

Problem solved.Īs to church organ, I blended SampleTank’s Church Organ Air with Miroslav’s Cathedral Organ. I found, however, that I can easily switch between Module Pro and SampleTank IOS while keeping the Korg Microkey Air connected over Bluetooth. I can only assume that IK want you to purchase Hammond B-3X for iPad ($130 USD) or AmpliTube Leslie. Further, SampleTank IOS does not have a rotary speaker simulation built-in. Frankly, I am not a fan of SampleTank IOS drawbar organs, which are very rock-oriented.

As to variety and solo instruments, Miroslav Mobile trounces Module Pro in the orchestra department.Īs to B-3 organs, Module Pro wins the contest. I like the woodwinds and horns best, rating them a notch above the Korg Module Pro voices. I’m on the love side although some of the string sections sound a tad dated. Sonically, Miroslav has always had its own unique character. I was well-aware of his work as a leader and as a sideman (Herbie Mann, Chick Corea, Roy Ayers, Larry Coryell, and others) before hearing the original Philharmonic library. Miroslav Vitouš, by the way, is one heck of a jazzer. The full library is 2.27GB while the Mobile Edition tips in at a modest 532MB. The mobile edition is a cut-down version of the current, big and improved Miroslav Philharmonic 2 library. (Again) Even better, I restored in-app purchases, finding additional B-3 organs and, ta-da, Miroslav Symphonic Mobile Edition. Thus, I installed IK Multimedia SampleTank IOS on my iPad and gave it a try.

Just like finding a 20 dollar bill in a drawer full of old socks, it’s a pleasant surprise to discover that you already own a useful iPad music app and simply forgot about it.
