In the video below, Sample Sound Review offers a Playthrough of Orchestral Tools GRIMM in collaboration with Bleeding Fingers Music. You can check it out here.
GRIMM invites you into the eerie atmosphere of a dark, ancient forest, featuring six ensembles that blend textural, melodic, and aleatoric articulations with processed pads and impacts. These cinematic scoring tools combine historical European instruments like the tagelharpa, lutes, sackbuts, hurdy-gurdy, baroque flutes, and strings, reimagined for modern screen scoring.
Developed with Bleeding Fingers Music, GRIMM’s foundation lies in six three-piece ensembles, each representing core instrument groups: woodwinds, high strings, mid strings, low strings, plucked strings, and brass. These ensembles showcase the unique sounds of baroque recorders and flutes, hurdy-gurdies, tagelharpas, baroque violins, violas, basses, sackbuts, and lutes, crafted to evoke specific moods and settings.
GRIMM’s instruments, often linked to medieval and fantasy realms, excel in creating atmospheres for these genres but are equally effective in modern horror and crime drama, adding layers of texture, tension, and emotion to any scene.
In addition to the traditional instruments, GRIMM includes detailed processed patches, offering gritty, dark, eerie, melancholic, or dystopian soundscapes. These patches are shaped by distortion, filters, and various effects, enabling you to instantly set the mood in your compositions.
This collection was developed with Bleeding Fingers Music, a team of top-tier composers founded by Hans Zimmer, Russell Emanuel, and Steven Kofsky. Known for their work on major projects like Blue Planet 2, Prehistoric Planet, and The Simpsons, they crafted GRIMM specifically for an upcoming series, recording the instruments at Teldex Scoring Stage in Berlin. The samples are key-mapped for modern (A4=440 Hz) tuning, ensuring seamless integration with other Orchestral Tools libraries.
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