The 96k sflib collection:

(Note: This file needs to be displayed in a wide shell window
for the table below to be displayed properly.)

Currently the sflib96 collection has a little more than  700
soundfiles  as of August, 2003, but we expect this number to
rise sharply and rapidly over the next few  years.  However,
there  are  more  large  sets of multiset samples (groups of
soundfiles with similar timbres and  articulation,  designed
to  be  used together). Consequently, the 96 k sflib samples
are organized into more levels of nested folders  (subdirec-
tories)  than  in the 44.1k /sflib collection. The following
table indicates the subdirectory structure for the  /sflib96
brass and perc collections:
  |
1 |                                        /sflib96
--+-------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------
2 |                                    brass                          |         perc
--+----------------------------------+------------------+-------------+-----------------------------------
3 |          trb                     |       btrb       |    euph     | block   cym    gourd   shaker
--+----------------------------------+------------------+-------------+-----------------------------------
4 | gliss   harmon   open   straight | open    straight | open   mute |

There  are no soundfiles in the bottom level sflib directory
— only the subdirectories brass and  perc.  Likewise,  these
two  subdirectories  do  not  contain soundfiles, but rather
further nested subdirectories.   The  perc  folder  includes
four  subdirectories  where  the actual samples are located.
The brass folder, however, contain three additional  folders
(trombone, bass trumpet and euphonium) which in turn contain
yet another level of folders where the samples are  located.
There  are  108  samples in the brass/trb/open folder, 73 in
the trb/straight folder, 63 in the harmon folder and  26  in
the gliss  folder.  Within the trb open, straight and harmon
subdirectories there are multisampled sets of  tones  played
loudly  (.ff),  mezzo  forte  (.mf)  and softly (.pp), short
tones (.S under one second in duration, and sforzando (.sfz)
tones.

