Quick Tip: Realistic Solo Orchestra Instruments with Keyswitch Articulations

Quick Tip: Realistic Solo Orchestra Instruments with Keyswitch Articulations

Tutorial Details
  • Difficulty: Intermediate
  • Time: 10 minutes
  • Requirements: Kontakt 4, or any orchestral plugin that supports keyswitching

Performers who play orchestral instruments often use multiple playing styles throughout a piece of music. Therefore, knowing when to switch articulations is important for computer composers who want to achieve a realistic sound. Fortunately, many orchestral VSTi have a feature that helps us do this, called keyswitching.

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Step 1: Pattern

To demonstrate this, I’ll be using the Viola Solo instrument from Kontakt 4, but this tutorial will apply to any orchestral plugin that supports keyswitching, though different plugins may use slightly different terms for articulations. Note that I selected the Sforzando articulation, which has a hard attack, allowing us to hear even the shortest notes.

Here is our pattern. Feel free to use the midi file if you’d like to follow along: StartingPattern.mid, or you could apply these tips to an original piece of your own. Note that for my pattern, the tempo is set to 178bpm.

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Step 2: Staccato

When a plugin’s design allows us to switch articulations using notes, this feature is called Keyswitching. Usually, these notes will be assigned to a very low octave, outside the musical range of the instrument. Once we locate these notes, we can change the articulation from inside the piano roll.

To begin, let’s apply the Staccato articulation to our staccato (short) notes. To do this, you’ll place a note on the Stacatto key to turn on this articulation, and you’ll also place a note on the Sforzando key where you want to switch out of it. In the image, I added the grey bars to help show where Staccato is turned on. Note that it is okay to be a little early with your keyswitches.

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Step 3: Legato/Sustain

When some notes are connected, it can sound great to have a hard first note and then soft attacks on the following notes. This makes for a realistic legato phrase where the notes blend into each other smoothly. Let’s turn on the Sustain articulation for our legato notes, and maybe have a little bit of overlap on some of those notes.

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Step 4: Fortepiano

The Fortepiano articulation is like a sustain note, having a soft attack, but with the addition of a swell. It can add a nice flourish to a pattern.

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I also want to note that we have a section with hard articulations (Sforzando, Staccato) and then we have a section with smooth articulations (Fortepiano, Sustain). This is why the pattern is so believable.


Step 5: Pizzicato

It takes a moment for a performer to switch between using their bow and their fingers, so the Pizzicato articulation should be used for entire sections like a verse or breakdown. Here it is in action.

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Did you notice how our previously staccato notes stood out? It is unrealistic for us to expect a violin performer to pluck those notes so quickly, so let’s remove some of them. Let’s also add some more dynamic range to our Pizzicato section, as our violin player may hurt his fingers having to play each note that hard. In FL Studio this is easily achievable by using the Scale levels tool ALT-X, and using the Tension knob, or you may prefer to adjust each note individually.

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Step 6: Clarinet

To demonstrate that this technique is applicable for other instruments, I copied the notes from Step 4 and had a Clarinet play them.

Without keyswitching articulations:

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With keyswitching articulations:

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Notice how much better the second example sounds? These principles apply to all instruments that support multiple articulations.


General Guidelines

  • Study the meanings and uses of these articulations. For example, if you know that Staccato means short notes and that Sustain/Legato means connected long notes, you can easily select a suitable articulation for each note.
  • If you’re going for realism, try to imagine what a performer is actually capable of. Notes cannot last forever, performers will need rests, and there’s a limit to how quickly a performer can switch between notes and articulations.
  • Don’t overdo it. Too many articulation changes in one phrase can sound as fake as having none. Like with a lot of subtle things in audio, it should be unnoticable to the average listener, unless you take it away.

Tags: Tips
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Discussion 11 Comments

  1. shabin says:

    Loved the article. Found it right when I needed it. Thanks

  2. Locke says:

    Loved it! Please post more tutorials on how to get the most of sample libraries like East West/Quantum Leap and such… :)

  3. Lahdeedah says:

    That was a really great tut! The demonstrations of the articulations and keyswitches was really great for those of us still getting a handle on beasts like EWQSLO. More please! :)

  4. Sean Duncan says:
    Author

    You’re welcome Shabin, Locke, Simon, and Lahdeedah. I’m glad you found it useful!

  5. Really useful. And there are many mistakes many composers make, like making these effects disconnected from what an instrumentalist can perform, making modern music look a bit ‘amateurish’.

    Great post.

  6. ExtremRaym says:

    i didn’t even know that it was possible ^^

  7. Give it some welly says:

    Phew, I read this tutorial late at night. After that I tried to fall asleep but couldn’t, I kept hearing that catchy line….taaa-da-ta-ta-taaaa :-)

    Great article though…

  8. VicDiesel says:

    Listen to step 2 over headphones. The staccato notes are panned differently and the player is two or three steps further away from the microphone. As a result it sounds like a strange duet between two players.

    I guess the instruments that come with Kontakt 4 are just el cheapo ones, to be replaced immediately with something more decent.

  9. ryan says:

    wow that truly sounds beautiful. are all those sounds from kontakt 4? they sound great. Vic, what would you use?

  10. john says:

    But articulation keys are not mute and to switch Sustain to Fortepiano you hane to hit C0 ( in our case it’s C1) and it will be sounding. To mute the key I have to edit mapping but I’d rather wouldn’t….
    Is there any other way to make the articulation keys mute without messing around? Thanks.

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