LO•KI Felt Piano vs Lekko

LO•KI Felt Piano and Lekko both offer intimate felt piano sounds, but their core distinction lies in their approach to character and control. LO•KI aims for a versatile atmospheric piano with user-defined sound shaping, while Lekko prioritizes a distinct, organically imperfect sound, specifically a "soft piano phenomenon pushed to the extreme."

Sonically, LO•KI offers five velocity layers and three microphone positions for spatial flexibility, alongside dedicated controls for attack, release, dynamic range, tape saturation, and ambiance, totaling 5.7 GB. Lekko distinguishes itself with a larger 7.1 GB library focused on capturing a smaller Scandinavian upright, emphasizing "human imperfections maxed out" and including samples recorded to worn analog tape for additional "dirty, unstable mood." While both mention multiple round robins, only LO•KI specifies five.

Choose LO•KI if you prioritize granular control over various aspects of your felt piano sound, desiring adaptability for film scoring, ambient, and songwriting with mic positions and comprehensive shaping parameters. Choose Lekko if your preference leans towards a piano with inherent character, embracing its described "fragile beauty" and organic imperfections, particularly for recording and atmospheric genres.

Products Compared

Insights from Real-World Use

LO•KI Felt Piano

  • I have Lo-ki, but never really connected with it. The general principle I'd advocate thought, is that you can just never have too many felt pianos. I've.
  • reviews have been extremely positive if you're looking for soft dynamics ... Another fine felt piano library from my collection is "Lo-Ki" from Sonuscore.
  • Felt Piano was very useful and have used it a lot. However, I agree-what a weird programming choice on Autograph. I like Sonuscore's LoKi felt piano.
  • It causes me not able to use Woodchest in my production, the thumps happen so sudden and out of control, so is the Loki felt by sonuscore...

Lekko

  • Lekko's interface is very cool, with main controls, EQ, envelopes, and accessible layers.
  • Lekko is much more than just a piano library.
  • Lekko's interface is cool due to visual and numerical feedback when adjusting parameters.
  • Lekko's interface is beautiful and intuitive.
  • thanks a bunch for another inspiring video - I had the Pool project and Lekko already, but the Boddog was new to me.you can never have enough pianos on your drive, every one gives another kind of insp