Goran, thank you for your comment and suggestion. I agree with you that the English horn line sounds kind of ugly at times, especially with the repeated notes. I spent a lot of time trying to clean it up, but I couldn't figure out how to fix it. I found it especially difficult to avoid the "machine gun effect", both on a small scale with individual notes and a large scale with the longer repeating phrases. Do you have any advice as to how to improve this?
Thanks, Errikos, for listening and for your comment. I'm still quite new to all of this, so I don't yet have an established work flow, but for this piece it was something like this: First, I just entered the score into Sibelius by old-fashioned mouse clicking. My computer is quite wimpy (older Athlon processor with 6 GB of RAM), and my piano skills aren't great anyway, so real-time input isn't an option for me. After spending some time with the score and working out how I would conduct the piece in terms of phrasing, tempo changes, dynamics, etc., I entered all of the tempo info into the score. I'm never satisfied with the accelerando/ritardando lines in Sibelius, so I usually just end up assigning a new metronome mark to about 30% of the notes in the score. Incredibly tedious... Once the tempo is all set, I go through and assign patches to each instrument, which takes a long time since I'm still becoming familiar with all the available patches. I usually do about 4 or 8 measures at a time (or whatever is appropriate for a given musical line) and then move on to the next instrument.
The next step, which is the most tedious part, involves adjusting the start times and lengths of each note through the Properties window in Sibelius. This takes forever! It just makes my ears bleed when multiple instruments start or end notes at exactly the same time, and while the humanization feature in VI Pro goes a long way toward fixing this, I still find myself tweaking just about every note so that it sounds more natural. I understand this sort of thing is easier with a DAW like Cubase or Logic, and I hope I can one day learn to use one of those. I also spend a lot of time adjusting the individual velocities of notes to correct spots that sound awkwardly loud or soft.
The reverb is MIR Pro running through VE Pro. I used the Grosser Sendesaal for "In a Mosque" and the Teldex studio for "In a Village". I don't know what I'm doing with regard to mixing and such, so I basically just place the instruments on the stage and hope for the best. Also, my computer is only barely able to handle MIR, so I'm not able to get any feedback by real-time playback.
Thanks again very much for listening.
Brian