Vienna Symphonic Library Forum
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  • Well for now I am quite happy with other vendors muted instruments. Although I think it would be VERY UNFAIR if someone who bought EPIC HORNS for isntance was NOT entitled to the same in Mutes.

    Where are the MUTES guys? VSL?

    Evan Evans

    P.S. I am aware Herb mentioned this before and even mentioned it MAY be a free addon, but we need those 8 Horns in Mutes man. We need Violins in Harmonics and one more octave above where they are now.

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    @tonylombardi said:

    They didn't do mutes so they can charge more for them when they do release them. It's a business after all!
    This is really the only thing I can thing of, since muted brass and strings are so common in orchestral music.

    Actually there's another hypothesis: they didn't know how common mutes are. But I don't think they're that incompetent, or incompetent at all.

    If I'm wrong, maybe this will get them to explain the real reason to us.


    Tony I'm amazed that you could suggest that the team that have put together this incredible library are in some way incompetent. OK you backed down immediately, but to even think that I find bewildering. You don't seem to have much respect for their work. Everyone knows that VSL is a huge depature from previous libraries, or any other library around today. I am sure that it is the sheer amount of time and work that goes into creating the samples that is the real reason that we haven't seen all instruments muted yet. Of course VSL are in the business of making money from music - so am I - but to simply say that the only reason muted brass weren't included in the original realease was to make more money, flies in the face of what we know about Herb and the team. Have you forgotten the FREE upgrade to First Edition owners for example? Please think through what you're posting, these are real people we're dealing with and I don't think your criticism is constructive.

    Thanks,

    Andy.

  • I suppose you're right Andy. It's just that it's such a big hole in the library. You really can't call it a complete orchestral library without brass mutes. I just hope they don't leave out obvious stuff like this in the Symphonic Package and then charge us later for it when they do get it done.

    But here's one issue. Let me ask you this question: Wouldn't you have rather had brass mutes than obscure instruments like the Cimbasso, Bass Trumpet, and Wagner Tuba? If you listen to orchestral music, brass mutes are used WAY more than any of those instruments. Could it be that it was easier to do those instruments than brass mutes? Maybe, I don't know. I'm curious as to how many people have actually used these instruments in their music, and how often.

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    @tonylombardi said:

    Wouldn't you have rather had brass mutes than obscure instruments like the Cimbasso, Bass Trumpet, and Wagner Tuba?


    I understand what you're saying, but I think it's a double edged sword. Yes you're right brass mutes are used immeasurably more times in orchestral writing than the Bass Trumpet for example, but what I've found is that having the more unusual instruments at my disposal helps when looking for different and fresh textures. It's a case of more is better, rather than less. Anyway Herb's made the announcement so there shouldn't be too long to wait.

    Thanks,

    Andy.

  • Which update do we need the most ?

    You're talking about muted brass,
    but don't you guys need the Bass flute at all ?
    That's a misterious hole in the VSL library

    " Wouldn't you have rather had brass mutes than obscure instruments like the Cimbasso, Bass Trumpet, and Wagner Tuba?"

    Right, but at least we HAVE the brass library.

    Maybe, the main focus of Herb was to produce a classical orchestra, more than a classical bank aimed to fill the pop, or movie music purpose.

    I can't complain, having the VSL changed my life, even if I bought already several orchestral library, so, even if I (we) express some criticism, let me tell you all the good that we enjoy too.
    "-)

  • I suspect there will be an anouncement of some new stuff very soon. Things have been very quite around here for a while

  • In fairness (since I started this thread), I do think that a Wagner tuba or a bass trumpet is a lot easier to do than a good set of mutes. For trumpet alone I would want a complete set of long notes, short notes, trills, stacatto repetitions, legato, portamentos, etc for each of harmon (with and without stem), straight and cup mutes. And I would probably want trumpets and trombones with a mod-wheel controlled hat (because I'm a sick bastard). So I realize that I'm asking to increase the number of samples (and recording/engineering time) in the current trumpet set by a factor of 5 or more. Just adding a bass trumpet is clearly much easier than that.

    For strings I'd be a little less demanding, because I don't see much real use for metal practice mutes in orchestral music; simple rubber or wooden mutes would be fine. So I'd only want to double the current library size. And maybe not even that because I'm not convinced that there's a huge difference between things like legno with and without mute.

    I think that Herb et al made a concious business decision to eliminate mutes that had nothing to do with competence or a desire to extort money out of us users. They probably decided that the main commercial users will be film composers, who tend to favour a lush (unmuted) sound. And a complete set of mutes would make an expensive venture prohibitive.

    However, having rushed to his defence, Herb, if you're listening, I really do want mutes, and I would be willing to pay extra for them if they were done in the same fabulously thorough manner as the unmuted instruments were.

  • string mutes are there, right? I use them all the time and love them.

  • I love muted solo violin. Would be thrilled to have it from VSL.

    Nigel

  • Brass and string mutes, please, Herb. And since we are wishing, don't forget the string harmonics.

    Michael Matthews

  • Definitely want both natural and fingered string harmonics for both solo and section strings. And if we could get a good set of harmonic repetitions, legato and portamento as well as long and short notes and effects like tremolos and glissandos, that would be particularly useful.

  • Everybody has his own needs,
    Why don't we organize a Pool ?
    Herb, is it a secret, what's coming next, new products, updates ?

  • Your discussion makes me think about something: When you mute an instrument, it’s almost as if you have a completely new instrument. When muted, you can do nearly every thing you do without muting it. So, for each way to mute the instrument you have a new instrument. And because you can change the way to mute during a playing note you have infinite samples do make.
    It’s almost the same than to sample a human voice. “Changing the mute” is almost like changing a vowel… And that’s not simple to sample!
    I’ve started to sample a singer’s voice many years ago… But when trying to put samples together, I’ve noticed that the more I added samples the more the “instrument” was heterogeneous and sounded artificial. Why? It was almost impossible for the singer to reproduce exactly the same vowel twice! Even if this evolution was not audible when sung by the real singer, it was very artificial when putting together cut samples from different context (Imagine a flute where the diameter change suddenly up to 3 millimetres…) The transition was brutal and not natural. I’ve found the solution in a huge amount of sampling and in voice modelling.
    I’m afraid that we’ll have those kinds of difficulties with muted instruments like muted trumpet. So may be VSL team have already worked about muted stuff but where waiting for a mature technology to realize it properly (with the same quality as this amazing lib).
    The classic sampling technology has showed its limits few years ago, and now we see that it’s an optimal method when combined with other techniques like performance tools or convolution with impulse responses. You surely heard about the Giga Piano II and the impulse responses of the board. Convolutions don’t give good results to simulate vowels or mutes but other techniques are coming…
    So don’t blame them if they don’t have already a huge muted library. They might have technical issues to manage before releasing it!

  • Interesting... I could actually see them using a type of convolution or filtering for the mute effect. After all, that's all that a mute is reallly doing, filtering. And you're absolutely right about the size of the job -- it hadn't occured to me that they would basically need to sample *everything* again with the mutes on!!! Holy smokes, what a task!

    Unfortunately, though... I'm *dying* for mutes! (And yes, nat/art harmonics, scratch tones, sul tasto, sul pont, etc. What would also be great would be some over-zealous solo string marcato attacks -- you know, the kind that actually distort a little bit. That would be awesome! I wonder how hard it is to get players to record samples of "mistakes", like these little buzzes... They could really bring sample-based performances to life, I think! It would also be amazing to have real "performance double-stops" -- intelligently mapped double-stops using a new mode of the performance tool... okay, I'm getting carried away.)

    J.

  • "I could actually see them using a type of convolution or filtering for the mute "

    Yes, they are some solutions for this.
    About the convolution, you couldn't have good results with it, at least with the convolution products currently available.
    About filtering, actually we could say that any DSP tranformation on a signal is a filter... So yes, theorically, we could do it with a real time, dynamic and adaptative filtering. The most important point is the modelling of the muting transformation. That's where rely the quality and the realism of it.

  • I for one won't buy either the chamber strings or the solo strings without at least muted sustain samples. It's that important for me. You don't really need muted col legno or even muted pizz is not so different. But muted sustain. legato, that's basic, IMO.

    Alan

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    @belkina said:

    You don't really need muted col legno or even muted pizz is not so different.


    I agree that muted legno and pizz aren't terribly different from their unmuted versions. The only places one tends to encounter them are where it would be difficult to remove a mute that was placed for some other reason.

    But that got me to thinking... what about muted versus unmuted harmonics? I'm not a string player, so I can't just slap a mute on and try it. Can anybody comment on the differences here?

    And, on the subject of some type of filter to mimic the effect of a mute, I'd have to object to that. What I like so much about VSL is its realism. I may be a Luddite, but I think that digital filtering would greatly diminish that realism.

    K

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    @Another User said:

    I may be a Luddite, but I think that digital filtering would greatly diminish that realism.
    What about convolution for space modeling? Do you think it diminish the realism of VSL instruments? You can change the impulse response to simulate different spaces and different surround configuration. Of course, until having very good tools for it, built in reveb was prefered... Is it still the case?
    Anyway, I just don't know what solution(s) VSL's team will choose for mutes, but I'm shure they'll give good results (as usual...)

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    @MusicianDesigner said:

    What about convolution for space modeling? Do you think it diminish the realism of VSL instruments? You can change the impulse response to simulate different spaces and different surround configuration. Of course, until having very good tools for it, built in reveb was prefered... Is it still the case?

    Well, the math for reverb convolution is very solid. It's computationally intensive, but it shouldn't cause serious signal degradation or introduce excessive noise (if done right). And, because it mathematically models what happens to the wave as a result of the physical room, the results sound quite realistic.

    But I don't think that the same could be said for mutes. How do you sample the effect of placing a mute on the bridge of a fiddle? I don't think I even understand what that would mean. It's not like the reverb situation where you can idealize the same initial waveform being acted upon by a physical space. The sound from the muted instrument is a different sound to begin with because the bridge is part of the sound creation mechanism.

    I suppose you could sample each note with and without the mute, compare the power spectrum and construct a set of EQ rules that try to mimic the same behaviour. But is that all there is to a mute? Might the extra weight on the bridge also alter the frequencies of the upper harmonics? Could there be additional phasing effects or other interesting distortions?

    I'd really prefer it if they were to just sample the muted instrument and be done with it.