User Guide  for  Hauptwerk
About Hauptwerk
Welcome
What is it?
What is it used for?
Licensing
Installation
Prerequisites
Background
Installing
Upgrading
Backups
Quick start
Stand-alone
MIDI sequencing
VSTi plug-in
Background
Tour of a pipe organ
Using Hauptwerk
The virtual console
Settings screens
Menus
The File menu
Loading sample sets
Combination files
The registration sequencer
Temperaments
Audio routing and multi-channel audio
Activation and reset
Capture mode
Recording audio
Master tuning
The transposer
MIDI input
MIDI output
Re-directable inputs
Component installer
Importing v1 organs
MIDI organ consoles
MIDI sequencing
Organ design tools
Performance tuning
General options
Sample set options
Voicing
Reference
MIDI implementation
Troubleshooting
Creating sample sets

What is Hauptwerk?


Hauptwerk is a computer program that takes full advantage of the enormous processing power of the latest home computers to provide very complex pipe organ modelling and per-pipe sound shaping, whilst maintaining the enormous polyphony necessary to model a pipe organ successfully.

Hauptwerk console screen


At its core, Hauptwerk is a very powerful and high-performance specialist software sampler.

The system is built around the philosophy of using at least one large sample per pipe (typically 3-10 seconds), all including release samples to record the decay of each pipe accurately, and recorded in CD quality or better. All samples are held in memory to achieve a much higher polyphony for a given hardware cost than is possible with disk-streaming, commonly used in software samplers. Unlike generic software or hardware samplers, Hauptwerk has complex physical and acoustic models specifically designed to reproduce the features and sound of a pipe organ, and is thus able to achieve much more realistic results. It is also designed for a much higher polyphony than generic samplers.

But Hauptwerk is much more than a sampler. It also models all of the physical controls and functional details of a pipe organ. The main console screen shows you a photo-realistic representation of the console, and allows you full control over the virtual organ in the same way that you would control the original instrument. Everything behaves as you would expect; stops, couplers, the programmable combination system, swell pedals, crescendo pedals, ventils, theatre organ second-touch, bass and melody couplers, and so on. You can also use up to four touch-screen monitors to make the virtual controls accessible in convenient locations relative to your MIDI console or MIDI keyboards.(1)

What's more, in Hauptwerk every control and function can be fully controlled by MIDI, and Hauptwerk can send MIDI output to control moving/illuminated draw-knobs/tabs, control real external ranks of pipes or hardware expanders, and even control LCD panels to show labels for each draw-knob and piston. If you wish, Hauptwerk can be fully integrated into a MIDI organ console and operate as its 'engine', with comprehensive real-time per-pipe voicing facilities, multi-channel audio output and all of the features you would need from a high-end system.(1)

But perhaps the biggest appeal to many of Hauptwerk's users is that you are not restricted to a single set of organ sounds. Have a look at some of the amazing sample sets available for Hauptwerk, listed on the Crumhorn Labs website. Some of the greatest organs in the world can be played virtually.

Hauptwerk is available for Apple Macs (both Intel and PowerPC Macs) as well as PCs running Windows. If you are a Windows studio user, Hauptwerk can also run as VSTi plug-in, enabling it to be integrated conveniently within Cubase and other major VSTi hosts, or used with virtual MIDI cable drivers with non-VSTi sequencers. Currently the (VSTi) plug-in version of Hauptwerk is only available on Windows platforms, but a plug-in version is planned for the Mac platform soon.

Because Hauptwerk is designed to give incredible performance and realism, a fairly modern, powerful computer will give best results. We think that's a small price to pay for the results you will get.

However, you can still use Hauptwerk on older computers with excellent results and a huge polyphony by simply disabling some of the audio realism features such as interpolation and per-pipe filters. Even with only 512 MB of memory you can still use Hauptwerk very effectively with smaller sample sets, or by choosing to load only certain ranks of larger sample sets.

Unless you are buying a pre-configured Hauptwerk-based system, it also helps if you have some basic experience with computers and MIDI.

(1) MIDI output, real-time voicing, the LCD panel system, multi-channel audio output and multi-monitor support are only available in the Advanced Edition of Hauptwerk.


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Hauptwerk, Hauptwerk virtual pipe organ, Crumhorn Labs and the Crumhorn Labs and Hauptwerk logos are trademarks of Crumhorn Labs Ltd.