Hmm well think of it this way:
Orchestral Cube: multisampling as we know it. Tons of articulations and special p<f>p, p<f, sfz etc samples. The technique used in de the Cube is not new, we've seen it in other Giga libraries as well, but of course the choice of material and the recordings themselves are amazing.
Performance Set: now the contents of this set you won't find in any other library out yet. The set offers you new playing techniques in combination with a midi tool set between the midi input and the sampler. This is used for true legato playing, true repetitions, alternation and that sort of things. True legato is really my favourite as you're able to play realtime on the keyboard, legato, and will hear the actual interval switching the way it sounds with real instruments (glisses, clicks, breaths, valves).
So the Cube is a complete orchestral library, but without the Performance Set you won't be able to achieve the realistic legato prhasing and repetitions you're hearing in some of the demos.
The Performance Set is not a complete orchestral library. It is a tool GREATLY enhancing the realism and writing freedom of an existing library. Combining the Set with the Cube is of course what you ultimately want, as they totally blend in sound. The Set does not offer standard samples, like single percussion hits, single staccatos, as that is what the Cube is for.
If you already own orchestral libraries, perhaps going for the Set first is a good idea as you will probably gain the most in realistic sequencing. But you will soon find you want the Cube as well.
Hope this helps.
Maarten
Orchestral Cube: multisampling as we know it. Tons of articulations and special p<f>p, p<f, sfz etc samples. The technique used in de the Cube is not new, we've seen it in other Giga libraries as well, but of course the choice of material and the recordings themselves are amazing.
Performance Set: now the contents of this set you won't find in any other library out yet. The set offers you new playing techniques in combination with a midi tool set between the midi input and the sampler. This is used for true legato playing, true repetitions, alternation and that sort of things. True legato is really my favourite as you're able to play realtime on the keyboard, legato, and will hear the actual interval switching the way it sounds with real instruments (glisses, clicks, breaths, valves).
So the Cube is a complete orchestral library, but without the Performance Set you won't be able to achieve the realistic legato prhasing and repetitions you're hearing in some of the demos.
The Performance Set is not a complete orchestral library. It is a tool GREATLY enhancing the realism and writing freedom of an existing library. Combining the Set with the Cube is of course what you ultimately want, as they totally blend in sound. The Set does not offer standard samples, like single percussion hits, single staccatos, as that is what the Cube is for.
If you already own orchestral libraries, perhaps going for the Set first is a good idea as you will probably gain the most in realistic sequencing. But you will soon find you want the Cube as well.
Hope this helps.
Maarten