Kontakt has become one of the most popular and respected software samplers for modern musicians. If you're relatively new to Kontakt then these 5 steps will get you up and running in no time.
Rather than my typical list of secrets about a particular instrument or DAW program, I thought this month I’d shake it up a bit. Here are 5 important tips I absolutely wish somebody had told me when I first started using the powerhouse megasampler Kontakt from Native Instruments. Hopefully, if you’re getting started with Kontakt (or even if you’ve been using it for a while!) these tips will save you valuable time in your workflow.
The effects section in Native Instruments Kontakt 5 has been expanded with several key additions that focus on the studio-style sound processing. New algorithms Solid G-EQ and Solid Bus Comp, borrowed from the Solid Mix Series, allow alignment and compression, and the separately purchased Transient Designer was integrated into the Kontakt.
Quick Load Menu Is…. Quick
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It’s so easily overlooked, and it’s one of the best features of Kontakt if you find yourself reaching for your favorite instruments often. Just to the right of the ‘keyboard’ button at the top menu bar, click on the ‘quick’ button and you’ll be treated to Kontakt’s Quick Load menu. You can drag and drop your favorite multis, banks, and instruments into the menu. If you find yourself reaching for a similar set of instruments often, you’d be nuts to waste valuable session time hunting around that huge library. Put them in the quick load menu and call it a day!
Drag and Replace, Keep the Same MIDI Channel
Ok, you know how you pick out one sound, decide you want to use another so you browse a bit, double-click on a preset, play some notes… and still hear the original sound? I know, it drove me nuts too. When you have a sound loaded up in the rack and you double-click a different patch, Kontakt automatically keeps your previous sound and adds a new sound on MIDI channel 2. Of course, since your controller is set to MIDI channel 1, you won’t hear your new sound when you play!
Well, it doesn’t have to be this way! Instead of deleting your original sound and then instantiating your new one, simply drag and drop the NKI file onto the current sound that exists in the rack. Voila! The current sound will disappear, and your new sound will appear, already routed to MIDI channel 1. It’s a great time saver if you’re looking to browse through your library and don’t want to use Komplete Kontrol.
Right-Click and Assign
Want to take advantage of that fancy MIDI controller you bought with over 300 buttons, lights, and knobs? You don’t have to worry about what knob is transmitting what message on what MIDI channel… All you have to know is where the right mouse button is.
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Right-click on a controller on the instrument inside of the Kontakt window and you’ll be treated to the ‘learn MIDI CC automation’ dialog box. Click it, then touch something on your MIDI controller. Whatever you touch will now control that knob on the screen. Pretty cool, right? If you’re not happy with a mapping, simply right-click it and you can remove it.
As if that amount of control wasn’t enough, you can even click on the ‘auto’ menu in the navigation area (upper left corner of the window) and you’ll be treated to a top down view of all the assignments you made. Here, you can easily invert a routing if you like! Why not have a single knob move one control up while moving another one down? You can make some pretty drastic adjustments in tone that way.
Cores, Cores, Everywhere
In the options menu under ‘engine’ you’ll be able to adjust Kontakt’s multiprocessor support options. Of course, when running Kontakt in standalone mode you’re going to want Kontakt to utilize all those cores you paid so much for. However, did you know that this option can sometimes work against you when hosting Kontakt in another audio program?
MainStage, for example, has excellent multi-core handling and does all the heavy lifting in that respect for you. In that case, you want MainStage managing your multicore support and Kontakt to disable said support. Each DAW or audio program handles this differently, so be sure to research which will work best for your needs. I noticed a dramatic shift in CPU dropouts when I disabled multicore for the AU plugin but left it enabled for the standalone app on my laptop.
See The Pretty Colors
See those different colored keys? They actually do stuff!
Kontakt’s keyboard will show multicolored keys for many patches. In fact, even the most basic patch that utilizes a single color still has significance! The blue colored keys represent sampled notes. In general, when playing back a high-quality sampled instrument, you don’t want the computer to ‘generate’ sound. If it’s high quality, there is likely a sample for every single key. The blue notes represent the sampled area. If you take a strings patch, it will mean the blue notes show the range of the patch you are using, and anything outside that range isn’t playable. Of course you could monkey around in the engine and get Kontakt to ‘stretch’ the pitch of the top note up and give you more range, but the quality won’t be the same and you’ll also be outside of the physical area that instrument can actually play.
The other colors can represent a number of different thing. Sometimes an instrument will use keyswitches to change articulations (such as from bowed strings to plucked) and you’ll see pink-ish colored keys to show you what notes will make that switch for you. Many instruments may have loops, one-shot samples, or other scripting ready to go at the simple press of a key. Take notice of these colors and make the most of using them as a guide!
Kontakt is Deep, Man!
Kontakt is an incredibly deep instrument, and the richness of the programming engine allows for developers to create some truly inspiring instruments that combine elements of synthesis with elements of sample playback. Use these tips to get the most out of the included instruments as well as 3rd-party ones that you add on yourself!
Learn Native Instrument Kontakt the easy way HERE.
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So you are wondering how to install kontakt 5 in fl studio?
Well let me show how to do that in 5 basic steps:
Make sure Kontakt 5 is installed locally
Open the plugin manager in FL studio
Set up the search folder for Kontakt 5
Scan the plugin list
Locate kontakt 5 in the plugin list
Plus I’ll show you a bonus step of how to set it up so that Kontakt is easily accessible.
Let’s do it!
Step One – Make sure you have installed Kontakt 5 from Native Access Application
When you open up the Native Access application, you get to see which apps have been installed locally on your system. So check to make sure that Kontakt has been installed locally on your machine.
Once you confirm that click on the Kontakt icon. This will open up a side panel on the right side of your screen that shows a couple of tabs. Click on the second tab, which is the installation path. Make a note of where the 64 bit VST installation path is at.
You will have to remember this path for step three.
Step Two: Open up the plugin manager in fl studio
So now that you have confirmed that kontakt is installed on your machine, and you have copied the path address for the 64 bit VST, open up FL Studio.
To access the Plugin Manager, right click on the Plugin Database menu item on the left side of your screen in Fl studio. Then select the Manage Plugins option. This will bring up the plugin manager window.
NOTES: If you don’t see the menu on the left side of the window, press Alt+F8.
Step Three – Setup the search folder for FL Studio
So now that we have the FL Studio Plugin Manager window open, let’s set up the search path for FL Studio to find Kontakt.
Click on the folder icon in the Plugin Search Paths Menu.
Then you want to navigate to the folder you found earlier from the Native Access application.
Once you have navigated to the 64bit VST folder for Kontakt, click okay.
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Step Four – Scan the plugin list again
So now that we’ve told FL Studio where to look for the new Kontakt plugin, we have to get make FL Studio scan all the folders again to find the new ones.
Click the Find Plugins button in the top left of the plugin manager window.
This process will take a while, so be patient.
When it gets done, you should see Native Instruments Kontakt show up as a new plugin. You’ll know it’s new because the text will be in yellow on the right side of the window as you scroll down.
Once you have confirmed that FL Studio has now located the new plugin, you can close the Plugin Manager window.
Step Five – Locate the New Plugin
So now that you are back out in the main window of FL Studio we need to locate the new plugin.
On the menu on the left side of the window find the line that says Plugin Database.