The Woovebox sampler supports multi-sampled instruments and percussion kits.
When used chromatically (e.g. for a playable instrument like a piano), multi-sampled instruments avoid the "smurf" effect (e.g. samples sounding "unnatural" at higher or lower pitches than what they were recorded at) by sampling an instrument at different pitches. By your Woovebox intelligently switching between the different samples according to the closest pitch, the resulting instrument will sound a lot more natural when played back in your song. When further augmented with synthesis, dynamics and subtle randomness, realistic and organic renditions of accoustic instruments can be achieved.
When used for percussion, multi-sampled instruments avoid "sameness" and can help percussion parts make sound more organic by randomly selecting the sample to be played.
A multi-sampled instrument can have up to 16 samples, and will take up one sample kit. To create a multi-sampled instrument;
Refer to "using multi-sampled instruments in your song" for instructions on how to set up a patch that uses your new multi-sampled instrument.