Voices of Passion
Female Vocalists from Wales, Syria, India, Bulgaria and America

₹13,530 ₹7,171 (incl. GST)
Instant Delivery
Software is not returnable.
- Female Vocalists from Wales, Syria, India, Bulgaria and America
- Over 7GB of 1,000 recorded ethnic phrases
- Created by award-winning sounds producers Doug Rogers and Nick Phoenix
- Staccato, swell and New Age-style performances
- Oo, oh and ah true legato intervals (America and Wales)
- Phrase generator (Wales)
- Now included in OPUS, along with individual downloads, custom keyswitches, and dozens of MIDI Tools and Mixer Effects
Whenever you need solo vocals as an effect rather than a traditional singer, Voices of Passion gathers the uniquely beautiful voices of female singers from around the world and makes them available to you in a single library. As a media composer tasked with depicting a sprawling landscape, a single note from one of these singers will throw it into sharp relief. You can produce an incredibly expressive performance with ornaments, vibrato, and all the subtleties you need to produce the exact soundscape for the job.
QUICK FACTS:
- Produced by NICK PHOENIX
- Over 7 GBs of vocals
- Female Vocalists from Wales, Syria, India, Bulgaria and America
- All singers recorded with great attention paid towards pitch
- Oo, oh and ah true legato intervals (American and Wales only)
- Over 1000 ethnic phrases with a great deal of passion
- Phrase generator for Welsh vocals
- Expressive samples, non vibrato, delayed vibrato
- Ethereal style, breathy vocals
- New Age vocal performances, staccato and swells
- PLAY features allow for very quick and intuitive sound loading and organization
- All singers recorded with a Telefunken Elam 251 and a RCA 44 ribbon mic for tonal variation
WHAT WILL YOU CREATE?
If you want to imbue your music with haunting vocals from around the world, there’s no better way to do so than with Voices of Passion. Each of the 5 voices comes from a different nation, giving you the ability to call upon a wide variety of traditional singers and styles, whichever best suits the atmosphere you need to create–making this essential if you compose for film or video games. Which one will you use first?