Garritan’s highly successful Personal Orchestra has been selling steadily since 2004. It first appeared as a Kontakt Player instrument, but was updated in 2009 as GPO4, with its own built-in ARIA Player developed by Plogue Art Et Technologie. Since then, updates have been few and far between and as good as it is, it was beginning to look and sound a little long in the tooth compared to its competitors – the strings in particular needed updating.The long wait is now over, though, and GPO5’s instrument list has 70 per cent more patches overall; the addition of Garritan Orchestral Strings; updated ProjectSAM brass patches; an expanded choir; new Steinway pianos; a new harp and a custom organ console. 16 new impulse presets have also been added to the convolution reverb.Central to GPO5 is the ARIA Player and after installing the software, unlocking it couldn’t be easier. You simply drag a registration card onto the player. No extra sample player is needed and it functions either standalone, or as a plug-in for your DAW. It’s amazingly efficient and loading sounds is fast and easy using a simple drop-down menu system.There are four main pages – controls, mixer, effects and settings.

  1. Garritan Personal Orchestra 4
  2. Garritan Personal Orchestra 6

Each instrument appears with its own particular set of relevant controls, has a dedicated channel strip in the mixer and can be treated with either convolution or algorithmic reverb in the effects page. The settings page handles the more advanced technical details such as performance monitoring, rendering settings, tuning and so on.AlternativesMiroslav Philharmonik 2 from IK Multimedia is a good alternative to GPO5. It, too, contains a full symphony orchestra including solo strings, and has a straightforward user interface.It also contains a range of effects should you wish to add flanging and chorus to your symphony orchestra – useful, but not essential.

Garritan Personal Orchestra 4

At £76, the often-overlooked HALion Symphony Orchestra is a real steal at the moment: again, a simple interface and a full symphony orchestra at your disposal. And 2015’s Orchestral Suite from UVI has 60 classical instruments.Do you really need this?If you compose or arrange orchestral music that’s eventually going to be played by real musicians in the time honoured old-fashioned way, then Garritan’s Personal Orchestra is really all you need.It provides a super-fast workflow and an accurate-sounding rendition with easy controls and built-in mixing facilities. That said, if you’re prepared to put in some extra work, highly convincing mock-ups are also possible.OverviewInfo pageLoading instruments in ARIA is incredibly easy using a drop-down menu system. Here, we have a complete chamber orchestra selected from the Ensemble menu.Controls pageInstrument controls vary according to which instrument is selected. This is the Violin 1 set with ADSR dials, tone, mod wheel and portamento, all with assigned CC numbers. Also found here is EQ and auto-legato.Mixer pageIf you want, you can mix an entire project within ARIA using its mixer. Nothing fancy – just volume, pan and sends for the reverbs, found in the Effects page.

Garritan Personal Orchestra 6

Personal

EQ is applied in the Controls page.EffectsBoth algorithmic (ambience) and convolution reverbs can be applied in the Effects page. Ambience has a comprehensive set of controls and the convolution has a large number of presets suitable for all kinds of spaces, rooms and halls.Super StringsThe number of instruments now included has increased dramatically in this new version, due mainly to the inclusion of the Garritan Orchestral Strings, which includes sections, small section and solo patches in a wide variety of bowing techniques.Due to the original Garritan philosophy of providing an affordable full orchestral library with a light footprint, string articulations were kept to a minimum in previous versions. But with today’s computers, resource management is less of an issue, and GPO5 now has more bowing techniques than some of the higher end dedicated string libraries.Apart from common articulations like Sustain, Pizzicato, Staccato and Marcato, the large section contains Heavy Vibrato, Grand Detache, Martele, Potato, Col Legno, Sautille and Sul Tasto.As the workhorses of the orchestra, the strings play almost constantly throughout a piece, providing melody, rhythm and accompaniment. So to reproduce authentic-sounding symphonic strings with samples, you need as many options as possible. GPO5 goes a long way towards achieving this.Overall, the strings are a big improvement and our only grumble is with the fixed vibrato on some patches, which becomes irritating after a while.

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