@nafai23 said:
Like I said I am impressed..very impressed but lets not call his work musicianship at the highest level but certainly not slight his work. I retract the statement about "punching it out"....it is more than that...not great "musicianship" but nice ears and skills.
OK, I think I see the problem. Something that you would only be able to judge having actually tried to do this sort of work: To get samples, which by their very nature have to be quite uniform, to express anything at all, takes musicality on the highest level. The result is maybe NOT a performance 'on the highest level', compared with a good real orchestral one. Let me use a silly example: To play the oboe part on a blade of grass between one's fingers would be almost impossible. But I'm saying that someone with sufficient musicality - not just grass-playing skills - could get a result that's impressive - but still CONSIDERING it's a blade of grass!
I still insist that it takes music-making on the highest level, true musical intelligence and feeling, to get La Mer to sound this close - USING SAMPLES.
But as I say, you would only understand this if you tried. I can only say that out of everything I've done, trying to mould music out of samples was the hardest challenge I've untertaken. I don't mean technically but musically. Apologies to the VSL team, but it isn't easy. Using these tools, that's about as close as you can get at the moment, I'd say.
When I did the Hans Gal excerpts (needed for an exhibition on his music) I refused to leave it at 'that's as good as we can get it with samples', and we played the string parts 'live' over the top, mixed in. This helped. But of course there are clumsy moments which couldn't be fixed using these tools. I guess that's why this library is constantly in development.
So I'm saying that given a difficult instrument to play, you need to be a true musician to still be able to express something. But I understand now, 'the highest level' should be applied to what's needed to get this result, and not to the result itself compared to top performances of this music by world-class orchestras.
It's easy to forget the 'real world' when spending time in a virtual one!
Simon