 Kontakt |
- TVEC II programming.
- Ability to control levels of separate parts of intervaLive® in TVEC I programming.
- Keyswitched instruments in Ruby and Diamond show the exact keymap where each articulation is triggered.
- More polyphony available to each instrument.
- -Ability to stuff more articulations into one instrument such as keyswitched instruments.
|

- Requires heavy CPU power.
- Many features not available globally such as attack curve, filter, pitch wheel controls, velocity attack, envelope ADSRs, etc.
- If you make any changes in Kontakt whether loading a new instrument or changing anything on the interface, Logic will not safely ask you if you want to save the changes in your song before you close it.
|
 EXS 24 |
- Extremely efficient use of CPU power; you can get more instruments loaded.
- Nice global controls on all instruments such as attack curve, filter, pitch wheel controls, velocity attack, envelope ADSRs, etc.
- You can load 128 instruments in one song.
- If you make any changes in EXS whether loading a new instrument or changing anything on the interface, Logic will safely ask you if you want to save the changes in your song before you close it.
- Some bonus samples in the Studio Strings.
|
- Levels of the separate parts of intevalIve® are fixed. (You can change the levels if you know how to edit in EXS.)
- Instruments are limited to a polyphony of 64 voices each.
- Because of certain programming limitations, some articulations in keyswitched instruments have to be loaded separately rather than in just one instrument. For example, instruments that use mod wheel crossfades are usually in different instruments than those that use velocity-selected layers.
|