Complete software
Orchestra-Wave is a virtual instrument designed for producing orchestral textures and scoring layers inside your digital audio workstation (DAW). It targets both film composers and producers who want to enrich pop, electro, hip-hop, or rock productions with strings, woods, brass, ensembles, and orchestral colors typical of PCM.
Thanks to its large waveform library and 422 patches, you quickly move from idea to arrangement: sketching string harmonies, reinforcing a chorus, cinematic pads, brass stabs, doubles, and sustain layers to thicken a theme. Orchestra-Wave is also relevant for musical sound design with a "vintage digital" feel when you seek a precise, structured, and immediately mixable imprint.
The core of Orchestra-Wave relies on PCM sound generation faithful to the spirit of the original expansion card. With over 1500 waveforms, the instrument provides a vast raw material to cover varied articulations and colors, from wide ensembles to more focused instruments. This PCM base is ideal for achieving a clear response, readable attack, and easy placement in a dense arrangement.
The 422 built-in patches allow you to work immediately without creating presets. For composition, this means less time searching for "the right sound" and more time writing: you load a patch, play, then refine. This approach is particularly effective for preproduction, demos, tight deadlines, and sessions where inspiration must remain fluid.
Orchestra-Wave includes a complete effects section with reverb, chorus, and 78 multi-effects. You can thus add depth to a string section, widen an ensemble, add movement, or bring a more pronounced color without multiplying inserts in your DAW. The built-in effects also facilitate sonic coherence between patches, helping to build a homogeneous and credible section in a mix.
The graphical interface is designed for clear access to sound parameters and useful production adjustments: balancing the output, adapting presence, controlling ambiance, and refining character. Whether you aim for a broad orchestra for a cinematic theme or a discreet layer for harmonic support, the editing helps place the sound in the right spot, at the right level, and with the right sense of space.