Mon Mar 20, 2017 4:55 am
Hello Stéphane,
To add to Andrew's post, there isn't a truly dry (or drier) version of that sample set, so the only option you would have with it would be see whether truncating the release tails was sufficiently convincing. Since doing so can't remove the reverb from the attack/sustain portions of the samples, with very wet sample sets truncation is probably most successful when used in moderation (i.e. without truncating tails too short, which would risk sounding unnatural, relative to the reverberation audible in the attack/sustain).
Best regards, Martin.
Hauptwerk software designer/developer, Milan Digital Audio.