Shipping items
latest releases
Cover small: Luthéal Piano

Luthéal Piano

"L´enfant et les sortileges", "Tzigane" - those are just two works by Maurice Ravel which make use of the luthéal. The luthéal is probably one of the rarest piano instruments in existence – with only one original instrument being left. Invented by the Belgian George Cloetens, it uses a grand piano as its basis and allows to change the tone of the piano by applying the Luthéal mechanism. Built in 1922, it has been completely restored and resides at the Musical Instrument Museum (mim) in Brussels.
Cover small: Edition Beurmann - Orphica Piano

Edition Beurmann - Orphica Piano

Die Orphica Piano-Library bietet ein besonders „Klavierchen“: Erfunden von Carl Leopold Röllig, wurde es exklusiv von Klavierbauer Joseph Donal Ende des 18.Jahrhunderts nur etwa 15 Jahre gebaut. Infolgedessen gehört das kleine, tragba-re Hammerklavier mit seiner ersten Repetitionsmechanik zu einer sehr seltenen Gattung – höchstens 30 Exemplare sind weltweit erhalten. Dem Namen nach an die „Lyra des Orpheus“ angelehnt, dessen Ähnlichkeit Röllig in der Orphica sah, ist das Instrument ein Vorläufer zum heutigen portablen Keyboard.
Cover small: Edition Beurmann - Italian Harpsichord III

Edition Beurmann - Italian Harpsichord III

The Italian Harpsichord III library features an instrument built around 1690 by an anonymous maker. Featuring three sounds – a front and a rear 8’ register as well both together – it allows for the traditional rich and slick Italian harpsichord tone, of-fering additional flexibility by choosing the adequate 8’ or using the gentle 2 x 8’ combination with its inspiring and complex harmonics.
Cover small: Edition Beurmann - French Harpsichord

Edition Beurmann - French Harpsichord

The French Harpsichord library features a double-manual instrument by renowned French builder Nicolas Pigalle. The instrument – built in Dijon in 1771 – features an “enchanting sound with singing clarity and a substantial bass”, as Professor Beur-mann explains. These qualities - along with its huge tone which also manages to bring out its deli-cate, sophisticated finesse and detail – make it is an excellent representation of the French style. “It is one of only two surviving harpsichords from Dijon, a city once so rich in musical tradition, the other also being by Pigalle.”, he continues.
Cover small: Edition Beurmann - Italian Harpsichord II

Edition Beurmann - Italian Harpsichord II

The Italian Harpsichord II library features an instrument built around 1590 by an anonymous maker. Being very typical for the Italian style, the instrument features a housing seperated from the painted cabinet. Furthermore, the instrument - which had been owned by the Australian opera singer Joan Sutherland - sports a special feature: The housing is not bearing directly on the cabinet, but on two ledges below the ribs. This allows for the under-body to resonate.
Cover small: Edition Beurmann - English Spinet II

Edition Beurmann - English Spinet II

The English Spinet II library features an instrument built by Benjamin Slade in London around 1705. Slade´s spinets were essential to the history of the instrument. He had apprentices such as Thomas Hitchcock (see English Spinet library). The sampled instrument shows the qualities for which Slade is known, offering a very sweet-sounding yet majestic and brilliant tone. Only one spinet and one harpsichord of his instruments has survived.
Cover small: Edition Beurmann - German Lautenwerck

Edition Beurmann - German Lautenwerck

The German Lautenwerck library brings a long-gone instrument into your sampler: The Lautenwerck - or Lute-Harpsichord - was one of Johann Sebastian Bach´s favourite instruments. Despite 50 Lautenwerck builders in Germany, not a single instrument survived throughout the centuries. When the instruments had vanished, the awareness had gone as well: Only a couple of decades ago, musicologists found out that such an instrument had existed, solving the mystery of scores mentioning being written for Lautenwercke. Until then, one would have guessed that the composer meant a regular lute instrument by that notion. When the knowledge of it had resurfaced, Professor Beurmann had a reconstruction built by Ludwig Richter in Ludwigsburg, Germany.

Luthéal Piano

Realsamples - release date:11.04.2011

format
 
excl. VAT
order
Shipping item
save 10 % ? Delivery time: from stock 5 days 2-3 weeks
Cover large: Luthéal Piano
More infos
Reviews

"L´enfant et les sortileges", "Tzigane" - those are just two works by Maurice Ravel which make use of the luthéal.

The luthéal is probably one of the rarest piano instruments in existence – with only one original instrument being left. Invented by the Belgian George Cloetens, it uses a grand piano as its basis and allows to change the tone of the piano by applying the Luthéal mechanism. Built in 1922, it has been completely restored and resides at the Musical Instrument Museum (mim) in Brussels.

Conductors from all over the world inquire regularly to rent the luthéal for concerts in order to play Ravel´s pieces. However, shipping the last remaining one of its kind to around the globe proved to be impossible. As a result, mim and realsamples teamed up to provide a comprehensive sample set of this rare instrument, featuring more than 9500 single samples. The virtual luthéal now allows to play Ravel´s pieces the way they were supposed to be.

  ©

Besides the regular grand piano sound – coming from a great Pleyel™ grand – the iron mechanism of the Luthéal offers additional sounds such as a Clavecin stop offering a sound reminiscent of a harpsichord by adding nails to the strings. The Clavecin (“harpsichord”) stop is great for a little experiment where a straight harpsichord would sound too far off.

Furthermore, the Harp Tirée stop adds felt dampers to the strings, producing a harmonic sound similar to an all-acoustic version of a Fender™ Rhodes® electric piano with its warm yet sparkling and lively harmonics. The Harp Tirée stop delivers – whether you feed it with some Thelonius Monk-style skronk or a harmony extraordinaire. Both stops can be added at the same time, a combined setup which is referred to as Cimbalom, offering the sound spectrum of a dulcimer.

Perhaps we should have called the library "The Original Prepared Piano" - because that is basically what the luthéal is. Although the term “prepared piano” has been coined by late 20th century figures such as avantgardist John Cage, they weren’t exactly the first. Today’s prepared pianos, especially in sample libraries – think of pianos plucked with a guitar pick – seem unusual, but they only rarely make sense in a performance. While the luthéal hasn’t exactly been music for the masses yet, it might well be, treasuring unique yet musical sounds to be explored by the curious and the willing.

Whether you´re into classical music or not – the sounds of the luthéal don’t need to be limited to the pieces of Maurice Ravel in the grand scheme of things. The different stops are just made for anything that screams for a fresh and unusual approach. Now, this one original Luthéal in existence can travel the world – on your desktop.

The instrument was sampled chromatically with every register, providing up to 32 velocity layers to musically reproduce the luthéal. Additionally, samples of the release noises of each key and stop have been recorded and are available with 8 velocity layers per key to contribute to the overall picture of the instrument. Pedal noise samples of each stop (pedal push/release) have been recorded as well.

To start right away, presets are available for all common sample formats including HAlion2®, Kontakt2® and higher as well as EXS24®.

For the critical task of recording the luthéal, realsamples employed custom-made Wagner™ U47w® tube microphones in conjunction with Crane Song™ Flamingo® preamps and Universal Audio™ 2192® digital converters. For maximum sound quality, we recorded in 192 khz/24 bits resolution, downsampled to 44.1 kHz/24 bits.
 


System requirements


This Multi Format Library does not include any software to play the sounds on your computer. Moving your mouse over * Multi Format Library in the product header will highlight all the included formats. Any compatible software is required to load and play the sounds of this library.

Instruments
Genre
Format
Supplier
Search