Noon Instruments - Toska V1.3.1 -kontakt- Free ... ((exclusive)) May 2026
Noon Instruments' Toska is an evocative Kontakt library designed to capture a specific, deep sense of longing and spiritual anguish, translated into a versatile palette of evolving atmospheric textures. Version 1.3.1 continues to refine this unique collection of sounds, which blend heavily processed analog synths, acoustic instruments, and field recordings into a professional tool for cinematic underscore and ambient music. Core Sound Sources and Design
Free Alternatives (Legal):
If you cannot afford Toska, try these free Kontakt libraries with similar vibes: Noon Instruments - Toska v1.3.1 -KONTAKT- Free ...
Unique Sound Sources: Built from over 17,000 samples (roughly 6.5 GB) of heavily processed analog synths, brass, strings, woodwinds, vocals, and field recordings. Three Main Banks: Instruments: 83 core patches for rich pads and soundscapes. Noon Instruments' Toska is an evocative Kontakt library
Modulation: Features two LFOs (controllable via Mod Wheel) that can be mapped to pitch, amplitude, or any macro control. System Requirements Windows 10+ / macOS 10
System Requirements:
- Windows 10+ / macOS 10.14+
- 4GB RAM (8GB recommended)
- 2GB free disk space
- Log into your account at nooninstruments.com
- Go to “My Downloads” → “Toska”
- Download “Toska_1.3.1_Installer.pkg” (macOS) or .exe (Windows)
- Run the installer – it will overwrite previous versions (your custom snapshots remain in User Content folder).
- Open Kontakt 6/7 → Libraries tab → Toska. Check bottom-right corner for version number.
Unlike traditional orchestral libraries that aim for perfect performances, Toska focuses on "imperfect" multi-layered recordings. It blends heavily processed analog synths with organic sources like brass, strings, woodwinds, vocals, and field recordings. The result is a sound palette that feels alive and unpredictable, making it ideal for dystopian underscores, ambient soundscapes, and experimental electronica. Key Features of v1.3.1 Toska - Noon Instruments