@Beat Kaufmann said:
It is another possibility as you have with MIR which trys to simulate and get a more live-concert situation.
Hello Beat,
interesting topic and always interesting to read about your workflow. Your hints are often helpful. So thanks for that.
But: Since I'm using MIR I have to dissent about your assumed target of this tool.
I think even though MIR is using samples of real venues, it's not the goal to get a "live-concert situation" or even a "simulation of the reality". That's a big misapprehension in my experience and in my opinion. I will try it to explain why.
Even though I use it sometimes in this way for making mockups to give musicians an audible suggestion of the sheets on their musicstands, in fact - even though it sounds "believable" and in this way, how musician ears know it from rehearsels in a studio room. It sounds good, really incredible for a never done "performance", but for a music-production this mockup sounds quite boring. Even if the mockup would be made with real musicians, recorded in the same studio-room (since MIR imaginabel.) it would have the same boring effect - 'cause it's not produced.
And this producing makes the different.
For me it's a big difference between "make music" and "music-production". A half-thousand years music happens only in unity of space and time. Since the first recording of a musical piece these unity has been lost and a new kind of art (beside "music") was born - I call it here "music-production".
(This differentiation is important not only to avoiding fights endless comparing apple and pears.)
I think working in the "art of music-productions" we are aiming for the liveliness and the spirit as we know and love it of making music (in the half-thousand years old traditionell way). That liveliness will be not done with real spaces alone, even not with real musicains!
To get an effect with music productions like we have with making music in real life - n o t getting the s a m e effect (we have no unity of space and time here!) - we have to do a lot of unorthodoxly and not "reality-like" things to get an effect moving our hearts. That's why we take all the effort to get an analogical effect as we know it from the reality.
So it's often quite barren setting the instrument-icons in MIR in a "real life-position" thinking now it sounds good, 'cause I have real sampled spaces. (So we could think, these production will be good 'cause I have life musicians, made from flesh and blood ;-))
No, the real advantage of MIR is to have no trouble with all the settings of tons of reverbs and panning tools for different space-depths and "reality-like" reflections - the sampled rooms helps to make this inavoidable producing process to make very easy and simple. And so I have space using my mind to think and care about the depht in the other dimensions (your graphic is very good btw!).
My using of MIR if I make a "music-production" is far away of the "reality". Maybe the first violin sitting next to Beethoven (in the foyer) and the last doublebass upstairs on the wall (I think 50 m or 70 away?) - it's not live-concert-situation! (beside the "unnatural" trimed tail of the reverb). Setting the icons like live concert situation sounds good, maybe real, I don't know, but never mind, it sounds boring. Without the liveliness touching my mind and heart.
The visual "crazy" setting do it.
Maybe the lookout of MIR gives a wrong impression of how to use it. Of course in different ways, and sometimes for simple "simulations of reality". But thinking it's made for having a "faked" live-concert-situation is very abridged.
Yes, I'm in love with MIR!
Best
Frank