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Benjamin Wallfisch Strings vs Lux Orchestral Strings

Posted: Nov 14, 2025 1:12 pm
by Linos
Two strings libraries that sound very good, going by the demos. We haven't discussed either library here. With Orchestral Tools' Black Friday discount, both are in the same ballpark price-wise (at l ast foe me, after vat deduction on Lux).

I'm not sure if I need Wallfisch Strings or Lux. But I am curious. Wallfisch Strings sound very live to me. Divisi sections are great. Same for up- and down-bow samples. I'm not sure if unlooped sustains are worth the additional ressources. No portamenti, and the legatos seem to be erratic.

Lux sounds warm and lush. It has huge strings sections. It has more articulations than BWS, and articulation blending looks neat. It looks like the more complete library of the two.

Curious to hear what you all think.

Re: Benjamin Wallfisch Strings vs Lux Orchestral Strings

Posted: Nov 14, 2025 3:03 pm
by Tanuj Tiku
I have to say that the LUX strings sound quite bad in terms of musicality. It actually takes me back to the very early VSL days. They do have a warm and silky sound but the legatos and phrasing capability is from 20 years ago from the sound of it.

I did listen to Wallfsich strings at the time of launch and did not hear anything wildly different from what I already have. Although, it is probably more musical than LUX. It seems there is a bit of hype for these new strings from sonuscore but sound very synthy to me!

Re: Benjamin Wallfisch Strings vs Lux Orchestral Strings

Posted: Nov 15, 2025 9:14 am
by Linos
Interesting. Lux sounds good to me. Warm, or maybe dense, because of the huge sections. The legato isn't anything special, but to me it doesn't sound any worse than that of most competitors. Good point about the musicality, though. Sonuscore has great demo composers, yet the demos still sound static. It's possible that the dynamic range does not allow for musical phrasing.

As an aside, I don't know why developers insist on providing just one transition speed when CSS has long since proven that having three speeds is far superior. It's no wonder that CSS's legato is unbeaten — other developers don't even try.