@Another User said:
They may not be perfect, but at least they prevent legato notes from sounding obviously disconnected.
But that's precisely the problem --- they DO sound disconnected. Listen to the Pavanne demo. Yes, it's beautifully executed (and my compliments to Jay!). It's making the best of the VSL library. But what bothers me tremendously (and this has nothing to do with Jay's work) is the constant stream of "bumps" on the attacks of the slurred phrases. In particular, listen to the homophonic section around 2:15. Every note starts with a "bump". That's not legato. Listen to the bassoon at 4:37. I highly doubt that the score indicates, "play with funny pitch bend on the attack of each note in this phrase". Same with the descending flute + basson line at around 4:26. Again, not a reflection of the beautiful job that Jay did. It's about the samples...
My purpose in posting here was to offer some "relief" to the OP who seemed to be struggling with the legato samples as myself, not to rehash my original point. But hearing what I hear in Pavanne and other demos, at least I can rule out some kind of playback problem with my copy of VI. I'm not saying that to be smarmy. It was a concern at one point, because, despite the documentation I was also able to get legato patches to play polyphonically under certain conditions...
Finally, regarding the 50 ms time threshold, I double-checked the documentation and you are correct.
@ Herb,
Thanks for your reply. But honestly, when I hear C-->B as I do at the top of the .mp3 and I don't see those notes in the score, the last thing I'd think to do is to look halfway into the score to see if those notes occur. In any event, thanks for clarifying where the files go. I suggest that the documentation be made clearer for these tutorials.