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Cinematique Instruments
Cinematique Instruments Cinematique Instruments Cinematique Instruments Cinematique Instruments
What is it?
This product is "Powered By" Engine. The OS and Format icons listed below should be accurate for the latest version of Engine.
Format(s)
Instrument(s)   
Operating System Availability
Operating System Latest Version
 1.0 
System Requirements
- Windows 7, 8, 32-bit & 64-bit
- Min. recommended: Pentium/Athlon XP 3.0GHz, 2GB RAM
- Interfaces: Standalone, VST (32-bit and 64-bit)
 1.0 
System Requirements
- OS 10.9 and 10.10
- Min. recommended: Intel Mac 1.8GHz, 2GB RAM
- Interfaces: Standalone, AU, VST,
License & Installation Method
Voucher / Code for redemption on other website
Tell Me More
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Cinematique Instruments

Cinematique Instruments sets a focus on weird, odd and rare instruments which add a subtle and individual character to your music production. Cinematique Instruments nearly recorded everything they could get their hands on.

The library contains wonderful string instruments such as an autoharp, a 36 string instrument with a series of chord bars, a kantele, a traditional plucked 5-string instrument of the zither family native to Finland, a wooden celtic nylon harp or a bowed psaltery, an instrument of the zither family such as a kind of a wooden soundbox with unstopped strings over it.

Beyond a nice collection of percussion sounds Cinematique Instruments also features strange and rare keyboard instruments such as the low-price, garbage Super-Sound EK-470 e-piano, the charming organ with its electric fan which blows air across reeds or the organic and warm Zeitter & Winkelmann Piano.

There are also special sound paks called Glass, Metallic Objects, Experimental Box and Downbeat Box. These sound paks are a source of individual und inspiring textures, pads, mallets and percussions instruments.They beat and knocked doors and sideboards of a metallic kitchen with timpani mallets, brushes, sticks, fingers and fists, they tapped with fingers and timpani mallets against lids, rubbed around the glass rim and they assembled instruments from unique sounds such as station announcements, trains, paper crumpling, acoustic and electronic noise, station hum, underground railway noise, pneumatic doors, crown cap shaking, glitches, noise, hiss, hum and other weirdness.

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