think breakthrough British EMS VCS3, which made musical history upon
its introduction in 1969
by being the first commercially portable synthesiser available anywhere
in the world, thanks to its innovative modular matrix-based patchboard
dispensing with the
telephone exchange-like cabling of other (much larger) modular systems
in favour of making space-saving connections with (removable) coloured
pins; part of the
genius of today's LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES sample-based virtual instrument library lies in its inspired interface it shares with other Spitfire Audio
products.
Positioning ‘pins’ via an onscreen 10 x 32 grid arrangement allows
access to recordings across 12 intervals — in this instance, instantly
select which Evo
(evolution) sits on each of those 12 key ranges, or generate randomised evolutions.
Enjoying
instant gratification with those engaging and inspiring long
articulations that change sometimes subtly and sometimes radically over
time before looping —
organised in a VCS3 grid-like fashion with (almost) infinite
possibilities and giving unexpected results — is a given. Get this,
though. Those evolutions have become
widely adopted amongst the composer community as the most effective
means of easily writing music that is able to subtly change over time
without variation in
melodic content. Creatively speaking, those textures — this time even
highlighted in the titling of the LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES library itself —
can then be developed, processed, and shaped further, offering a rich range of possibilities.
Watch Spitfire Audio’s awe-inspiring aircraft hanger-hosted trailer video for LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES here:
Put it this way: what really separates LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES from
what has gone before it is the unlikely location chosen to record its
namesake source material. Musically speaking, achieving a stunning,
spacious sound involved finding a uniquely vast performance space, which
led the LONDON
CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES team
to Old Jet, a decommissioned aircraft hangar in Suffolk, England.
Originally built to test American fighter planes, its
soundproof qualities and a remarkable 10-second reverb tail made it the
perfect setting from within which to blend and bring to life the
multifaceted, otherworldly
textures to which the resultant release owes its notable name.
Watch Spitfire Audio Director Paul Thomson’s ‘traditional’ video walkthrough of LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES here:
Needless to say, Spitfire Audio’s Harry Wilson worked
in close collaboration with the LCO during every step of the way, with
much attention to detail required when
recording in such an extraordinary live space since even the smallest
sound could crucially disturb a carefully crafted take in what was meant
to be a controlled
environment. Enter LCO Co-Principal Conductor and Artistic Director Hugh
Brunt with a thoughtful take on Old Jet’s inspirational influence on
the productive
proceedings therein: “You
don’t have to create too much sound to agitate the air — what you
receive back from the room is an incredible richness of overtones and
warmth of sound. We discovered sounds that you couldn’t create without
that space and orchestration — for example, a harpist bowing in an
attacked way gives
you a lot of high end which normally dies away quickly, so we added
viola and cello harmonic sul pont to lengthen that attack and pick up
the overtones, while the
room strengthened its resonance.”
Recording
reality dictated that the LCO’s process of workshopping welcomed
creative input from each of its world-class performers added character
and colour to each
note carefully captured for LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES, as attested to by fellow LCO Co-Principal Conductor and Artistic Director Robert Ames. “We
were in a position where we could be completely experimental; in that
space, certain notes and articulations would ring in a certain way, so
we played off that and
changed things accordingly,” he notes, before adding: “Writing
for a long reverb is a really fascinating thing to do. Trying to
predict how the space is going to feed back into
the notes you’ve written for is a really interesting thing. To have an
orchestra to play with when curating these sounds... it’s like the
ultimate synthesiser!”
Watch lead Spitfire Audio composer Oliver Patrice Weder’s ‘In Action’ video for LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES here:
So,
from conception to recording, the process was clearly curated and
orchestrated in intricate detail. In selecting the instrumentation for
each group of textures, the
LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES team
collectively focused on the idea that every musical sound can be broken
down into three distinct areas —
namely, the hit at the front, the sustain in the middle, and the decay
or release at the end — and then chose a select instrument or ensemble
to inhabit each of those
areas, blended together and lengthened by the resonance of the vast
space involved. Indeed, all concerned managed to retain the intimacy and
expression of
each sound by keeping the ensemble small and only recording up to five
musicians at a time. Those combinations of instruments were subsequently
split into four
groups — Ethereal, Mercurial, Quantum, and Astral —
appropriately named in keeping with the soundscapes evoked by each
bespoke combination. All are distinct in
orchestration, techniques, and evolutionary style, but are also designed
to compliment each other when layered together. This experimental
approach allowed
Spitfire Audio to
take the resultant sounds to a completely new space, using
unconventional techniques, such as introducing vibrating foreign objects
to the
instruments; experimenting with quarter tone variants, adding fifths and
extra octaves; introducing a variety of bowed textures — bowed harp,
bowed marimba, bow
hairs threaded through piano strings; and singers using different parts
of their voices to create raspy tones.
The recording expertise and acclaimed Evo Grid technology attributed to Spitfire Audio adds extra dimensions to each sample, so LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA
TEXTURES users
ultimately are offered a distinctive, ever-changing kaleidoscope of
progressive techniques with instant playability. Performers can choose
between a range of
mic positions for extra control — Close, Tree, Ambient, and Outrigger; add plate reverb; or stretch the samples on each individual texture to taste. The Close mics
yield much
closer attention to detail, while still giving a sense of the expanse
and warmth of the supersonic-sounding space within Old Jet! Jesting
apart, every sound has been mixed by
renowned engineer Joe Rubel (who has worked with the likes of Brit
singer-songwriter extraordinaire Ed Sheeran), with an option to choose
his definitive mix.
Musical
mission accomplished, Robert Ames appropriately signs off by airing his
hopes and dreams for the dream library latest that is LONDON CONTEMPORARY
ORCHESTRA TEXTURES: “My
hope for composers is that they get a taste of what it’s like to be
with the LCO in the studio — a snapshot of the kind of creativity that
happens between composers, orchestrators, and musicians, distilled into a
library.” A library like no other, no less. Literally through the power of sampling, Spitfire Audio
again succeeds in creating new instruments that could not be recreated outside a sampler — making the impossible possible!
LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES can be purchased and digitally downloaded for £249.00 GBP (inc. VAT)/$299.00 USD/€299.00 EUR (inc. VAT) — from here: https://www.spitfireaudio.com/ shop/a-z/london-contemporary- orchestra-textures/
For
more in-depth information, including superb-sounding audio demos from
the usual suspects at Spitfire Audio alongside a number of special
guest compositions from fellow LCO co-principal conductors and Artistic
Directors Robert Ames and Hugh Brunt, please visit the dedicated
LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES webpage here: https://www.spitfireaudio.com/ shop/a-z/london-contemporary- orchestra-textures/
LONDON CONTEMPORARY ORCHESTRA TEXTURES needs Native Instruments’ free KONTAKT PLAYER (5.6.8 or higher) — included in the purchase — to
run as a fully NKS (NATIVE KONTROL STANDARD®) supporting plug-in instrument for Mac (OS X 10.10 or later) or Windows (7, 8, or 10 — latest
Service Pack, 32/64-bit), while Spitfire Audio’s free Download Manager application allows anyone to buy now and download anytime.
Spitfire Audio is
a British music technology company that specialises in sounds — sample
libraries, virtual instruments, and other useful software devices. It collaborates
with the best composers, artists, and engineers in the world to build
musical tools that sound great and are exciting to use.
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