Good to see this conversation starting to move!
PaulR. I work in Finale, so I simply set up my score (oh boy... yup, the "paper" one - virtual paper, actually!), with the instruments I'm interested in using, then get to work. On the Giga side, I create custom instruments with as many articulations as I can cram into memory -- that's the annoying part. I then write everything in full notation. I just think better that way. It helps me write more idiomatically for each instrument -- so I don't write keyboard-like lines for violin, for example. As far as the "sound" goes, now that you've got me thinking about it, I still auralize the orchestration, then score it -- just like some old school composer who doesn't even have a computer! That's kind of weird, I suppose. But that's just my training, and what I'm accustomed to. Actually, I really enjoy auralizing it before I "put it to paper". It makes the quality of VSL that much more rewarding!
To be quite honest, that's usually "it", since I seldom actually output my Giga versions. (I mostly compose concert music, at this point, so the VSL is only for me, and the "live" performance is booked well in advance.) However, I have done some music for contemporary dance using sample-based output as the final product. In that case I worked in Cubase, selecting sounds as I went, and playing them in -- no paper score at all!
But, for anything resembling a "real" orchestra, it's always paper first. So, for me, sample selection really just comes down to old-fashioned orchestration -- if it's Flute and Clarinet I hear, then I write something on the Fl and Cl staves. Simple!
DG. I'm really interested in your "graphic score". Is it literally that? A la Stockhausen? That's something I've long been interested in trying -- finding a sort of shorthand that I can use to capture the essence of an idea, without getting bogged down in details too quickly. My work is very detailed, so it tends to be a slow process writing it, which I'd like to speed up... Actually, that's not quite true. I'd like to find a way to get the sounds in my head "out" more quickly, without disturbing their original impression. After that, I quite enjoy detailed tinkering about, just to get things cleaned up.
mathis. Good to know. Composition and Orchestration I'm comfortable with, but the film world is still somewhat a closed book. I'm hoping to get involved in some film work, but I really want it to represent a continuation of my compositional style - not a "made to order" product - so I probably won't be drowning in contracts!
J.