/Dietz
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
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Yes, Peter, if I may jump in. I hear what you are calling the "blip" although it's very subtle. In the clarinet example I think it's just the subtle mechanics of the instrument being heard, the slapping shut of a pad, etc, etc. I'm quite sure it's only audible in the starkest of situations (solo and little reverb maybe) and because you've become accustomed to hearing that ultra smooth legato, though not as realistic, these "blips" are catching your ultra sensitive ears. I've noticed it once or twice before also, but in the context of a musical piece it always sounds great.
Just to chime in belatedly, having seen this thread for the first time...
I'm in agreement with what Peter Schwarz has argued. As a clarinetist with professional-level training and with some years of experience playing in orchestra from my university days, I know a little something about how the instruments should sound. The VSL legato instruments (at least in the Special Edition, which I have) do not always acheive a normal, natural-sounding result (clarinet incidentally being among the worst IMO, but then some other instruments sound quite good). This has been one of the few disappointments I've had with VSL (but a serious one). When the transitions don't work well, the effect is like hearing amateur players with bobbling, ill-coordinated fingers. I hope that this can be improved and fine-tuned in a future update, because I've often had to expend quite a bit of extra effort, using techiques similar to Peter's, in order to work around the problems when they are bad enough to interfere audibly with the whole mix. Additionally, two other problems I have had with the legato instruments is the lack of strict playing response (i.e., the legato transitions still activate when there is a small gap between the midi notes, making it difficult to simulate tenuto- or legato- tonguing) as well as the difficulty in getting a clean, firm attack on the first note of a phrase with some of the winds.