EWQL Symphonic Orchestra Play Edition
Sample Library
Reviews : Sample / Sound / Song Library
A star Hollywood orchestral library gets an extreme make-over.
Dave Stewart
In 2003, after a protracted period of anticipation, the cumbersomely-named EastWest Quantum Leap Symphonic Orchestra was released to much critical acclaim. Three years later, the Professional Expansion (XP) upgrade doubled the size of the library to a stonking 138GB. The whole shebang had been recorded in a large concert hall from three microphone positions, making it 5.1 surround-compatible. With a cast size and budget rivalling that of Ben Hur, this mammoth undertaking represented a huge commitment by its makers, and that commitment was duly rewarded when EWQLSO became the orchestral collection of choice for many film, television and game composers. The American company kept faith in their grand project and have now re-formatted the entire library (which was formerly available only in the Native Instruments Kompakt/Kontakt format) to run on their custom Play sound engine.
With its ability to access unprecedented amounts of RAM, the 64-bit version of Play is particularly well equipped to handle the large numbers of instruments required for orchestral arrangements. However, the 32-bit Play engine will also run all of EastWests Play-formatted libraries with no diminution in sound quality or functionality — the only difference between the 32-bit and 64-bit versions (which are both supplied with every Play library) is their RAM usage.
EWQLSOs instruments and articulations were described in detail in the June 2004 and June 2006 issues of SOS, while the Play sound engine was reviewed along with EastWests Fab Four and Ministry of Rock libraries in the March 2008 edition. In this review well concentrate on the new features implemented in the EWQLSO Play Edition.
Metallurgy
The Play version of EastWests flagship orchestra ships in a choice of four precious-metal varieties (see box elsewhere in this article), catering for buyers ranging from the impecunious amateur to the top professional. The Silver version includes release trails and full sample mapping, but it has no keyswitches and contains far fewer articulations than the other versions. The top-of-the-range Platinum Plus provides 24-bit and 16-bit samples, offering buyers the convenience of working with the more CPU-friendly 16-bit samples when programming an arrangement, then switching to 24-bit when its time to record it.
Surprisingly, its not possible to directly load a 16-bit instrument — you have to first load the 24-bit version, then alter the bit-depth setting on the interface and wait while the replacement samples load in. Users have asked for this somewhat clunky routine to be streamlined: EastWests Doug Rogers response is that although that would be easy to do, “we didnt want Platinum to default to a lower quality so we insist on both being loaded”. Platinum Plus users who wish to work 16-bit are therefore stuck with this procedure. While I can understand EastWests desire to maximise sound quality, such enforced inflexibility seems counter-productive to me.
Though the makers have reduced its size by deleting unused samples, this is still a massive collection (the Platinum Plus version contains 194GB of sample data on 28 DVDs). I whiled away the installation time by learning to play the bagpipes, reading the entire works of Shakespeare and translating the Encyclopaedia Britannica into Urdu. After that, the on-line authorisation procedure went quickly and smoothly. However, the strings, percussion and woodwind refused to utter a peep (let alone a scrape, boing or parp) until I downloaded and installed the latest Play software. I was also obliged to download a 90MB library update, which fixed a problem with some missing flute samples. Such updates-cum-running-repairs have long been par for the course in this industry, but I still hark back nostalgically to the days when products worked perfectly straight out of the box.
More Than Skin Deep

Plays Browser page allows you to create virtual folders containing your favourite instruments.
Plays Browser page allows you to create virtual folders containing your favourite instruments.
The EWQLSO Play interface has its own distinctive look, layout and customised controls. The player retains the five-stage amplitude envelope and convolution reverb found in other Play libraries, but dispenses with the rock/pop-orientated ADT, delay and filter effects. I found the convolution reverbs EW Hall setting sounded very good indeed when applied to solo woodwind close-miked samples. The effect worked best when I deactivated instruments release triggers and backed off the envelope release time.
Three new performance modes are designed to increase realism: a brand new legato script does a very good job of smoothing out the contours of melody lines, and can even cope with fast trills — I found it much more effective than the Pro XP zero legato instruments (also included), which use non-interval-specific notes extracted from phrases. Portamento adds a slight pitch slide between notes, effective if used sparingly! Via a combination of randomising functions, the repetition script subtly varies the samples so that no two repeated notes sound identical. These modes can be turned on and off on the fly with MIDI CC commands, a useful expressive facility. However, be warned that the legato and portamento automatically switch on the convolution reverb when selected!
When programming, I like to see parameter settings displayed as numeric values: as well as lending a vaguely scientific air to proceedings, it makes it easy to duplicate settings for different instruments. The EWQLSO Play GUIs envelope and tuning controls have numerical readouts, but its fader levels, pan positions, reverb controls, stereo double amount and velocity sensitivity curve are purely graphic. The articulation slots loudness controls (which default to 0dB with an extra 12dB of headroom) annoyingly refuse to return to zero once theyve been altered — the closest you can get is 0.094dB. Cest un bug, nest-ce pas?
Slot Machine
The most striking innovation in the EWQLSO Play GUI is the large number of generously sized slots available for instrument articulations: 16 are shown at any one time and more can be viewed by scrolling down. Loading a Master or Elements version of an instrument automatically places all its available articulations into these slots. Masters automatically load articulations with all their samples in place, while the far less RAM-hungry Elements only load samples for the first two articulations, leaving you free to manually load any others youd like to hear.
A critical difference between Master and Elements instruments is that the former contain a full set of keyswitches and will play only one articulation at a time, whereas Elements have no keyswitches but can play multiple instruments simultaneously. Elements are thus a good environment for auditioning articulations and creating layered instruments, but as this version of Play doesnt allow you to program your own keyswitches, youre obliged to use a Master as a starting point if you need that facility. Given the Masters relatively large RAM consumption, its good practice to discard the samples of any articulations you dont plan to use in a project (by unticking the Load box next to their slots) and then save your setup with a new name for future use.
Instruments default to loading their stage mic position samples, which preserve real-life orchestral platform positions, with the harp stage right, tuba stage left, and so on. The close and surround versions can then be loaded simply by pressing their dedicated buttons. Each close instrument has its own pre-programmed pan setting, which reflects the instruments regular stage position, but you can easily overrule that and centralise the panning if you wish.
With some Master instruments packing over 3000 samples, using multiple mic positions could easily cause CPU or RAM overload, so (as with all orchestral libraries) its advisable to be thrifty about how many instruments, articulations and mic positions youre using at any one time. Plays sample purge function, which analyses incoming MIDI notes and removes any unused samples from an instrument, is an extremely useful aid to keeping your setups lean and mean, but obviously shouldnt be used on an instrument until youve completed its part!
DisPlay
Keyswitching facilities have been greatly improved. The GUIs keyboard now shows precisely where keyswitches are mapped; if you play a note within the general keyswitch area which has no keyswitch assigned, it no longer cuts off the sound like the Kompakt version did! In addition to the new Master keyswitch sets, the old Professional XP keyswitch instruments are also included, for the benefit of users looking to recreate past projects. However, the original set of keyswitches created for the first edition of the library is now history. The only feature I missed is that currently theres no way of seeing at a glance which articulation is currently active in a Master. Perhaps thats one for a future update?
The advanced properties window contains instruments global tuning, pitch-bend and play-range settings. The last feature is essential for customising keyboard splits and, in this library, would be an invaluable tool for creating your own full strings or brass ensembles. EastWest have now addressed the pitch-bend calibration issue from Plays early days but, rather idiosyncratically, the bend amount is displayed as a percentage. By trial and error I worked out that the standard two-semitone bend requires a setting of 17 percent (not many people know that!), but for some reason the default setting is two percent, which produces a tiny pitch deviation of little musical value.
I was pleasantly surprised to observe that the Play keyboards keys change colour to reflect user edits: for example, if you deactivate a keyswitch within a Master, the hue of its key changes from blue (indicating a keyswitch) to pink (indicating a blank key). Similarly, when you limit the range of an instrument, the keys at the outer limits of the play zone that were previously white (indicating a mapped sample) turn pink as the play range shrinks. Very cool! Such visual refinements eliminate guesswork and make the library much easier and quicker to use.
Summary
This reprogrammed-from-scratch update of EastWest/Quantum Leaps orchestra goes well beyond cosmetic surgery. The sound — big, bold, naturally reverberant, tailored for the big screen — is stronger than ever and the comprehensive instrumentation and performances (unchanged from the Pro XP version) meet most symphonic requirements. In addition, the Play Editions new features and improved keyswitching make the library much easier to handle and give increased control of articulations, both vital factors when handling the myriad performance variations of a full score. For once, this is a case of a Hollywood remake that actually improves on the original! 0
Various Versions
Platinum Plus (194GB): All instruments, all articulations, three mic positions, 24-bit and 16-bit samples.
Platinum (117GB): All instruments, all articulations, three mic positions, 24-bit samples.
Gold (33GB): All instruments, all articulations, single (stage) mic position, 16-bit samples.
Silver (11GB): Essential instruments and articulations only, no keyswitches, single (stage) mic position, 16-bit samples, bonus choir and church organ samples.