Soundiron has launched its newest addition to the Vintage Keys Series. The Disco 6000 library captures the historic sounds of the fascinating Solton Disco 64 analog synthesizer and drum machine.
The Solton Disco 64 has a recognizable fat analog tone that includes rhythmic drum loops, as well as synth sustains and staccatos.
We recorded the instrument articulations in wide stereo and direct line in. After that, we hand-crafted twenty evolving atmospheric pads from the source content to make this party more bodacious. If you’re looking for warm funky grooves and radical synths to compose your next 1980 dance track, look no further than Disco 6000.
This library has a fully-customizable user interface, modular FX rack and 20 custom FX presets designed to get the inspiration flowing and allow you to start creating quickly.
Disco 6000 features
- 5 main powerful open-format Kontakt .nki instruments.
- Synth Sustains, Staccatos, Percussion, Drum Loops in multiple bpms.
- 20 Custom Sound-Designed FX and Ambient presets.
- 6.36 GB Installed.
- 3,406 Stereo Samples.
- 24 bit / 48kHz Stereo uncompressed PCM wav audio.
- Unlocked wav samples can be directly imported into almost any wav-compatible plugin or DAW.
Disco 6000 for the full version of Kontakt 5.5.2 or higher is on sale for only $19 USD at Plugin Boutique until September 26th, 2020 (regular $29 USD).
More information: Soundiron
based on the demos this still does not beat vtines mk1 imo
i find it interesting that rhodes, despite being so simple, yet so nuanced (specially taking different models into consideration), is so difficult to emulate correctly without sounding cheap. and even when taking only good emulations into consideration, i find it interesting how one can sound so much better/different than the next one.
idk, but to me when i think rhodes, i think warm 70s sounds. all these rhodes with such presence/attack/bite/another stage emu, sound so 80s to me, and are therefore such a completely different sound i’m hoping/expecting from a rhodes plugin.