In addition, she was a guest soloist at the James Wood portrait concert at the 2001 Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival which was broadcast on BBC Radio 3. In 1997 Kuniko recorded James Wood’s Marimba Concerto in London where her performance was highly complimented by the BBC. Installing all these options requires around 8GB of disk space.After graduation she was based in Europe for over ten years, winning major awards including the Kranichsteiner Musikpreis from the Internationales Musikinstitut Darmstadt in 1996 and second prize at the International Leigh Howard Stevens Marimba competition in 1996. The loops are duplicated in Acidised WAV, Apple Loops and Recycle formats and can also be imported into Stylus RMX. In addition to the loops, there's a mini‑library of three‑dynamic single hits on all the instruments (including some nice rainstick, agogo bells and mark tree samples), a valuable aid to programmers.
However, the makers' assertion that Elemental Studio Percussion offers "quick and easy percussion parts” wouldn't cut much ice with pop producers, who I suspect would end up spending a lot of time using Recycle to put these grooves firmly in the pocket. When you apply that approach to multitracking 14 instruments, the results are bound to be a little uncoordinated, but what they lack in precision they make up for in imagination and spirit. I'd guess that the player created these pieces largely through improvisation, perhaps with a few ideas sketched out beforehand. Picking the elements that work best together takes time, but (as ever) a little creativity will produce good results. Despite this, when you assemble the components of each piece in a song they all sit fairly well with the click, and the transitions from one four‑bar chunk to the next are clean. Some of the pieces sound messy in places (the 240bpm effort is the worst offender) and the combination of less‑than‑perfect timing, over‑ambitious ideas and a crowded arrangement spoils the feel. Even if things occasionally get a little too busy, it's clear that these rhythms would add a lot of vitality to a track. I enjoyed the drive and urgency of the 140bpm, 4/4 number, in which some nifty conga, timbale and djembe playing over an urgent egg‑shaker and cowbell pulse whip up the excitement. These pieces have no particular shape and lack played endings: they just stop in mid‑flow. The library contains eight rhythm pieces spanning a tempo range of 80 to 240 bpm, each broken down into its component instruments with a reference stereo mix. Mr Diaz (assistant professor at the prestigious Berklee College of Music) has a background in jazz, world beat, R&B and Caribbean music, and on Elemental Studio Percussion he performs with the staple Latin percussion instruments: shakers, maracas, guiro, tambourine, bongos and congas, for example. The building blocks for this enterprise are provided by percussion maestro Ernesto Diaz. In this case we're not talking about erecting the Pyramids of Giza or constructing the East London Olympic Village, but the much more critical business of knocking up a groovy rhythm track. As any craftsman will tell you, if you get the basics right you can build with confidence.