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    @DaveTubaKing said:

    Surely a full choir is at least 150 singers or say at least 32 per part we would then need half choir (16) chamber choir ([H] and small ensemble (4) and of course at least two of each soloist.


    As a former choir director, let me assure you it's difficult enough to field 32 competent professional singers. 32 is a really big sound especially if they're well rehearsed and motivated. 60 would be optimum. To define a full choir as being at least 150 singers, to me, is quite unrealistic.

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    @DaveTubaKing said:

    Surely a full choir is at least 150 singers or say at least 32 per part we would then need half choir (16) chamber choir ([H] and small ensemble (4) and of course at least two of each soloist.


    As a former choir director, let me assure you it's difficult enough to field 32 competent professional singers. 32 is a really big sound especially if they're well rehearsed and motivated. 60 would be optimum. To define a full choir as being at least 150 singers, to me, is quite unrealistic.well I've rarely played with a choral society of less than a hundred most choral societies are 100 - 150. I've played most of the standard orchestral and choral works and a choir of less than 100 would be a very poor show. I've done the big stuff such as Mahler 2, Carmina Burana, Verdi requiem, Belshazar etc with choirs well over 100 and for the really big stuff like Mahler 8 almost always there are two choral societies with the numbers up to 300 singers.

    Perhaps there's a misunderstanding when you refer to a professional outift. In the UK all all the big choral societies that perform with all the big pro orchestras are amateur. Perhaps your thinking of professional singers doing film work.

    So what will VSL be doing - smaller professional groups or big choral societies - perhaps they will have to do both.

  • Ah, Choral Society!

    That's different. The situation in the UK is not the same as here in the US. Yes, there are choral societies here, and in larger cities you can raise a good sized group, but even so, some of those groups would range from 30 - 60, or possibly a 100 or more depending on the situation.

    For me, without numeric definition, a full choir would be a group large enough to execute all parts with clarity and gusto. If you could field 8 competent singers per voice (SATB) that would be an amazing opportunity.

    Really, Dave, we should drop the word "full" and change it to small, medium, large, very large, and quite possibly, WHOA! And then define by those descriptions.

    Regardless of recorded size, for me, the benchmark is can a sampled choir perform a Bach chorale at tempo, and pieces by Palestrina.

    PA
    [/i]

  • One thing though, and that would apply for orchestral instruments also: I wish the recordings of these samples where not done so tight! Why not have them just a bit less perfect. When recording one sample at the time perfection is tempting and seem necessary although I think it makes it sound a bit less human and not as smooth in a piece context. But VSL is still a great treat! My 2 cents.

  • Guy,
    I'm of the opposite view, not just with VSL but sample bases in general.
    When sample use was in its infancy, we all wished for that tight sound, as past sample bases were considerably less refined than they are now. Trying to write a chamber music piece, or a full orchestra symphony? Twenty years ago this would have sounded awful and hopelessly synthetic.
    Now, today, we are lucky to have precise samples, well recorded, and a much truer representation of a naked live sound. (Generally)
    It's then our choice how, raw or less perfect we want the sound to be, and we have the option of manipulating the samples, and groups of samples, to emulate what we each consider is the sound we are seeking.
    It's far easier to work from excellence down, than from inferiority up.
    The sample library is just the start of a long and challenging process, and once that library is in place, it's entirely dependant on our own ability to create music, be it with one sample, or layers of samples. Today, the synthetic sound is not generally a result of poor samples, but inadequate programming, and it's our responsibility to imorve our own skills to 'come up to' the standard of the library.
    And finally, when everything is written and recorded, that masterpiece can only be truly finished when mastering, application of effects, and final mix are of the same exacting standard as the quality of the samples, our performance, and clever programming.

    All Mozart (genius) and Beethoven (THE genius) had to do was write the notes!

    regards,

    Alex.

    [H]

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    @hermitage59 said:

    All Mozart (genius) and Beethoven (THE genius) had to do was write the notes!



    AND! Without electricity!

  • I don't see it that way, I look at it from a different perspective. The issue may once again flirt with aesthetics with me receiving a few tomatoes! [:@]
    What the hell! Personally I think you need some referrence to aesthetics in music. I have to go along with what's been done in the last 5 hundred years which brought music, sound, aesthetic, recordings etc. at its peak. Much of that depended on a live orchestras, and that is what we hear and appreciate today. I don't think anybody can deny that. We also know that an orchestra does not play tight to the millisecond close, that would sound awful. Part of the beauty is all the reasonable imperfections (not talking about quantize) which blends everything more naturally. Of course, one can say that is your job to this through blablabla... and I personally already do that, but it would be interesting to have some sounds in the future that could take that into account, which to me is related to the warmth issue. Ok I better duck now, here comes the eggs and tomatoes!!!! [:O]ops:

  • Guy,
    No need to duck just yet.
    In fact the inter relation of notes and the possibility to automate all or part of the process has been discussed elsewhere in the forum to length.
    But it's the transition between notes that determines much of the sound we call live, and i speak as an ex orchestral player.
    As my orchestration tutor once said, playing the notes is the easy part, it's the gaps that create life, imperfection, and the most noise!

    Regards,

    Alex.

  • Peter,
    I'm fairly sure the absence of electricity would certainly sort out the dedicated from the hopeful in our age too! I confess to still enjoying the sensation of writing on parchment, using a fountain pen, with only a piano for checking. Seems right somehow......... at least sometimes!

    Regards,

    Alex.

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    @hermitage59 said:

    Guy,
    As my orchestration tutor once said, playing the notes is the easy part, it's the gaps that create life, imperfection, and the most noise!

    Regards,

    Alex.


    Smart teacher!

    Guy

  • Guy,
    Not only was he a smart teacher but a cold and ruthless sod as well.
    On one occasion i submitted a string quartet for assessment, one which i'd worked for a week almost without sleep to produce. He looked at it briefly, threw it in the bin pitilessly, gave me a withering stare, and said in a voice as cold as stone "Are you sure plumbing isn't a better option for you?"
    Turns out he was good with people too, as my next attempt was a lot better, and he only snorted in disgust. Almost a compliment from him!

    Regards,

    Alex,

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    @hermitage59 said:

    Guy,
    "Are you sure plumbing isn't a better option for you?"

    Regards,

    Alex,


    lol [:D] Funny!

    Strangely enough, I a few years back I'd say to myself, if I'd have to do it all over again, I'd get a degre in plumbing as well as my music degre. That will keep you going until good music related work comes your side. (and help pay VSL... [[;)]] )

    Guy

  • Symphony of Voices by spectrasonics was made quite some time ago....I wonder if they will ever release a choir that has legato for example? Anyone know if they are up to this? I wish we had a bit more of a concrete answer of a time frame when VSL's Choir will come out....even though someone here mentioned they are still "seeing" if they want to do it.......doesn't sound too encouraging.....unfortunately there isn't much else here...besides East West's which does sound great and can sound cheesy. The "Slang Legato" really sounds awful to me and for 900 dollars!! I wonder how much VSL would sell theirs....Symphony of Voices "Still" hasn't dropped in price from being 500 dollars. Isn't that a bit odd?

  • Job might be able to do it, but no one else is going to achieve Peter's benchmarks with any of the sampled choirs available today and also have a life. If that's your expectation, you're in for severe disappointment. The Messiah or Mozart Requium just aren't going to happen.

    But they're still really nice! You just have to use them for what they do well, and in general they don't want to be exposed too starkly.

  • So Nick what would you say is the most flexible choir to get now? What has a great sound, good lasting value, and one that is easy to operate for what it can do? Of course this is opinion but what is yours :lol[*-)] Do you think waiting for VSL whenever that is will be the best idea or to go ahead with something else?

  • I haven't tried Symphony of Voices, Austin. EWQLSC is certainly the highest-end and most ambitious choir right now, and unless you're expecting it to be as close to the real thing as EWQLSO is, it's hard to imagine that anyone would regret buying it.

    Giovani is a children's choir only and is by design a very specific library, but it's capable of producing some nice sounds if you put in the work to make it sound good.

    To tell you the truth, I still love the mixed choir in the Kurzweil K2500. It's a pad sound rather than an SATB choir, and in that sense it's primitive since it's a mixed choir that you play rather than program. You won't get it to play choral music, but it's a gorgeous sound.

    And if I were in a position to know whether it's worth waiting for the VSL choir, I wouldn't be allowed to tell you. [:)] (I'm not in that position.)

  • Thanks Nick for your response. Anyone else have any opinions?

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    @Nick Batzdorf said:

    I haven't tried Symphony of Voices....


    It's good for certain things but don't expect anything realistic for chord progressions! It actually sucks for that! But the sampled phrases (Kyrie Eleison, Sanctus etc...) are neat, although quickly becomes repetitive!

  • So then Guy, do you think that East West's version is superior to SOV? SOV seems to have a larger ambience or decay with it where East West appears not...can you get the sound SOV has out of East West?

  • By the way, I use Gigastudio 3 orchestra version and East West is a plugin using kompakt......how is the cpu usage with the East West? Thanks!