Vielklang

Zplane - release date:15.04.2008

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vielklang audio harmonization instrument from z.plane development is a versatile intelligent harmony generator for musicians, songwriters and producers. It creates backing vocals and brass sections with up to four voices in a more musical way than traditional harmony processors. vielklang utilizes sophisticated voice-leading and harmony progression models to generate more natural and musical arrangements rather than producing plain parallel voicings. The piano-roll display allows complete control over every pitch of every voice.

Sound On Sound magazine (UK) December 2008:
"...Vielklang is undoubtedly musically powerful and sophisticated, and as ever, a little musical knowledge will help you get the best out of the program. However, I have to say that it’s pretty easy to operate straight out of the box. Beginners will have great fun hearing their lead vocals transformed into a harmony-singing group (especially one that sings all the right parts without rehearsal and doesn’t require payment). Since it doesn’t work in real time, it’s not the right program for gigging solo vocalists looking to create live harmonies, but it’s an ideal studio tool. Whether you need a barbershop quartet, Everly Brothers-style harmonies, an experimental classical vocal arrangement or some cool voice parts for your R&B track, give Vielklang a whirl and bring a little harmony into your life!.."

Features
- Automatic generation of four-voiced choirs and brass sections
- Musical voicings by using voice-leading and harmony progression theory
- One-click modification of tempo, scale, and harmony
- Adjustable pitch correction, delay, timing humanization, timbre, volume, and pan for - each voice
- Full control over every note of every voice
- Audio-To-Midi
- Midi-controlled snapshot system allows several harmonizations per audio input
- Highest quality with the élastique pitch shifting engine
- Plug and Play - Don´t waste time with tedious configuration

It´s all about Music
vielklang "thinks musically" and prepares intelligent voicings. vielklang by zplane is packed with musical intelligence and music theory: it automatically detects the best fitting harmonies for each individual input melody, and automatically synthesizes up to four voices with the voices not merely running in parallel but with their voicings automatically selected to sound most natural (voice leading). vielklang gives you a natural-sounding result immediately and allows you to concentrate on tweaking the results rather than edit them from scratch as with traditional harmonizers. 

Creativity First
Directly interact with the music rather than with the technology. Don´t waste time with tedious configuration of obvious parameters like root note, scale, tuning frequency etc.; let vielklang take care of this with its automatic recognition engines and concentrate on making music! Have complete control over your voicings and musical parameters like harmonies, pitch range and scale.

Discover the Potential
The vielklang audio harmonization instrument is not a harmonizer, but much more! With the vielklang plugin, you can easily generate and trial natural sounding background vocals and brass sections, modify melodies and single-voiced loops in terms of pitch and scale, and experiment with different harmonizations or chords triggered by different MIDI inputs. It allows you to generate up to four voices, edit their harmonies and single pitches, control the playback speed, and convert the audio to MIDI.



Video Demos


Tutorial Video 1 Tutorial Video 1
 
Quickstart Video Quickstart Video
 
Tutorial Video 2 Tutorial Video 2
 



More infos


User Interface
Manual
Demo Version MAC
Demo Version Windows

Systemrequirements


Mac

  • OS X 10.4.x (IntelMac/PowerPC)
  • 512MB RAM minimum
  • 1.5GHz CPU minimum
  • 15MB free hard disk space

Windows

  • 2000/XP/Vista/Win7
  • 512MB RAM minimum
  • 1.5GHz CPU minimum
  • 15MB free hard disk space

Plugin Formats

  • VST 2.4, RTAS (for ProTools 7.3 and later)
  • Audio Unit (Mac OS X only)

Product activation:
An internet connection on any computer is required to authorize / activate the product (Challenge/Response).



Reviews


SoundOnSound 12/2008
Future Music 8/2008


SoundOnSound 12/2008

It seems you can’t cross the road nowadays without getting caught up in a road-rage incident, an inner-city riot (puzzling if you live on Dartmoor, I know) or an act of international terrorism, There’s a lot of anger around, but music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, and it seems too me that if each seething citizen could only get in touch with his or her inner barbershop quartet, the world would be a more agreeable place. These are probably not quite the thoughts that inspired Zplane to invent Vielklang, but the German company can content themselves with the knowledge that their program will definitely make life more harmonious.

Vielklang produces a fully harmonised four-voice output from any single-voice melody, by analysing the melody’s scale and automatically synthesizing four additional pitches for each note. The new voices don’t merely track the melody in parallel (which would sound naïve and cheesy), but are generated according to intelligent principles, in order to sound the most musically natural. These principles embrace the arts of chord voicing and ‘voice leading’ (the progression of a line through a series of pitches). That stuff can take years to learn, but if your musical theory is a little sketchy, don’t worry – Vielklang will do the brainwork for you. The program, which needs only 15MB of disk space, runs on Windows 200/XP/Vista and Mac OS 10.4 or higher, and requires a VST, AU or RTAS (Pro Tools 7.3) compatible host application. A 1.5GHz or faster processor is recommended.

Synchronicity
Unlike some comparable programs, Vielklang doesn’t produce harmonies in real time – it operates as an audio instrument in its own right, rather than as a plug-in on an audio track/ To enable it to work its magic you have to ‘let the dog see the rabbit’ by opening Vielklang, loading or dragging in an audio file and waiting a short time while the program analyses it, after which you can hear the harmonies it creates. Bear in mind that you can’t drag ‘regions’ or other graphic representations of recordings into the program: it will import only real, uncompressed audio files such as AIFFs or WAVs.

The harmonised audio doesn’t automatically sync with your song; it defaults to playing right at the start of the track, where most people put their count-in. In order to sync the harmonies to the original source you can do one of three things: 1. Manually enter a ‘host-to-plug’ offset time corresponding to the point in the timeline where the original audio file plays. (In Logic, this is made difficult by the fact that Logic displays sub-second time in frames and bits while Vielklang displays in it milliseconds. Believe me, converting ‘five frames 71 bits’ to a figure in milliseconds is not the sort of thing you want to think about when you’re working on an arrangement!) 2. Enter the offset time automatically by placing the host cursor at the required play position and hitting Set. (in Logic 7, you also have to hit Start and Stop after setting the cursor position to coax the host into telling Vielklang the song position.) 3. Use a MIDI note to trigger the ‘Vielklanged’ audio at the requisite time, exactly as if you were triggering a sampler.

Whichever method you choose, the sync will only be 100 percent accurate if the MIDI note’s placement coincides with the actual start point of the audio file, as opposed to the start position of its on-screen region (as you probably know, once an audio file has been edited, the two are not necessarily the same).

Harmonious Relations
I used Vielklang to generate harmonies for a female lead vocal I’d recorded on the 18th-century French song ‘Plaisir d’Amour’ (the tune of which was adapted for ‘I Can’t Help Falling in Love With You’, sung by Elvis Presley and covered by UB40). I chose this old ballad because a) it’s out of copyright, b) it happened to feature in a film score I was working on recently and c) its harmonic simplicity is on a par with most contemporary songs. Having loaded in the vocal audio file, I was impressed by the harmonies and chordal movement that Vielklang generated at the first attempt – as well as sounding musically correct, the harmonisation had a sophisticated, crafted quality that sounded like a human artifact rather than a mechanical confection. You can see the harmonisation in the screen shots.

Vielklang displays chord symbols above each pitch. I found this particularly impressive, since I gave the program no information whatever about keys, scales or chordal structure – it took one look at the melody and figured out the chord sequence by itself. (To be honest, that’s also a bit disconcerting; it’s always been my job to figure out the chords of songs, but now I’ve apparently been made redundant by a piece of software. Damn it!) My only quibble with Vielklang’s harmonic thinking was that it reckoned the first two chords should be Bb and Eb: correct on the first count, but in real life the second chord is the same as the first. To change the Eb chord to a Bb, all I had to do was click on the chord symbol and a list of alternatives appeared. Sure enough, one of them was Bb, I clicked on it and the chord change was done. Easy. (NB: Vielklang uses only sharps in its display, so Bb is rendered as A#, and so on.)

If you look at the original melody line (marked in orange) and the green harmony part above it, you’ll see that they don’t move in parallel; for example, when the melody rises to a D on the word ‘love’, the harmony repeats its previous note and thus avoids a predictable upward movement. This demonstrates the musical intelligence I mentioned earlier. Similarly, when the melody rises from a Bb to an A, providing contrary motion and making a nice inversion for the F chord, Composers, arrangers and singers will recognise these as smart musical choices, Having said that, if you actually want a parallel harmonisation, Vielklang will happily oblige!

In the original arrangement, one upper and two lower harmony parts were added to the original melody, but you can position the melody line wherever you want in relation to the harmonies. The rather low-pitched vocal on ‘Plaisir d’Amour’ actually sounded best placed second to bottom. If four parts seem too rich, you can ask Vielklang to create a two-voice harmonisation in which the harmony line can be placed above or below the original melody. A ‘range’ control determines the size of intervals: a minimum setting produces a typical pop-style close harmony, while higher settings create wider, somewhat less predictable intervals.

In pop arrangements, backing vocal harmonies rarely need more than three parts. The simplest way to generate a three-voice harmonisation in Vielklang is to create a four-part harmony and mute one of the parts, which will then obligingly disappear from the main display. Muting, soloing and panning are done on the Voice Settings screen, which also contains individual level controls for each of the voices. In a four-part harmonisation, Vielklang sets the original line 6dB louder than the harmonies; that generally sounds OK, but for a more democratic blend you can turn the lead line down, or even leave it out of the backing-vocal mix altogether. The four voices can be routed through different stereo outputs, enabling you to add different effects to each part.

It’s worth bearing in mind that when Vielklang creates a harmonisation, the part corresponding to the original lead vocal is, like the harmonies, a new piece of synthesized audio. Though is sounds very similar to the source, you might notice a few subtle pitch artefacts that aren’t there in the original. In the rare event of the program misidentifying the pitch of a note, you can easily correct it by entering edit mode and dragging the offending pitch up or down in semitone steps until it sounds right. The only sonic problem I encountered in my tests was that one ‘p’ on the front of a word produced a loud pop in the Vielklang audio. The makers say this was caused by a bug that will be fixed in a software update, which should be available by the time you read this.

Snapshots of Infinity
Other powerful and subtle controls lurk within the Voice Settings screen: one allows you to loosen up the timing of the parts, while another controls the amount of pitch glide between notes. The amount of pitch deviation in a voice is governed by the ‘drift’ control. Setting both the glide and drift controls to zero produces ‘One More Time’-style robotic, vocoder-esque pitch steps. Hey! Now you can sound like Cher singing ‘Believe’… er, on second thoughts, maybe that’s not such a great idea. Vielklang displays pitch deviations and vibrato in the original melody in a similar way to Melodyne, with a continuous red line running horizontally through the middle of the ‘pitch blobs’. Currently, the line doesn’t change appearance in response to pitch-deviation edits, though I’m told that may be changed in future.

You can force the mean tuning of a voice towards keyboard-style equal temperament: a setting of zero leaves the original tuning unaltered, while a maximum setting forces every note to concert pitch (which is not necessarily a good thing – singers naturally tend towards using ‘just intonation’ and will deliberately pitch certain notes slightly sharp or flat to make them sound sweeter). The aforementioned settings affect all the notes in a part globally: if you want to perform pitch-correction on individual notes or change their rhythmic placement, you’ll need to use a program like Melodyne.

A Vielklang harmonisation naturally preserves the tempo of the original performance, but if necessary you can alter the playback tempo without affecting the pitch of the voices. Conversely, if you feel the original line’s overall tuning is a little flat or sharp, you can tweak the global fine-tuning frequency up or down without affecting the tempo of the playback. (This is all made possible by “elastic time-stretching and pitch-shifting”, which sounds like a musical yoga exercise.) This type of fine-tuning affects the entire harmonisation, as the harmonies obviously have to follow the pitch of the original voice.

The Shape control is a lot of fun. You know how speeded-up vocals have an insanely bright, chirpy quality while slowed-down voices sound gloomy and half-witted? Though Vielklang’s pitch-shifting algorithm is very good, a trace of those tonal characteristics can sometimes be detected in its outer harmonies. That’s where Shape comes in: by tweaking its value up or down, you can change the formants of the Vielklang-generated audio to ‘tune out’ any timbral weirdness and thereby make harmony parts sound more natural. (You can also use it to produce hilarious vocal effects, but that’s another story).

Just for a laugh, I loaded a sampled oboe line into Vielklang to see what it would make of a non-vocal source. The results sounded pretty weird, synthetic and timbrally mangled, but to be fair, the oboe does have an extraordinarily piercing, angular tone that’s a million miles away from the human voice, and Vielklang wasn’t designed to work with that kind of input. However, experimenting with breathier, softer-toned instruments like the flute and recorder might produce some interesting results – just don’t expect to hear a realistic four-part wind arrangement!

Vielklang supports multiple harmonisations, which it calls Snapshots. Each one can be assigned its own MIDI note and triggered for different sections of an arrangement. Using snapshots, you can start you sing with a two-part vocal harmony, introduce three backing vocal parts on the first chorus, unleash the ‘Full Monty’ four-part choir on the last two choruses and return to two voices for the final quiet verse. You can save completed Vielklang arrangements from within the program as a stereo WAV (the program currently doesn’t create AIFF files), or bounce them in the normal way in whatever file format your system supports. If you’re undecided about the parts, you can save all the alternative harmonisations in one Vielklang file and recall them later. The ability to create and store multiple snapshots is a big advantage over real-time harmonisation devices, which, by virtue of the way they work, can produce only one automatic harmonisation.

Musical Alchemy
If you’re wondering (as I did) how on earth Vielklang manages to derive musically correct harmonies, chord sequences and intelligent voice-leading from a raw audio file, Zplane founder Alexander Lerch explains that the key is worked out by analysing the individual pitches of the input melody and noting their number of occurrences. Having established the key (and by extension, the scale), the program can work out all the theoretically possible harmonies for each note. The optimal chord sequence is then calculated, based on rules of harmonic progression and statistical likelihoods – for example, in the key of (say) A major, it’s more likely that an E major chord will lead to an A major chord than to a D major, especially if a D major had already occurred immediately before the E major. The movement of each voice within the overall harmony is determined using a “rule-based fuzzy logic model, with each rule weighting each possible combination of pitches with a probability according to the particular combination. The rule model includes traditional voice-leading rules like the avoidance f successive fifths, as well as rules regarding what kind of pitch succession is desirable.”

That’s clever stuff, dude. Though my logic is invariably fuzzy, I did notice that Vielklang won’t perform a chord change unless the melody also changes note; in real life it’s quite common to have a row of repeated pitches accompanied by changing chords, so that’s one area where users may need to do a spot of editing to produce optimum results.

Self-harmony
Vielklang is undoubtedly musically powerful and sophisticated, and as ever, a little musical knowledge will help you get the best out of the program. However, I have to say that it’s pretty easy to operate straight out of the box. Beginners will have great fun hearing their lead vocals transformed into a harmony-singing group (especially one that sings all the right parts without rehearsal and doesn’t require payment). Since it doesn’t work in real time, it’s not the right program for gigging solo vocalists looking to create live harmonies, but it’s an ideal studio tool. Whether you need a barbershop quartet, Everly Brothers-style harmonies, an experimental classical vocal arrangement or some cool voice parts for your R&B track, give Vielklang a whirl and bring a little harmony into your life!

Review: Vielklang  Sound on Sound December 2008It seems you can’t cross the road nowadays without getting caught up in a road-rage incident, an inner-city riot (puzzling if you live on Dartmoor, I know) or an act of international terrorism, There’s a lot of anger around, but music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, and it seems too me that if each seething citizen could only get in touch with his or her inner barbershop quartet, the world would be a more agreeable place. These are probably not quite the thoughts that inspired Zplane to invent Vielklang, but the German company can content themselves with the knowledge that their program will definitely make life more harmonious.

Vielklang produces a fully harmonised four-voice output from any single-voice melody, by analysing the melody’s scale and automatically synthesizing four additional pitches for each note. The new voices don’t merely track the melody in parallel (which would sound naïve and cheesy), but are generated according to intelligent principles, in order to sound the most musically natural. These principles embrace the arts of chord voicing and ‘voice leading’ (the progression of a line through a series of pitches). That stuff can take years to learn, but if your musical theory is a little sketchy, don’t worry – Vielklang will do the brainwork for you. The program, which needs only 15MB of disk space, runs on Windows 200/XP/Vista and Mac OS 10.4 or higher, and requires a VST, AU or RTAS (Pro Tools 7.3) compatible host application. A 1.5GHz or faster processor is recommended.

Synchronicity
Unlike some comparable programs, Vielklang doesn’t produce harmonies in real time – it operates as an audio instrument in its own right, rather than as a plug-in on an audio track/ To enable it to work its magic you have to ‘let the dog see the rabbit’ by opening Vielklang, loading or dragging in an audio file and waiting a short time while the program analyses it, after which you can hear the harmonies it creates. Bear in mind that you can’t drag ‘regions’ or other graphic representations of recordings into the program: it will import only real, uncompressed audio files such as AIFFs or WAVs.

The harmonised audio doesn’t automatically sync with your song; it defaults to playing right at the start of the track, where most people put their count-in. In order to sync the harmonies to the original source you can do one of three things: 1. Manually enter a ‘host-to-plug’ offset time corresponding to the point in the timeline where the original audio file plays. (In Logic, this is made difficult by the fact that Logic displays sub-second time in frames and bits while Vielklang displays in it milliseconds. Believe me, converting ‘five frames 71 bits’ to a figure in milliseconds is not the sort of thing you want to think about when you’re working on an arrangement!) 2. Enter the offset time automatically by placing the host cursor at the required play position and hitting Set. (in Logic 7, you also have to hit Start and Stop after setting the cursor position to coax the host into telling Vielklang the song position.) 3. Use a MIDI note to trigger the ‘Vielklanged’ audio at the requisite time, exactly as if you were triggering a sampler.

Whichever method you choose, the sync will only be 100 percent accurate if the MIDI note’s placement coincides with the actual start point of the audio file, as opposed to the start position of its on-screen region (as you probably know, once an audio file has been edited, the two are not necessarily the same).

Harmonious Relations
I used Vielklang to generate harmonies for a female lead vocal I’d recorded on the 18th-century French song ‘Plaisir d’Amour’ (the tune of which was adapted for ‘I Can’t Help Falling in Love With You’, sung by Elvis Presley and covered by UB40). I chose this old ballad because a) it’s out of copyright, b) it happened to feature in a film score I was working on recently and c) its harmonic simplicity is on a par with most contemporary songs. Having loaded in the vocal audio file, I was impressed by the harmonies and chordal movement that Vielklang generated at the first attempt – as well as sounding musically correct, the harmonisation had a sophisticated, crafted quality that sounded like a human artifact rather than a mechanical confection. You can see the harmonisation in the screen shots.

Vielklang displays chord symbols above each pitch. I found this particularly impressive, since I gave the program no information whatever about keys, scales or chordal structure – it took one look at the melody and figured out the chord sequence by itself. (To be honest, that’s also a bit disconcerting; it’s always been my job to figure out the chords of songs, but now I’ve apparently been made redundant by a piece of software. Damn it!) My only quibble with Vielklang’s harmonic thinking was that it reckoned the first two chords should be Bb and Eb: correct on the first count, but in real life the second chord is the same as the first. To change the Eb chord to a Bb, all I had to do was click on the chord symbol and a list of alternatives appeared. Sure enough, one of them was Bb, I clicked on it and the chord change was done. Easy. (NB: Vielklang uses only sharps in its display, so Bb is rendered as A#, and so on.)

If you look at the original melody line (marked in orange) and the green harmony part above it, you’ll see that they don’t move in parallel; for example, when the melody rises to a D on the word ‘love’, the harmony repeats its previous note and thus avoids a predictable upward movement. This demonstrates the musical intelligence I mentioned earlier. Similarly, when the melody rises from a Bb to an A, providing contrary motion and making a nice inversion for the F chord, Composers, arrangers and singers will recognise these as smart musical choices, Having said that, if you actually want a parallel harmonisation, Vielklang will happily oblige!

In the original arrangement, one upper and two lower harmony parts were added to the original melody, but you can position the melody line wherever you want in relation to the harmonies. The rather low-pitched vocal on ‘Plaisir d’Amour’ actually sounded best placed second to bottom. If four parts seem too rich, you can ask Vielklang to create a two-voice harmonisation in which the harmony line can be placed above or below the original melody. A ‘range’ control determines the size of intervals: a minimum setting produces a typical pop-style close harmony, while higher settings create wider, somewhat less predictable intervals.

In pop arrangements, backing vocal harmonies rarely need more than three parts. The simplest way to generate a three-voice harmonisation in Vielklang is to create a four-part harmony and mute one of the parts, which will then obligingly disappear from the main display. Muting, soloing and panning are done on the Voice Settings screen, which also contains individual level controls for each of the voices. In a four-part harmonisation, Vielklang sets the original line 6dB louder than the harmonies; that generally sounds OK, but for a more democratic blend you can turn the lead line down, or even leave it out of the backing-vocal mix altogether. The four voices can be routed through different stereo outputs, enabling you to add different effects to each part.

It’s worth bearing in mind that when Vielklang creates a harmonisation, the part corresponding to the original lead vocal is, like the harmonies, a new piece of synthesized audio. Though is sounds very similar to the source, you might notice a few subtle pitch artefacts that aren’t there in the original. In the rare event of the program misidentifying the pitch of a note, you can easily correct it by entering edit mode and dragging the offending pitch up or down in semitone steps until it sounds right. The only sonic problem I encountered in my tests was that one ‘p’ on the front of a word produced a loud pop in the Vielklang audio. The makers say this was caused by a bug that will be fixed in a software update, which should be available by the time you read this.

Snapshots of Infinity
Other powerful and subtle controls lurk within the Voice Settings screen: one allows you to loosen up the timing of the parts, while another controls the amount of pitch glide between notes. The amount of pitch deviation in a voice is governed by the ‘drift’ control. Setting both the glide and drift controls to zero produces ‘One More Time’-style robotic, vocoder-esque pitch steps. Hey! Now you can sound like Cher singing ‘Believe’… er, on second thoughts, maybe that’s not such a great idea. Vielklang displays pitch deviations and vibrato in the original melody in a similar way to Melodyne, with a continuous red line running horizontally through the middle of the ‘pitch blobs’. Currently, the line doesn’t change appearance in response to pitch-deviation edits, though I’m told that may be changed in future.

You can force the mean tuning of a voice towards keyboard-style equal temperament: a setting of zero leaves the original tuning unaltered, while a maximum setting forces every note to concert pitch (which is not necessarily a good thing – singers naturally tend towards using ‘just intonation’ and will deliberately pitch certain notes slightly sharp or flat to make them sound sweeter). The aforementioned settings affect all the notes in a part globally: if you want to perform pitch-correction on individual notes or change their rhythmic placement, you’ll need to use a program like Melodyne.

A Vielklang harmonisation naturally preserves the tempo of the original performance, but if necessary you can alter the playback tempo without affecting the pitch of the voices. Conversely, if you feel the original line’s overall tuning is a little flat or sharp, you can tweak the global fine-tuning frequency up or down without affecting the tempo of the playback. (This is all made possible by “elastic time-stretching and pitch-shifting”, which sounds like a musical yoga exercise.) This type of fine-tuning affects the entire harmonisation, as the harmonies obviously have to follow the pitch of the original voice.

The Shape control is a lot of fun. You know how speeded-up vocals have an insanely bright, chirpy quality while slowed-down voices sound gloomy and half-witted? Though Vielklang’s pitch-shifting algorithm is very good, a trace of those tonal characteristics can sometimes be detected in its outer harmonies. That’s where Shape comes in: by tweaking its value up or down, you can change the formants of the Vielklang-generated audio to ‘tune out’ any timbral weirdness and thereby make harmony parts sound more natural. (You can also use it to produce hilarious vocal effects, but that’s another story).

Just for a laugh, I loaded a sampled oboe line into Vielklang to see what it would make of a non-vocal source. The results sounded pretty weird, synthetic and timbrally mangled, but to be fair, the oboe does have an extraordinarily piercing, angular tone that’s a million miles away from the human voice, and Vielklang wasn’t designed to work with that kind of input. However, experimenting with breathier, softer-toned instruments like the flute and recorder might produce some interesting results – just don’t expect to hear a realistic four-part wind arrangement!

Vielklang supports multiple harmonisations, which it calls Snapshots. Each one can be assigned its own MIDI note and triggered for different sections of an arrangement. Using snapshots, you can start you sing with a two-part vocal harmony, introduce three backing vocal parts on the first chorus, unleash the ‘Full Monty’ four-part choir on the last two choruses and return to two voices for the final quiet verse. You can save completed Vielklang arrangements from within the program as a stereo WAV (the program currently doesn’t create AIFF files), or bounce them in the normal way in whatever file format your system supports. If you’re undecided about the parts, you can save all the alternative harmonisations in one Vielklang file and recall them later. The ability to create and store multiple snapshots is a big advantage over real-time harmonisation devices, which, by virtue of the way they work, can produce only one automatic harmonisation.

Musical Alchemy
If you’re wondering (as I did) how on earth Vielklang manages to derive musically correct harmonies, chord sequences and intelligent voice-leading from a raw audio file, Zplane founder Alexander Lerch explains that the key is worked out by analysing the individual pitches of the input melody and noting their number of occurrences. Having established the key (and by extension, the scale), the program can work out all the theoretically possible harmonies for each note. The optimal chord sequence is then calculated, based on rules of harmonic progression and statistical likelihoods – for example, in the key of (say) A major, it’s more likely that an E major chord will lead to an A major chord than to a D major, especially if a D major had already occurred immediately before the E major. The movement of each voice within the overall harmony is determined using a “rule-based fuzzy logic model, with each rule weighting each possible combination of pitches with a probability according to the particular combination. The rule model includes traditional voice-leading rules like the avoidance f successive fifths, as well as rules regarding what kind of pitch succession is desirable.”

That’s clever stuff, dude. Though my logic is invariably fuzzy, I did notice that Vielklang won’t perform a chord change unless the melody also changes note; in real life it’s quite common to have a row of repeated pitches accompanied by changing chords, so that’s one area where users may need to do a spot of editing to produce optimum results.

Self-harmony
Vielklang is undoubtedly musically powerful and sophisticated, and as ever, a little musical knowledge will help you get the best out of the program. However, I have to say that it’s pretty easy to operate straight out of the box. Beginners will have great fun hearing their lead vocals transformed into a harmony-singing group (especially one that sings all the right parts without rehearsal and doesn’t require payment). Since it doesn’t work in real time, it’s not the right program for gigging solo vocalists looking to create live harmonies, but it’s an ideal studio tool. Whether you need a barbershop quartet, Everly Brothers-style harmonies, an experimental classical vocal arrangement or some cool voice parts for your R&B track, give Vielklang a whirl and bring a little harmony into your life!



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QL SILK

Reggae Fundamentals

Retro Cool

Retro Flute

Retro-Funky Breaks

Rhythm Organism

Rotation

Sampled Landscape Ambient World

SampleTank 2 XL

Scoretrax

Soul City

Soulful Pop

Special Edition Bundle Complete

Special Edition Bundle Core

Special Edition Bundle Vol. 1

Special Edition Bundle Vol. 2

Special Edition Collection Vol. 1

Special Edition Collection Vol. 1 PLUS

Special Edition Collection Vol. 2

Special Edition Collection Vol. 4

Special Edition Section Vol. 1 Brass

Special Edition Section Vol. 1 Brass PLUS

Special Edition Section Vol. 1 Woodwinds

Special Edition Section Vol. 1 Woodwinds PLUS

Special Edition Section Vol. 2 Brass

Special Edition Section Vol. 2 Brass PLUS

Special Edition Section Vol. 2 Woodwinds

Special Edition Section Vol. 2 Woodwinds PLUS

Studio Works

Suite Grooves

Suite Grooves 2

Symphobia

Symphobia 2

Symphobia Bundle

Symphonic Brass Collection

Symphonic Manoeuvres

Symphonic Manoeuvres 2

Symphonic Orchestra Gold Complete

Symphonic Orchestra Platinum Complete

Symphonic Orchestra Platinum Plus Complete

Symphonic Orchestra Silver Complete

Synergy X

The Elements EXP

The Essence of Panflute

The Resource

Total REX

TOTAL Workstation 2 Bundle

Urban Ammunition

VI One

VI Symphonic Cube

VI Vienna Super Package

VI06 Woodwinds I

VI07 Woodwinds II

VI08 Brass I

VI09 Brass II

VI11 Saxophones

VI12 Special Woodwinds

VI13 Special Brass

VI24 Dimension Brass

Vielklang

Vintage R&B

VSL Exploration Kit

WIVI - Orchestral & Band Brass

WIVI - Woodwinds & Saxophones

WIVI Band

World Colours

World Instruments Collection

Xsample Chamber Ensemble


Additional downloads at www.soundsondemand.com


11 Classic Orchestra

1500 Instruments Mega Pack

25 Pop/Funk Brass

30 World Instruments

42 Session Instruments

51 Classic Orchestra 2

52 World Instruments 2

AIR Expanded

Ambient

American Gangster

Arabian Bangers 1

Arabic Vibez

Atalanta Chill

Baker Brothers Funk Session Vol. 1

Bhangra Beat Volume 1

Black Brass Collection

Black Collection: Bundle Pack

Bollywood Pop

Brass Elements

Brit Horns - The Multisamples

Business Class Refugees - Producer Collection

Carousel

Celtic

Celtic Instruments

CHH Compact

CHH Complete

CHH Soprano Sax Promotion Sale

CHH Vol 1 - Alto Saxophone

CHH Vol 1 - complete

CHH Vol 1 - Tenor Saxophone

CHH Vol 1 - Trombone

CHH Vol 1 - Trumpet

CHH Vol 2 - 4Trumpets

CHH Vol 2 - 6Trombones

CHH Vol 2 - 7Saxophones

CHH Vol 2 - Complete

CHH Vol 2 - Saxophone Sections

CHH Vol 2 - Trombone Sections

CHH Vol 2 - Trumpet Sections

CHH Vol. 1 - Trumpet Section

CHH Vol.3 - 4 x Tenor-Trombone Mute

CHH Vol.3 5 x Trombone-Section Mute

CHH Vol.3 4 x Bass-Trombones Mutes

CHH Vol.3 4 x Trumpets Cup/Straight Mute

CHH Vol.3 5 x Trumpet Section Muted

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.3 4 x Trumpet Harmon Mute

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 4 x Clarinet

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 4 x Fluegelhorn

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 4xSaxophones

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 COMPLETE

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 Deep Brass

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 Deep Fat Brass-Section

Chris Hein - Horns vol.4 Fluegelhorn-Sections

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 Woodwind-Sections

Chris Hein Horns Vol 1.5 Update

Chris Hein Horns Vol.3 Complete

Cinematic Ambient Samples Bundle

Classic Bollywood

Classic Bollywood Vol 2

Compact Disco

Complete Celt - The Multisamples

Complete Classical Collection 2nd

Conexion Latina

Dark Atmospheres & SFX 01

Dark Atmospheres & SFX 02

Dark Cinematic Textures & Sound Effects

Deepest India

Desert Winds

Desert Winds FREE

Didgeridoo & Other Primitive Instruments

Dirty Anthems

Dirty Hitz

Distant Rhythms

Doodlebug Jazzy Hip Hop Theory

Dream Whistles

DSF Old World Instruments Refill

Dubmatix Presents Reggae Soundclash

DubWise

E-MU Emax

E-MU Planet Earth

E-MU Proteus 1 2 3

E-MU Proteus Pack

E-MU Proteus Pack Dimension SFZ

Ensoniq ASR

Ensoniq ASR EPS TS

Epic World

Epic World FREE

E-Pop

Essential Didgeridoo - Tribal Resonance

Ethnic Haze

Ethnic Hiphop Volume 1

Ethno & Tribal Ambient

Ethno World Selection

EW5 - Instruments

ExpansionPack for GarageBand

Forest Kingdom

Forest Kingdom FREE

Funked Up Horns

Funky House Grooves

Greg Adams' Big Band Brass

Harmonica

Hip Hop Construction King

Hip Hop Horns -

Horn Section

Ibiza Lounge

Independence Pro

Indian Harmonium

Indian Sessions - KV Bala Krishnan

Jay-J Shifted House & Future Tech

Kick-Ass Brass!

Killer Horns 1

Killer Horns 2

Knutby Church Organ

Laya Project

Lightning Blue

Love & Magic Vol 1: RnB Series

Mad Professor Reel to Reel Reggae

Marshall Jefferson House Generation Vol2

Monster Music XL

Music ToolBox

Orchestral Bundle

Orchestral Colours

Part Time Heroes Nu Jazz Downtempo and Electronica

Phantom Horns

Planet Of The Orchestra

Platinum Orchestra

Polynesia Sounds

Prosonus Orchestral Brass

Prosonus Orchestral Woodwinds

Raw Southern Horns

Reel People Broken Beat Nu Jazz and Soul Vol. 3

Reel People Broken Beat, Nu Jazz And Soul Vol4

Rennie Pilgrem Future Funk

RnB Diamonds

RnB Fever

Sax House MIDI Melodies

Saxophone

Saxotronic

Saxx Jaxx

SHOCK LOOPS

Smokers Relight Vol1

Smokers Relight Vol2

Smokers Relight Vol3

Smooth Drum & Bass

Soundbook

South American Construction Kit Pak

Stereo MCS - Vaultage

Street Beatz

Studio Orchestra

Studio Piper - Virtual Bagpipes

Symphonic Series Vol 1: Classic Cartoons

The Thin Blue Line

Trumpet

Urban Flutes 1

Urban Flutes 2

Urban Orchestra 3

Urbanic Orchestra

vielklang

Woodwinds

World Colours

World Woodwind Series - Clarinet

World Woodwind Series - Turkish Clarinet

XCE Chamber Ensemble

Yidaki Groove

Zion Train Dub Selections

11 Classic Orchestra

1500 Instruments Mega Pack

25 Pop/Funk Brass

30 World Instruments

42 Session Instruments

51 Classic Orchestra 2

52 World Instruments 2

AIR Expanded

Ambient

American Gangster

Arabian Bangers 1

Arabic Vibez

Atalanta Chill

Baker Brothers Funk Session Vol. 1

Bhangra Beat Volume 1

Black Brass Collection

Black Collection: Bundle Pack

Bollywood Pop

Brass Elements

Brit Horns - The Multisamples

Business Class Refugees - Producer Collection

Carousel

Celtic

Celtic Instruments

CHH Compact

CHH Complete

CHH Soprano Sax Promotion Sale

CHH Vol 1 - Alto Saxophone

CHH Vol 1 - complete

CHH Vol 1 - Tenor Saxophone

CHH Vol 1 - Trombone

CHH Vol 1 - Trumpet

CHH Vol 2 - 4Trumpets

CHH Vol 2 - 6Trombones

CHH Vol 2 - 7Saxophones

CHH Vol 2 - Complete

CHH Vol 2 - Saxophone Sections

CHH Vol 2 - Trombone Sections

CHH Vol 2 - Trumpet Sections

CHH Vol. 1 - Trumpet Section

CHH Vol.3 - 4 x Tenor-Trombone Mute

CHH Vol.3 5 x Trombone-Section Mute

CHH Vol.3 4 x Bass-Trombones Mutes

CHH Vol.3 4 x Trumpets Cup/Straight Mute

CHH Vol.3 5 x Trumpet Section Muted

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.3 4 x Trumpet Harmon Mute

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 4 x Clarinet

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 4 x Fluegelhorn

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 4xSaxophones

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 COMPLETE

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 Deep Brass

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 Deep Fat Brass-Section

Chris Hein - Horns vol.4 Fluegelhorn-Sections

Chris Hein - Horns Vol.4 Woodwind-Sections

Chris Hein Horns Vol 1.5 Update

Chris Hein Horns Vol.3 Complete

Cinematic Ambient Samples Bundle

Classic Bollywood

Classic Bollywood Vol 2

Compact Disco

Complete Celt - The Multisamples

Complete Classical Collection 2nd

Conexion Latina

Dark Atmospheres & SFX 01

Dark Atmospheres & SFX 02

Dark Cinematic Textures & Sound Effects

Deepest India

Desert Winds

Desert Winds FREE

Didgeridoo & Other Primitive Instruments

Dirty Anthems

Dirty Hitz

Distant Rhythms

Doodlebug Jazzy Hip Hop Theory

Dream Whistles

DSF Old World Instruments Refill

Dubmatix Presents Reggae Soundclash

DubWise

E-MU Emax

E-MU Planet Earth

E-MU Proteus 1 2 3

E-MU Proteus Pack

E-MU Proteus Pack Dimension SFZ

Ensoniq ASR

Ensoniq ASR EPS TS

Epic World

Epic World FREE

E-Pop

Essential Didgeridoo - Tribal Resonance

Ethnic Haze

Ethnic Hiphop Volume 1

Ethno & Tribal Ambient

Ethno World Selection

EW5 - Instruments

ExpansionPack for GarageBand

Forest Kingdom

Forest Kingdom FREE

Funked Up Horns

Funky House Grooves

Greg Adams' Big Band Brass

Harmonica

Hip Hop Construction King

Hip Hop Horns -

Horn Section

Ibiza Lounge

Independence Pro

Indian Harmonium

Indian Sessions - KV Bala Krishnan

Jay-J Shifted House & Future Tech

Kick-Ass Brass!

Killer Horns 1

Killer Horns 2

Knutby Church Organ

Laya Project

Lightning Blue

Love & Magic Vol 1: RnB Series

Mad Professor Reel to Reel Reggae

Marshall Jefferson House Generation Vol2

Monster Music XL

Music ToolBox

Orchestral Bundle

Orchestral Colours

Part Time Heroes Nu Jazz Downtempo and Electronica

Phantom Horns

Planet Of The Orchestra

Platinum Orchestra

Polynesia Sounds

Prosonus Orchestral Brass

Prosonus Orchestral Woodwinds

Raw Southern Horns

Reel People Broken Beat Nu Jazz and Soul Vol. 3

Reel People Broken Beat, Nu Jazz And Soul Vol4

Rennie Pilgrem Future Funk

RnB Diamonds

RnB Fever

Sax House MIDI Melodies

Saxophone

Saxotronic

Saxx Jaxx

SHOCK LOOPS

Smokers Relight Vol1

Smokers Relight Vol2

Smokers Relight Vol3

Smooth Drum & Bass

Soundbook

South American Construction Kit Pak

Stereo MCS - Vaultage

Street Beatz

Studio Orchestra

Studio Piper - Virtual Bagpipes

Symphonic Series Vol 1: Classic Cartoons

The Thin Blue Line

Trumpet

Urban Flutes 1

Urban Flutes 2

Urban Orchestra 3

Urbanic Orchestra

vielklang

Woodwinds

World Colours

World Woodwind Series - Clarinet

World Woodwind Series - Turkish Clarinet

XCE Chamber Ensemble

Yidaki Groove

Zion Train Dub Selections

Cover small: Special Edition Bundle Complete

Special Edition Bundle Complete

The Special Edition Complete Bundle includes all Special Edition Collections (including the new releases Vol. 3 and Vol. 4) at a reduced price, when compared to purchasing them separately.
Cover small: Special Edition Bundle Core

Special Edition Bundle Core

The Special Edition Core Bundle includes the Special Edition Volumes 1-4 (without the Articulation Expansions of the PLUS Volumes but including the new Vol. 3 and Vol. 4) at a reduced price, when compared to purchasing the included Collections separately.
Cover small: Special Edition Collection Vol. 4

Special Edition Collection Vol. 4

Special Winds & Choir - The Special Edition Volume 4 features 15 woodwind and brass instruments that are not included in the Special Edition Volumes 1–3, such as the “Fanfare Trumpets”, bass flute and contrabass clarinet. Articulations include staccato, sustained, sforzato as well as Vienna’s famed Legato Performances.
Cover small: Era  Medieval Legends

Era Medieval Legends

Coming soon - May 2012! “Era, Medieval Legends”, a wonderful collection from a forgotten fantasy world of knights, princesses and dragons...
Cover small: Synergy X

Synergy X

Synergy Expands to the Power of X! Weighing in at over 20 Gigabytes, the newly expanded Synergy X pushes the envelope far beyond today’s standard of music and sound design. This breathtaking collection of over 1600 innovative instruments, tempo-synced loops, and jaw-dropping multis delivers the next generation of diverse cinematic sampling with a user interface designed to inspire. Powered by Native Instruments Kontakt Player engine, Synergy X utilizes extended sample synthesis and effectual techniques to provide you incredibly interactive, and ready-to-perfom instruments. With X´s powerfully intuitive sound sculpting interface, enhanced control is in your hands. Simply put, all instruments can be modified, redesigned, and customized to your preference. This makes Synergy X perfect for any performance and production environment.
Cover small: Ambient Skyline 2

Ambient Skyline 2

Ambient Skyline 2 is the second in a series of ambient & cinematic chill-out loops, rhythm beds and samples created by Funk/Soul Productions. Quickly create the perfect musical bed and ambient masterpiece with these beautifully crafted loops and sounds.
Cover small: Epic Horizons - Cinematic Atmospheres

Epic Horizons - Cinematic Atmospheres

Welcome to Epic Horizons - 5.3Gb of 24bit cinematic audio excellence from the producer of the award winning Dark Skies!
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