>The fact is, I want samples, not synthesis, BECAUSE they are separate recordings of notes, articulations, etc. played by real instruments. The art of sampling is using recordings, not fakes, of an instrument.
Well, i'll go for a drastic comparison now.
Imagine watercolors the only, albeit advanced, means to create pictures, and people have gone at great lengths to provide you with the means to pull it off as authentic and realistic as possible. So you have stacks of trays with gazillions of water colors in all shades and you have learnt to make good use of them.
Now someone comes along and tells you about this new technology which is called photography, which can easily capture in a mere second what would have took you days to paint.
Now, you kick and scream about it not being watercolors, so how could that be taken seriously and whatnot.
Still, folks will very likely begin to flood the new guy's studio to have their picture taken...
Point in case is, what do you head for to have chiseled on your tomb stone ? This one ?
"Here lies good old Bill, who was a master in making independent recordings of tones sound as if they were in fact being played by an orchestra."
or would you rather prefer that one :
"Here lies good old Bill, who was a master in making orchestral music."
Regardless of the current development stage and realism (or lack thereof) of <the unspeakable>, sooner or later we have to acknowledge that sampling by itself is a static procedure, a snapshot, and while it provides you with instant realism and expressiveness *for this very recording of that note*, it will fight you forever when you try to bend it into something else. That's why they pile up layers and layers of velocity switches because what you seek is just not contained in one single 14" tom tom hit.
It's a bit like trying to assemble a novel with a construction kit of words. You'd need a pretty decent stock of premade words to find exactly the ones you're looking for and a good database structure to actually find them if they're there. Now, if you had opted for the *letters*-toolkit, you'd just have to make sure you have a good amount of all two dozen different letters and you're set.
I have the impression, that <soandso> might evolve into a decent letters-toolkit.
Christian
[URL=http://www.artofthegroove.com/logic/mp3/Christian_Obermaier_demo.mp3]show reel [/URL] [URL=http://uk.geocities.com/christianobermaier/home.htm]home page [/URL] [URL=http://uk.geocities.com/christianobermaier/Studio.htm]studio pics [/URL] [URL=http://uk.geocities.com/christianobermaier/Gearlist.htm]gear list [/URL]
Well, i'll go for a drastic comparison now.
Imagine watercolors the only, albeit advanced, means to create pictures, and people have gone at great lengths to provide you with the means to pull it off as authentic and realistic as possible. So you have stacks of trays with gazillions of water colors in all shades and you have learnt to make good use of them.
Now someone comes along and tells you about this new technology which is called photography, which can easily capture in a mere second what would have took you days to paint.
Now, you kick and scream about it not being watercolors, so how could that be taken seriously and whatnot.
Still, folks will very likely begin to flood the new guy's studio to have their picture taken...
Point in case is, what do you head for to have chiseled on your tomb stone ? This one ?
"Here lies good old Bill, who was a master in making independent recordings of tones sound as if they were in fact being played by an orchestra."
or would you rather prefer that one :
"Here lies good old Bill, who was a master in making orchestral music."
Regardless of the current development stage and realism (or lack thereof) of <the unspeakable>, sooner or later we have to acknowledge that sampling by itself is a static procedure, a snapshot, and while it provides you with instant realism and expressiveness *for this very recording of that note*, it will fight you forever when you try to bend it into something else. That's why they pile up layers and layers of velocity switches because what you seek is just not contained in one single 14" tom tom hit.
It's a bit like trying to assemble a novel with a construction kit of words. You'd need a pretty decent stock of premade words to find exactly the ones you're looking for and a good database structure to actually find them if they're there. Now, if you had opted for the *letters*-toolkit, you'd just have to make sure you have a good amount of all two dozen different letters and you're set.
I have the impression, that <soandso> might evolve into a decent letters-toolkit.
Christian
[URL=http://www.artofthegroove.com/logic/mp3/Christian_Obermaier_demo.mp3]show reel [/URL] [URL=http://uk.geocities.com/christianobermaier/home.htm]home page [/URL] [URL=http://uk.geocities.com/christianobermaier/Studio.htm]studio pics [/URL] [URL=http://uk.geocities.com/christianobermaier/Gearlist.htm]gear list [/URL]