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Next-generation electric piano software
Computer Music, Tue 30 Jun 2009, 11:36 am BST
The first software-based electric pianos – like Emagic's EVP88 and AAS' Lounge Lizard – were based not on samples, but on real-time tone generation methods.
They were pretty well received, but that didn't stop the likes of Native Instruments and, more recently, MOTU from producing similarly-themed instruments (Elektrik Piano and Electric Keys respectively) that rely on samples of vintage hardware.
OTR88 brings things full circle, physically modelling its sounds. It's also obsessed with detail, enabling you to adjust 17 parameters for all or, more unusually, each of the 88 notes.
However, OTR88 is something of a CPU hog. There are no specific requirements for non-Intel Macs, but we had trouble using it on a G5 dual 1.8GHz with 1.25GB RAM – it ran standalone, but not as a plug-in in GarageBand.
Luckily, our Intel Core 2 Duo 2.66GHz PC with 3GB of RAM coped fine, and Devine Machine says that it's working on G5 optimisations for a future update.
Once up and running, we immediately found OTR88 to be an excellent instrument. You're greeted by the Main view, which puts an electric piano graphic at the top and the stompbox effects currently in use at the bottom (choose up to five from Chorus, Delay, Distortion, Flanger, Phaser, Reverb, Tremolo and Wah).
Sounds can be loaded and saved in the Preset Manager, which is organised into lists of Global (with effects) or plain Piano presets. It should be noted that preset load times are super-quick – an obvious advantage of not using samples.
Other views include the MIDI page, which enables you to easily assign parameters to your controller hardware and adjust the polyphony, velocity curve, pitchbend range and MIDI channel, plus the Advanced Settings window.
Devine Machine is rightly proud of this, which it describes as the core of the instrument.
Although the Advanced Settings window looks rather intimidating, some clever interface design means that editing the 17 available parameters is actually very simple.
These fall into two categories – Tine settings and Hammer & Damper settings – and are listed in the upper display. This enables adjustment of all parameters for the selected note, which can be selected in the lower panel.
This graph-like lower display enables you to adjust the parameter you've selected in the upper display for each note, or you can click the Move All button to adjust the parameter for all notes simultaneously.
It sounds complicated, but once you get stuck in, the system becomes obvious, plus it makes creating pianos fun and intuitive. Other options are to interpolate parameters and smoothen/randomise the graph.
For OTR88 to justify its existence, it would have to offer something that its rivals don't, and it succeeds in several ways.
Firstly, there's the presentation: this is by some distance the slickest virtual electric piano on the market. Its ease of use is made all the more impressive when you consider just how in-depth you can go with your editing – if you want maximum control, this is the electric piano for you.








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Sounds great and is very playable. Lovely interface. More flexible than many of its rivals. Per-key parameter settings.
Heavy on your CPU.
OTR88 brings something different to the virtual EP market and will delight control freaks and tone nuts alike.
All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.








OTR88