These are some of my points and other points made in sibelius thread; just keep in mind that most of it came from a desire to have a VSL notation editor with automatic setup and playback results, etc- BUT there are other aspects of a DAW that could possibly relate to this so I think any thoughts on it are great.
- VE Pro is currently a VST host, mixer, LAN tool, and more- If
sequencing, a piano roll, and notation editor were added it could simply
work as an upgrade to VE Pro.
- Other DAW's aren't designed with the complexity of VSL's wide-ranging patches and with VSL playback in mind; so if VSL made a DAW or added sequencer/notation features to VE Pro, the amount of work to get things setup or playing right could be greatly reduced.
- Auto-divisi playback with auto-divisi notation. No setup required- you simply load a trumpet part
in your score and when you play 2 notes your patches divide... Nothing new, but if
you put "solo" in your score, only the first solo trumpet is played.
This way you can have auto-divisi and maintain one or two trumpet staves
in your score with the playback working automatically as real performers
would.
- Many of the users also suggested things like loading articulations as needed, when you add a stacatto in the score, it adds the patches and the matrices automatically, and so on.
- Things like slurs or crossfading from sustain to tremolo could take no extra 'midi programming' but the notation could be read and it be played accordingly.
The main point is that with these feature ideas and others, a VSL tailored notation editor could create a comfortable enviornment for composition that currently hasn't been very successful in other DAW's or notation programs. Other DAW features that aren't even notation related might be useful as well. But like I said, this came from a notation forum. We all wanted to start a specific thread to this and I feel it's most appropriate in both forums, but it's regarding VE Pro or a new program that would still likely fit better in this thread.
-Sean