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Lakeside Pipe Organ

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Lakeside Church Organ demos by Bach & T. B. Folmann
 

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The Lakeside Pipe Organ is a part steel pipe and part electric organ that produces most of its sound by venting mechanically compressed air (wind) through resonant pipes. Each pipe produces sound of one fixed pitch, so they are provided in sets with one pipe or more per note, each set or stop having a common timbre and loudness throughout. The Lakeside Pipe Organ has multiple sets of pipes of differing timbre, pitch and loudness which the player can employ singly or in combination. The actual organ is made from three keyboards, played by the hands, and a pedal board for bass notes, played by the feet, each of which controls its own group of stops.

We carefully recorded our organ at the Lakeside Temple of Practical Christianity (Oakland, CA), with master organist Don Sears.  We captured it a variety of different stop settings and combinations, allowing you to control the timbre of the organ. We recorded five different settings comparably from PP to FF. The majority of this library focuses on the classic steel pipes only, although we also opened up some of the organ's vintage electric stops for a little extra low-end reinforcement on our high 5th setting. All settings recorded at two microphone positions (close/far), so user have ultimately flexibility between 10 different organ settings. Every note was captured for up to ten seconds and all release-triggered samples were captured individually.

Additionally we realized that many other organ sample libraries use noise reduction, which gives a more polished/clinical or even garbled sound to the organ. We decided to take the opposite approach and allow all the air sounds in the library, since the "noise" is the air produced by the bellows and pipes that drive the instrument. This means that the organ has a more clearer, brighter, fuller, much more life-like and airy sound (especially in softer settings), giving it a more emotionally expressive and natural quality.

Tonehammer Lakeside Pipe Organ Facts:

  • $59
  • 5 Different Organ Settings (Equivalent to PP, P, MP, MF, FF)
  • Close and Far microphone positions for all settings
  • All notes on organ sampled (no interval sampling)
  • All notes sampled with release triggers
  • Acoustic recording without noise reduction
  • Additional foot basses in forte patches
  • Additional bell/chimes included
  • Additional session recordings, FX, live organ demos and hall sounds
  • Extensive read me install, patch and hint documentation (.pdf) (download here)
  • 15 instrument patches, 1,584 samples, 1,75 GB installed, 978 MB .rar download
  • Sample resolution: 44.1Khz/16Bit stereo and stereo .wav format
  • Format(s): Kontakt, EXS24 and .wav
  • Note: Native Instruments Kontakt 2 / 3 / 4 full retail versions required for Kontakt instruments.
  • EXS-compatible host/sampler required for .exs instruments
  • Note: Free Kontakt Player will only work for 30 minutes with this product. Full version required to remove this restriction.

3 Comments

Stu Kennedy

July 22, 2009

Fantastic organ!!

I looked everywhere for a decent church organ for a specific cue on a movie!
Colin OMalley recommended Tonehammer to me for smaple libraries.

And there it was … an organ! :-)
The quality of these samples are amazing, rich and delicate at the same time. Full but not overwhelming, I’ve hardly had to process the sound at all, it sounds right straight away!
You even had church bells in there too … which I am using!

Thanks guys and keep up the quality work at the tempting prices.

Stu

Nick Anderson (fandango)

March 17, 2009

Wow! That should be my review summed up right there.

However, let me elaborate. Without dropping names, I’ve picked up a fair few pipe organ libraries from some big names, but I’ve often been bemused at how carelessly they’ve been put together.

Tonehammer Lakeside Organ is not a comprehensive do-every-individual-stop attempt at a pipe organ library. It takes 5 different settings and attempts to capture a full set of high-quality samples.

And it does this with spectacular bravo. To anyone who’s ever heard an intro to a piece by Widor, Frank, or Guilmant, you’ll know of that overpowering, rumbling, terrifying Tutti sound on the low register of the pipe organ. Tonehammer have captured this beautifully and the effect is astonishing.

Whether you’re bumping up some film scores or writing music for soundtracks, games, etc., the 5 settings on this organ library are absolutely perfect. Great result with minimum fuss.

What astonishes me the most is the price. At $59 I thought there must be some mistake. However, I have 4 other Organ libraries and none of the others have given me the pleasure of this little (but powerful!!) beauty.

Great work guys!

Ray Savage

February 24, 2009

My mouth fell open with total amazement when this popped up in an e-mail today.

I’ve always wanted to find a way to play such an instrument, and now i shall…at least in a virtual sense.

You guys are completely insane, in a good way.

/Ray

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