GSi VST and VSTi Pack for Windows | 21,7 MB
GSi Die Funky Maschine ZD6 v1.1 VSTi
GSi Electric Grand EG70 v1.0 VSTi
GSi GS-201 Tape Echo v1.1.3 VST
GSi MrRay73 Mark II v.2.0.3 VSTi
GSi Spring Reverb Type4 v1.0.1 VST
GSi VB3 v1.2.2 VSTi
GSi Die Funky Maschine ZD6 v1.1 VSTi:
It was back in the fifties when German inventor Ernst Zacharias
invented one of the funkiest keyboards of all times. At first the
intention was to make a portable version of a cembalo, but it soon
turned into one of the most used keyboards in rock and pop music. You
will certainly recognize it in the famous pop song "Superstition", and
in many other funky tunes of the seventies. Many police and
investigation story movies and TV shows of the 70's and the early 80's
had music themes based on funky accompaniments made with the D6, a slap
bass and drums. This instrument can reproduce the sound of an electric
guitar and can be treated with the same effects used by guitarists
(wahwah, distortion, phaser, chorus, etc.) for both rhythmic and
melodic textures, since it is actually based on a set of 60 strings and
two humbucker pickups very similar to those used in electric guitars.
Plugin Description
ZD6 is a physical modeling simulation of a vintage "D6" stringed electric piano.
Main features:
- Full Polyphony (60 notes)
- Sympathetic resonances
- Realistic response to keyboard dynamics and aftertouch
- Octave transpose (1 oct. up, 1 oct. down)
- Adjustable global tuning
- Four dynamic curves available
- Realistic control panel with switches for active EQ and pickup selection
- Adjustable damper level and instrument volume
- Wah-Wah effect modeled after the famous JH-1 american Wah pedal
- Manual wah, LFO wah, auto-wah
- Distortion effect
- Eight-stage Phaser effect
- On-screen help tips and readout values
- Very low memory and CPU power needed
- Easy MIDI-Learn feature
- FX version included
GSi Electric Grand EG70 v1.0 VSTi:
Instrument Background, the CP-70 was a portable electric piano invented
during the seventies by the japanese company Yamaha, also makers of
renowned fine classic grand pianos. It was made for the touring
musician who wanted to take an acoustic piano on the stage. It's a rock
solid instrument that splits into two parts for better
transportability. The structure is based on the keyboard and mechanics
of a classic grandpiano but with a smaller harp, less strings and
shorter than a classic baby grand. There's no soundboard, and every
note has its own piezoelectric pickup. The main preamplifier offers a
basic 3-band equalizer and a tremolo effect. This piano had a
significant role in the pop music of the seventies and the eighties,
featuring in songs by well known musicians like Stevie Wonder, Genesis,
George Duke, Simple Minds, etc. It is now back on the stage thanks to
the british band "Keane", you can see it in the video of the song
"Everybody's changing". Every modern digital keyboard offering a wide
variety of timbres has a patch inspired to the sound of the CP piano,
and sometimes it's still preferred in genres like rock and pop where
the producers want a brighter and more prominent piano sound.
Plugin Description
EG70 is a physical modeling simulation of a CP-70 electroacoustic baby grand touring piano.
Main features:
- Full Polyphony (73 notes)
- Adjustable sympathetic resonances
- Realistic response to keyboard dynamics
- Adjustable global tuning
- Four dynamic curves available
- Realistic control panel with active EQ and Tremolo effect
- Stereo tremolo mode (auto-pan)
- Adjustable note decay and release lengths
- Built-in stereo digital reverb
- On-screen help tips and readout values
- Low memory and CPU power needed
- Easy MIDI-Learn feature
EG70 has a very natural response to keyboard dynamics and to player's
style. You'll hear the benefits of physical modeling mostly when the
sustain pedal is in use. The sound is warm and metallic at the same
time, unpredictable, rich and natural like only a real piano can be.
GSi GS-201 Tape Echo v1.1.3 VST:
Tape echo effects were invented towards the end of the fifties.
Presumably the very first tape echo machine was invented by Charlie
Watkins of London, England, in 1958. It was based on a small loop of
1/4" tape onto which audio was recorded by a magnetic head and then
read by three separated heads. What was read from the tape was
amplified by the internal all-valve circuit and eventually recorded
back to the tape, creating the feedback or "sustaining" echo effect.
The delay time of the unit was determined by distance of the write head
from the read heads, in conjunction with the speed of the tape. Many
manufacturers of this era produced their versions of echo machines,
mostly based on the magnetic tape system. The famous Binson Echorec was
based on a circular drum head with a metallic magnetic stripe. It was
used by Pink Floyd at the time of their album "Echoes". Another famous
tape echo machine was the Maestro Echoplex, heavily used by pianist
Herbie Hancock. Other notable units were the Selmer TruVoice Echo, the
Dynacord Echocord, along one of the most famous and widely used from
1973 to present day: the Roland RE-201. This particular model has a
tape loop about 4 meters long which is recorded, read and erased
continuously. It consists of one erase head, one write head and three
pick-up heads, which when combined with the variable speed DC capstan
motor allows many different delay configurations. This machine also
offers a reverberation effect based on a spring reverb tank. The
combination of echo and reverb gives an "ethereal" ambience effect
which eventually inspired the engineers so to name it "Space Echo".
Nowadays these machines are very sought after but quite rare to find on
the market, and their evaluation increases year after year. There are
many aspects that make the tape echo stand out from a modern digital
delay. Here are a few of the main features:
1) the unpredictability. A capstan motor is never perfect like a
digital clock signal, resulting in slight variations of the delay times
and pitched sound.
2) the frequency response and dynamic range. A magnetic tape is not as
clean and flat as a digital recording. Especially a loop of tape which
is cyclically erased and re-recorded many times in a short time lapse.
3) noise, hum, distortion. Defects that a digital system shouldn't
have, sometimes are wanted and can become "musically acceptable".
GSi MrRay73 Mark II v.2.0.3 VSTi:
MrRay73 Mark II is a digital simulation of the famous american
electro-mechanical piano of the seventies, invented during World War II
by a music teacher, Harold B. Rhodes (1910 - 2000), and widely used in
almost all musical genres ranging from soul/black music to jazz, blues,
modern and pop. This instrument has rapidly become a legend, and is
still used today, altough samples have replaced the real thing so that
very often music producers use huge sample libraries or hardware
keyboards / workstations to achieve this kind of sonority, and often
the result is a cold and 'dead' sound, with no vitality, no warmth,
nothing that even compares to the unpredictability and genuineness of
the real thing.
In 2007 an enterprising and far-seeing american
businessman has started a new Company with the aim to re-manufacture
the piano using the same recipe of the old factory, employing the same
ingredients and offering the same "taste" of the vintage instrument.
The new "Mark 7" piano was presented at the NAMM show and it was a big
success. It's on the market again, after about 20 years, with the same
name, same "soul" but largely improved under many important technical
aspects.
In a similar manner, MrRay73 Mark II is the second version of MrRay73,
after two years from its introduction to the public, but with a huge
difference in sound and functionality. While the old MrRay73 was one of
the first successfull simulations of such an instrument, capable of
offering similar vitality, warmth and richness of the real thing, the
new "Mark II" version brings many new improvements, first of all for
what concerns "THE SOUND".
As opposite to sample libraries, a real-time reproduction of a certain
sound has the ability to interact with the musician, producing
different behaviours from time to time. Hardly you will hear exactly
the same "waveform" twice. MrRay73 Mark II is a complete digital
reproduction of the real instrument, with all the moving parts that,
together, generate to the sound.
Summary of the main features:
* Full Polyphony (73 notes E - E)
* No note-stealing
* Adjustable single sound elements (metal, wood, pedal and damper noises)
* Sympathetic resonance and harp vibration
* Sustain pedal re-pedaling feature
* Six-stage vintage style Phaser effect
* Dual mode Tremolo effect
* Power amp simulation (Suitcase model)
* Adjustable wear of mallets and other elements (Piano Age)
* Stretch tuning or Equal Temperament
* Four velocity curves plus an adjustable "Dynamic range" level
* Fully Midi controllable with MIDI-Learn function
* Very Low CPU and memory usage
GSi Spring Reverb Type4 v1.0.1 VST:
A spring reverb is a system to obtain artificial reverberation invented
during the 40's by Laurens Hammond (also inventor of the Hammond
Organ). In a Spring Reverb pan, the audio signal is coupled to one end
of the spring by a transducer (a device that can convert electrical
energy into mechanical energy or viceversa). This creates waves that
propagate through the spring in both directions. At the other end of
the spring there is another transducer that converts the motion in the
spring into an electrical signal, which is then amplified and added to
the dry sound. Most spring reverb units use several springs together,
with each spring having its own characteristics (length, dimensions,
tension, etc.) resulting in a natural reverberation by summing several
delayed sounds at fixed or random intervals. However, with real spring
reverbs the user isn't allowed to change these characteristics. A
software simulation like Type4, on the other hand, allows you to adjust
parameters like "decay" (reverb duration), the dampening factor, the
virtual spring tension and other parameters that affect the overall
timbre of the reverb effect. Why should you want to use a spring reverb
rather than a precise and modern digital reverb? Spring reverbs have
typical sonic characteristics that, nowadays, make them desirable
mostly as effects on their own rather than simulations of an acoustic
phenomena.
Plugin Description
Type4 is a simulation of a vintage "Type4" spring reverb unit.
Main features:
- Four virtual springs with variable tension
- Variable decay length
- Variable dampening factor
- Adjustable pre and post filtering
- Adjustable timbre
- Very low memory and CPU power needed
- Easy MIDI-Learn feature
GSi VB3 v1.2.2 VSTi:
VB3 is a virtual tonewheel organ which simulates an american
electromagnetic organ of the old days, but it's also capable of other
simulations like the italian transistor organs of the seventies or the
red-tolex organs played by famous pop bands of the sixties.
Main features:
* Full polyphony (147 notes)
* Virtual 91 modeled tonewheels generator with accurate phase synchronization
* Adjustable leakage noise and cross modulation between tonewheels
* Three sets of waveforms: Set H (American Electromagnetic), Set F
(Italian Transistor), Set V (Red Tolex Transistor)
* Three different organ models
* Adjustable global tuning
* Foldback on 16" deactivable
* Realistic motor wow & flutter
* Busbars and 9 key contacts simulation
* 17 steps drawbars
* Two separate sets of drawbars per manual
* Full "inverted octave" presets
* String Bass with adjustable release time
* Dynamic pickup coil impedance loss
* Adjustable generator filters scaling
* Single triggered percussion with natural capacitor discharge/recharge
* Adjustable global Percussion Level
* Adjustable global Percussion Decay
* Vibrato/Chorus virtual scanner
* Adjustable Vibrato Scanner depth
* Electronic vibrato simulation when Sets F or V are selected
* Separated Upper and Lower V/C tablets with smooth switching
* Dynamic tube overdrive simulation
* Spring reverb derived from Type4
* Smooth action volume pedal with adjustable MIDI response
* Stereo wooden rotary speaker simulation with artificial environment and microphones positioning
* Five different rotary speaker algorithms with adjustable "character"
* Tone Cabinet (stationary speaker) simulation
* Rotors brake position
* Adjustable background hum and noise
* Very low CPU consumption
* Midi controllable, supports VST automation
* Easy MIDI Learn function
* Up to four separated outputs
* Upper and Lower manuals SPLIT with adjustable split point
* Upper and Lower manuals octave transposers
* Selectable output level
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