AAS Lounge Lizard EP3 £150
pros
Offers some of the most transparent and realistic virtual electric piano sounds available. Low CPU overhead considering the sophistication on offer. Excellent value for money (particularly for existing Lounge Lizard users).cons
Sounds from Lounge Lizard 2 can't be imported into the new version.summary
If you like electric piano sounds and have a computer, you have to buy Lounge Lizard — it's as simple as that!
information
£149.99 including VAT; upgrade from version 2, $49 (on-line download only). SCV London +44 (0)20 8418 0778. +44 (0)20 8418 0624.Test Spec
2.8GHz Intel Pentium 4C PC with Hyperthreading, an Asus P4P800 Deluxe motherboard with an Intel 865PE chip set and an 800MHz Front Side Buss, running Windows XP (SP2) with 1GB of DDR400 RAM. Steinberg Cubase SX v3.0.2 & Cakewalk Sonar 5.Photos too small? Click on photos, screenshots and diagrams in articles to open a Larger View gallery.
| Applied Acoustics Lounge Lizard EP3Modelled Electric Piano Instrument [Mac/PC]Published in SOS March 2006 Reviews : Software: ALL Most recent electric piano virtual instruments have been sample-based, but in Lounge Lizard, AAS continue to fly the flag for their physical modelling technology; version 3 offers an improved fork model, plus modelled electromagnetic and electrostatic pickups...
Given the amount of praise that Lounge Lizard has already received for its accurate Fender Rhodes and Wurlitzer models from both artists and the press, you might expect AAS to rest on these laurels and move on to different projects (see SOS October 2002, or www.soundonsound.com/sos/oct02/articles/lounglizzard.asp for our original review of the instrument). However, the recently arrived Lounge Lizard EP3 sets itself even higher standards in the company's search for physically modelled perfection. At the heart of this third incarnation is the same physically modelled combination of a mallet hitting a fork (comprising a tine and tone bar), amplified by a magnetic pickup. However, EP3 has a new and improved Fork model, while the two pickup models now offer electromagnetic (Rhodes) and electrostatic (Wurlitzer) options for a much wider range of sounds, plus a keyboard scaling control, so that you can more easily balance levels at the bass and treble ends of the keyboard. The Damper module provides more refined modelling of the noise of the dampers being applied to or released from the fork. The dampers now interact with the Fork parameters, and there's also a new Balance control that alters whether you hear the damper noise in the attack portion of the instrument, in the release phase, or in a mixture of the two. Finally, there's a completely new three-band semi-parametric EQ module to replace the more basic bass/treble controls of Lounge Lizard 2. Like AAS's String Studio, (see SOS August 2005 or www.soundonsound.com/sos/aug05/articles/aasStringStudio.htm) Lounge Lizard EP3 now has two switched front Panels (A and B) instead of one, which means that each one can be narrower, and AAS have taken advantage of this to add variable width to their preset Browser (just drag the divider between the two halves of the interface), so you can always read each preset name in full without horizontal scrolling (hooray!). The same reorganisation also results in the MIDI channel, polyphony, and activity controls moving to the main display from the Toolbar, so there's now enough space on the latter to display long preset names in full (hooray again!). Panel B houses the sound-generating components, and will be fairly recognisable to existing users. However, Panel A is completely new, and its contents are discussed in the box on the right.
In Use Lounge Lizard EP3 runs as a stand-alone application, and also supports VSTi, DXi, Audio Units and RTAS formats. I'm pleased to say that AAS have finally bowed to user demand and provided a 15-day grace period before you have to supply the response to the unique challenge generated after installation. This should go down well with all their users, especially those who have non-Internet-capable dual-boot setups and those who run into initial authorisation problems. AAS have learned the value of a set of 'Guided Tour' presets from their popular Ultra Analog and String Studio instruments in quickly showcasing the strengths of new products. Lounge Lizard 2 was already an impressive beast, but from the first moment you play one of the presets in the new version you can hear the engine improvements — there's a greater transparency of sound in the upper harmonics thanks to the new Fork model, while the greatly enhanced effects section adds further polish to each instrument. CPU overhead is also surprisingly modest for a physically modelled instrument, and even my elderly 2.8GHz Pentium 4 Northwood processor managed to produce the maximum 32 notes of polyphony with CPU usage peaks of just 30 percent — some sampled electric pianos consume this without offering any of the subtlety and expression of Lounge Lizard. I did miss the pitch-tracking of the mallet noise (which I've used in the past to create tuned percussion, organs, and vibes), although there's no denying that for more realistic electric pianos the mallet noise pitch shouldn't change across the keyboard — hopefully AAS will provide a tracking on/off switch in a future update for those of us who like to derail the engine in search of exotica. The only other downside to the new engine is that because of its modifications and enhancements it can only import instruments in its own LX3 format, and not those from previous versions of Lounge Lizard. However, those who rely on existing instruments from the older version of the program can simply leave that installed alongside with no conflicts (as there are no samples in Lounge Lizard, the install size is only around 12MB). As in previous versions, MIDI Links let you automate any combination of panel controls in real time using an external controller, but in EP3 there's a folder of supplied examples that provide insight into what's possible, since apart from obvious links such as mod-wheel control of Tremolo and other effects, there are also various pickup-related links that control pickup symmetry, distance, and output level simultaneously in varying amounts and relative directions. These provide lots of performance options, and surprisingly, there's no 'zipper' noise except when changing the effects mix controls.
Final Thoughts When the original Lounge Lizard came out, it was regarded as extremely clever, not to say handy if you didn't have a real electric piano to hand. By version 2 the heavy processor overhead had plummeted and the sound had become more refined, and various big-name players were beginning to regard it as more convenient, even if they did have the 'real thing' as well. With Lounge Lizard EP3, I predict that many musicians may well desire it more than the acoustic instruments it models — it just feels so good to play, you forget within a few seconds that you're not playing a real acoustic instrument, and there are hundreds of variations and refinements available that don't involve a technician manhandling 73 tines and pickups! Lounge Lizard EP3 is quite simply the new benchmark against which all electric piano sounds must be judged. Published in SOS March 2006 | Sunday 5th July 2009 July 2009
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