
Its intuitive interface makes it easy to use for both beginners and advanced musicians alike. Whether you need to create an authentic bassline for your cinematic projects, jazz music recordings or want a fat bottom for your trap beats, the Native Instruments Scarbee Jay-Bass is an excellent choice. You can easily shape the EQ settings to get the perfect low-end thump while adding just the right amount of grit, string noise, and fret buzz.

The Scarbee Jay-Bass driver comes equipped with advanced features such as custom pick-up and amp simulations, effects, and EQ controls to let you sculpt your sound to perfection. This audio driver is designed to provide a realistic and powerful bass tone modeled after the legendary Fender Jazz Bass.

The upright always needs help in the mix, though it brings plenty of rattles and squeaks and noise which every real acoustic recording has.The Native Instruments Scarbee Jay-Bass is a high-quality audio driver designed for audio professionals, DJs, and musicians seeking top-notch sound quality. I do like Trilian's "Studio Bridge" quite a bit, and the Vintage is great for vintage. They just didn't slice through with that nice resonance that real basses and good preamps have. Older "Red" samples were 16 bit (I believe) and a little too soft I thought. With Scarbee, I can add just a touch of Massey Tape-Head or some other good distortion, along with a little compression, and they really sit nicely.

Trilian basses still tend to have some of that overprocessed sound which plagued much of Trilogy and it's tough or impossible to remove if you feel that it needs to be.

I've spent an awful lot of time with each library (Scarbee Red and Blue, and also Trilian) and if I had to choose (luckily I don't have to) I'd go with Scarbee. I'm curious if any of you have both Trillian and Scarbee and can comment on their differences. I've been using the Kontakt Scarbee basses for a while and I just can't seem to get the tone I want.
