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  2. Spitfire Audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spitfire_Audio

    Run by a small group of volunteers, the channel is dedicated to creating and sharing sampled instruments for free. As of April 2021, over 500 'instruments' had been released via the Pianobook YouTube channel. Pianobook's instruments are made available in Decent Sampler, Kontakt, SFZ, and EXS/Logic Pro Sampler formats. [3]

  3. Kontakt (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kontakt_(software)

    Kontakt Player is a free, feature-limited version of Kontakt that functions as a virtual instrument for sample libraries, often with a specialized GUI with graphics and controls specific to that library, without the expense and extensive editing capabilities of the full version of Kontakt. Native Instruments manufactures numerous virtual ...

  4. Kontakt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kontakt

    Kontakt may refer to: Kontakt, a 2005 Macedonian film directed by Sergej Stanojkovski; Kontakt, a Norwegian political magazine (1947–1954) Kontakt (software), a music sampler; Kontakt-series explosive reactive armour; see Kontakt-5

  5. Talk:Kontakt-5 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Kontakt-5

    This is of course, provided that the round strikes the ERA, which only covers 60% of the frontal aspect of the T-72 series tank mounted with Kontakt-5 ERA.[1]" This link leads to a post on Liveleak - requoting this Wikipedia entry. This "circle of verification" is ridiculous. 91.46.116.187 11:12, 28 June 2014 (UTC)

  6. Native Instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_Instruments

    Native Instruments as a company was founded in 1999 in Berlin, Germany, where its headquarters are still located. [5] Founders Stephan Schmitt and Volker Hinz began using the name Native Instruments in 1996, when they developed Generator, a modular synth software package (which would later form the foundations for their ongoing product, Reaktor).

  7. Whirly tube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whirly_tube

    The whirly tube, corrugaphone, or bloogle resonator, also sold as Free-Ka in the 1960s-1970s, is an experimental musical instrument which consists of a corrugated (ribbed) plastic tube or hose (hollow flexible cylinder), open at both ends and possibly wider at one end (), the thinner of which is rotated in a circle to play.

  8. Clavioline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clavioline

    The six-octave model employing octave transposition was developed by Harald Bode [5] and manufactured under license by Jörgensen Electronic in Germany. [6] In England, the Jennings Organ Company's first successful product was the Univox, an early self-powered electronic keyboard inspired by the Selmer Clavioline. [7]

  9. Wind controller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_controller

    Miessner's patent from 1938 [3] [4] marks the birth of the electronic wind instrument family. [5] Early experiments with fully electronic instruments started in the 1940s. Leo F. J. Arnold invented an electronic clarinet that featured an on/off-switch controlled by the human breath. This instrument is documented in Arnold's patent from 1942. [6 ...