Vienna Symphonic Library Forum
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    @Errikos said:

    They worry about the mix instead of how rueful their compositions are. They're in the wrong profession these people, perhaps they should become mixing engineers... Why are they so obsessed with so-called realism instead of being obsessed with music?
    I don't know if I can speak up to these people, but I can't understand why you wouldn't worry about your mix? I mean - if you just want to write good music why not just stick to good old pen an paper? However, If you are a regular guy like me trying to brake into the industry trying to get my music into trailers, games and short films and such - the way your music sounds has EVERYTHING to do with it. I mean, if I could compose like Tchaikovsky that would be great, but if it sounds like general midi - or if I can only deliver my stuff on paper, how far can it take me? Offcourse if I would be studying music in Julliard I would find the right people to respect my music that way, but in real life where you are just sending your stuff out - it does have to sound good if you want to find people to use your music. There is 98% chance that I have to produce everything myself, from writing to mixing and mastering the final product. I have to be able to do all those things well to make it sound good and get people to like it. From my perspective, to say that creating a hollywood sound is JUST about writing is absolutely wrong. I would argue that it is 50% writing and 50% engineering (mixing, adding FX etc..) and this applies to ALL libraries no matter which one you use LASS, VSL or HS... heck I would even go as far to say the importance of writing is even less than the way your music sounds - when it comes down to people using your stuff.. Offcourse if you can write AND do all the other stuff, then you.. well then you are like Thomas Bergersen. Just my two cents..

  • CCCs (Chugga-Chugga Composers) should really be assigned a special place in Musical Purgatory. Nothing eternal mind you - I am not unfeeling - but a Period of Punishment of around 6 months, in which they would be forced to play cello in a section of one thousand, doubling at the octave the basses (250 players) for 24 hours a day an ostinato consisting of sforzandi staccati a-c-b-g-a-f-e-g repeated without cessation.  The Punishment would be monitored by Dr. T.  Here's a recent photo of him with his guards behind him supervising some punishment of boys who never practice their piano lessons:


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    @William said:

    CCCs (Chugga-Chugga Composers) should really be assigned a special place in Musical Purgatory.
    I had my share of that. I studied classical piano for ten years, always went to my lessons untrained. My russian teacher in the music institute hated me for being exceptionally talented but too restless to really practice.. Well it's just that in those teenage years I had so many other interests besides sitting inside practicing my scales..

  • [:D] CCCs! Fantastic! All that remains now is a CCC controller to be added in Logic, Pro Tools etc., for automating the automata...

    @devastat What you say has been my predicament exactly and you didn't realize that by reading my post? That's what I meant; that in the hypothetical15-20 years ago, you would still be mixing/mastering your composition to give as a finished product, but directors/producers would be far more interested in the actual music, IF your mix was professional. However, they wouldn't have been after one specific "sound", as the uneducated, uncultivated of today. These days the mix - as you say - is as important (if not more important) than the music, precisely because the music has become so streamlined, so uninspired, so generic, so automatic, that the roles have been reversed. Now, they will be more interested in your "sound", IF the composition is professional, meaning that it is exactly what they have heard before.

    I am not a good engineer (I never cared to be), and even if I were, my musical setup is too modest for the "expected standards" of the industry, i.e, I would have to hire a master engineer or even a mixing one if I were to score a mainstream feature with samples. But that has nothing to do with the quality of my compositions. I shudder to think that some hackwit would secure a contract over a young Herrmann today, because the turdirector would mistake the hackwit's better engineered track for better music! God help us!!


  • @Errikos Sorry if I misread your post. I guess we were then both saying the same thing. Your weakness might be mixing, my weakness is that I cannot read or write notes much, so if I ever get to do a project with a real orchestra, I will have to get an orchestrator to work with - someone who would do all the notations from my stuff in my computer. How fascinating that would be - to work with one, I really hope that day shall come one day..

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    @Another User said:

    Years ago on this forum I believe, there was a topic about the so-called Hollywood strings sound. It's a a sound that is brought about by the WRITING - if nobody believes that then you might as well start asking the players what make of violin or cello they use.
    And I would just like to ask, how would these poor saps WRITE any better music with VSL than they would with HS?

    Hang on a second - did VSL ever name any of their string libraries using the prefix "Hollywood"?????

    That's right Erik and a good point. Most of these tossers should be studying to be tea boys and then recording engineers. SOUND. That's what it's become all about if wasn't already that for the last 30 years. Don't get me wrong - I love the idea of sound and and am lazy enough to simply rely on sound or sounds to fool any potential purchaser of what I loosely describe as a 'musical composition' in my case. If I use more that 15 tracks on a recording - I've done something wrong.

    But I'm a snobby bastard. If I, for one nanno  second thinks a guy calls himself a musician - BUT CAN'T ACTUALLY PLAY A FUCKING NOTE ON ANY GIVEN INSTRUMENT - then that person needs to be electronically tagged and thoroughly persecuted. 


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    @devastat said:

    My russian teacher in the music institute hated me for being exceptionally talented....

    Exceptionally talented?

    And you now want to write trailer and game music using Hollywood Strings?

    I see.


  • About this thread. It's interesting to me that a discussion about Hollywood Strings and VSL has blended into a discussion about degenerative modern film scores vs more artistic older scores.

    The implication seems to be that HS represents the degenerate present, while VSL represents the classical past, the lost glory of finer days.

    On some level this is therefore an implication that VSL is behind the times, a library for the older, cast-off generation of overlooked detail-focused geniuses, while HS is stepping forth into the mainstream with the boldness and stupidity of youth.

    My own opinion is more simple. I like HS for its lush sound, and its extra velocity layers. I dislike HS for its limitation of ONLY having that big, distant, lush sound. Sometimes you want more edge, smallness and closeness in the sound.

    I think the best, but most expensive thing to do, is own both libraries and then use what you want when you feel like it, without getting too hung up on the collapse of beauty, the fall of society, the rise of the idiots and so on.


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    @Another User said:

    Exceptionally talented?

    And you now want to write trailer and game music using Hollywood Strings?

    That's correct, using Hollywood Strings, LASS or whatever that suits the piece I am currently working on (I am planning on getting some of the VSL Woodwinds as well). I do have a high admiration on innovative and modern composers of today such as Hans Zimmer and Thomas Bergersen, and sorry to disappoint you if my ambition is not to become a conductor of a boy choir in St. Paul's Cathedral or something similar that musically "educated" people like you will have high respects on. P.S I think you took my quote a bit out of context by leaving out the rest of the sentence - my point being that my teacher was getting frustrated as she thought I was talented yet [u]I did not have the patience[/u] to go thru "classical" training.

  • Why don't we leave it alone Paul? After all, there is an inherent contradiction in the sentences: "my piano teacher thought I was exceptionally talented" and "I cannot read or write notes much"...

    I have to agree with Dan on his point regarding the lushness of HS, which I covet sometimes when I write appropriate tracks for it. However, wouldn't that be a matter of plug-ins rather than of the original sampling? Couldn't one create settings - say on Vienna Suite, to get or approximate that kind of sound?

    I wouldn't call the flagship of orchestral libraries a "cast off, falling behind the times", simply because on this aspect alone it faces some competition which seems to be faring better for some people. The standard of comparison should not be the successful symphonic emulation of the puerile orchestral collages that are currently in vogue in one particular place on the planet (no matter how lucrative financially) and in vogue with non-musicians for the most part, but the emulation of Brahms, Mahler, and Xenakis (C. Kardeis - or was it Andi? - has managed to create some very convincing modern demos, considering that there aren't too many such articulations available in the VSL as yet).

    If everybody followed the ooberman paradigm, we would have no library, no means through which we could compose our concert music, test that music for ourselves, be able to send a recording along with a score to potential conductors, or score a film in any other way than the one favoured by ex-DJs and techno-producers. The linear chronological approach is not very apt in my opinion, as there are a lot of young people around who use orchestral libraries in various ways for various purposes. If pre-plainchant monotony is the spiral downward way that Hollywood has chosen to pave, so be it. Just because this is happening now, that doesn't necessarily make it progressive, right, or universal.


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    @Errikos said:

    Why don't we leave it alone Paul? After all, there is an inherent contradiction in the sentences: "my piano teacher thought I was exceptionally talented" and "I cannot read or write notes much"...
    A logical reason for this would be the fact that it's been 13 years since I stopped training classical piano, and been mostly reading midi sequences since - which I have no problem reading of..

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    @devastat said:

    it's been 13 years since I stopped training classical piano, and been mostly reading midi sequences since - which I have no problem reading of..
     

    Well it's no problem what you studied if your music is good - that is the only thing that matters.   There was a big discussion about musical education elsewhere.   


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    @William said:

    However I disagree about Zimmer - he is so far from being an "innovative" composer that your statement is making me start to quiver here in a slowly building rage.
    Well, at least his music is truly original, even he isn't classically trained or "educated". He has created his own musical style. You know a Zimmer score from the first beat that you hear.

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    @devastat said:

     and sorry to disappoint you if my ambition is not to become a conductor of a boy choir in St. Paul's Cathedral or something similar that musically "educated" people like you will have high respects on.

    My God! Are you gay?

    [quote=devastat]  - my point being that my teacher was getting frustrated as she thought I was talented yet

    Did she wear a headscarf?


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    @devastat said:

    Well, at least his music is truly original, even he isn't classically trained or "educated". He has created his own musical style. You know a Zimmer score from the first beat that you hear.

    Although it certainly shows that he isn't classically trained or "educated", I'll agree with you that he has created his own musical style, as "one knows a Zimmer score from the first beat that one hears". And for argument's sake I'll also agree that "his music is truly original".

    The million $ question that begs itself is: Since this guy's style is so original and personal, how does it benefit 100,000,000 orks that wish to claim composer's credit and get paid for their services, to deliberately and completely facsimile that style and try to pass it off as their own, when - as you say - it is so painfully obvious it is somebody else's?

    [The answer in the next post]

    @PaulShe wore powerful earmuffs; it can get very cold in Russia...


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    @Errikos said:

    The million $ question that begs itself is: Since this guy's style is so original and personal, how does it benefit 100,000,000 orks that wish to claim composer's credit and get paid for their services, to deliberately and completely facsimile that style and try to pass it off as their own, when - as you say - it is so painfully obvious it is somebody else's?
    I guess the answer would be that one who works in making music for commercials, computer games or in trailer music will once in a while hear someone asking "can you do that Zimmer spiccato thing?" And if you can replicate that style well, you can be sure to find yourself employed.

  • You know something? I'll bet it really is only once in a while that somebody asks for that ZImmer spiccato "thing" (which has existed since the late 18th century by the way - see Mozart among others), and every other time the directors/producers will be open to many other suggestions. For that "once in a while time", ALL of us can emulate that shyte, so what are the odds that any of us will be employed "once in a while", when the paragons have so many of us to choose from...

    But that's not it, is it? Unfortunately, all the mouse-riding / "Press Enter to generate" composeurs that have infested the industry, can proffer only that one particular dish, that isn't even their own.... Today's special is also yesterday's and tomorrow's special. Would you like Taikos with that? Small or Large?


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    @Another User said:

    For that "once in a while time", ALL of us can emulate that shyte, so what are the odds that any of us will be employed "once in a while", when the paragons have so many of us to choose from...
    Well I guess in that case my advance would be that I happen to love that style (among other things) and I am pretty sure that directors/producers can differ on people's work whether something has been done with passion or not.. Yeah, and on top of that if you can "cream" it with the lush sounds of Hollywood Strings that won't hurt either..

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    @Another User said:

    Well I guess in that case my advance would be that I happen to love that style

    Truth at last, and you're not alone (it just so happens that so many film-composers today just love that style over anyone else's). Come on, be honest; is there really anything else you can do apart from that style that anyone will buy?


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    @Another User said:

    Come on, be honest; is there really anything else you can do apart from that style that anyone will buy?
    Well the game I am composing at the moment has all kinds of music from the 'Villages of the Humans' to the 'Lands of the Goblins', so I guess there must be some un-zimmer like music there somewhere..