

They ran more smoothly on my computer, but they didn't sound nearly as good. I'm not too familiar at this point with a whole lot of other sample libraries, only a few far cheaper banks that were far inferior. Logic would be the only program I could run and get the performance I wanted out of it. This is unfortunate, especially since I have about 4 GB of RAM on my hard drive. The main problem I had with this was that I had to really be careful about not pushing my computer too hard. The actual quality of the given samples is pretty robust and full for the most part, and none of them sound very artificial, which is what I am always worried about. However, this is rarely possible at home, so I would have to say that this is pretty satisfying as far as sample banks go. My style of music doesn't really call for sample banks as much, since I really would almost always prefer to use live instruments. This is sort of limiting, as there are other sample banks that allow you to really manipulate the sounds within the banks themselves. You'd have to rely on some outboard gear or EQing to really mess with them. The only concern I have with these sounds is that once you pick them, you cannot manipulate too far within the interface of Goliath itself. There's a ton of different sounds for piano, synthesizers, orchestral sounds, percussion, and drum kit. The sounds in this sampler are pretty varied, and actually do a great job of covering all the basics. It also, beyond being a sample bank, has an actual sampler, called Play. The setup didn't take me very long, and once I got started, the interface in Logic made it all pretty easy to control. I think that it's a pretty easy thing to set up with Logic or another DAW.


This is a pretty high-quality sample bank.
