FluidR3 .sf2 contents

• Jan 21, 2016 - 02:53

Hi

I have recently had a bit of a play around with Musescore. My notation literacy is pretty poor, but I have been encouraged by what I have seen certainly ...

One of the "highlights" has been the fact that, for "free sounds" the collection that comes with Musescore (the FluidR3 soundfont essentially) I think is pretty good - it almost trumps Sonatina for me in that the sounds all seem fairly unified & cohesive together, quite listenable, & many more sound options are available.

BUT I am generally much more productive working with piano roll sequencers, & hence was keen to bring the FluidR3 Soundfont into my DAW ... (working here on a second hand macbook i picked up cheap, so keen to keep everything pretty "light", not too resource intensive ... currently playing back the .sfz version of Sonatina using Plogue Sforzando ...)

However when I download the FluidR3 .sf2 from the musescore site

http://www.musescore.org/download/fluid-soundfont.tar.gz,

i notice all the ensemble string sounds are missing ... (& possibly other sounds too...)

Has the soundset in Musescore been supplemented in some way? if so, where from?

& this raised a secondary question, when i looked up GM on Wikipedia, all the string instruments are only listed by individual, not "ensemble" format (i.e. no "violins 1 x 14, violins 2 x 11 etc ..). So is it true technically to sat that the sf2 / sf3 in Musescore is really GM compliant?

But primarilly, I would really like to be able to load all the default Soundfont sounds from Musescore in my DAW on my laptop.

So how can i achieve this?

Can the sounds be found in the nightly build path somewhere (for example)? On my macbook the "nuts & bolts" of the installation seem to be hidden out of view ...


Comments

In reply to by [DELETED] 5

Thanks

But having downloaded & unpacked that .sf2 i still don't see the individual string ensembles "1st violins, 2nd violins" etc ... (as the appear in the mixer dropdown menus when assigning sounds in Musescore.)

These were the sounds i was after - or is the Musescore mixer simply providing a cosmetic (range restricted) "wrap" of the generic "Dry_Strings" etc ...

None the less, thanks - it's certainly nice to have a set of 2 choices available now for many of the standard orchestral sounds ... & one day, i'll write that Koto concerto! ; )

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