@Fred Story said:
I like William's ideas, which if I read them correctly, essentially say - forget all that. The sampled orchestra is a beast unto itself...capable of creating stuff we probably couldn't with a live orchestra.
Fred Story
Hello lads! Mind if I sit down with you on this one. What are you drinking? [:D]
That's it exactly Fred.
I actually got told off the other day by Leon. [[:D]] He suggested to me that my template was wrong and that a real ochestra wouldn't sound like that. Hahhaa! I wish he would come on on this thread actually, because his ideas on ochestral sound and the examples on his site are really excellent. He's a good lad. DG would also be very useful to this discussion, given his conducting experience -something I personally would never try. [:O]ops: - again.
But, I don't subscribe necessarily to that way of thinking. I can't understand, given the amout of power now available to us, why we want this so-called real sound with a sample library like VSL. I just don't get it.
I sympathize with J and others who feel it's a pre-requisite to get this real orchestral sound and ambience -if that's what they want. In other words, J wants to hear it as real as possible, and then record it with live players. EVEN if that is accomplished, I guarantee, guarantee - it'll still sound completely different when you get the live players in. Bound to. For all sorts of different reasons. And anyway, where's the excitement in that. I mean, what are you going to do? Play the sampled version to a group of live players first and say 'I want it to sound like that'.
But I do understand, so this is not in any way meant to be a contradiction or argumentative just for the sake of it. Also, when live players are in session, you could use so many different takes -and then in post production do all sorts of tweaking. Add reverb here, EQ there and on and on.
We're nearly there now, but there will come a time in a few years or so, where most writers just aren't going to bother with real players a lot of the time, especially if there's dialogue or special effects over the top. The main problems at the moment for me anyway with samples, is generally the solo stringed instruments -but that will probably change in time.
Say you want to put non-orchestral pieces in an orchestral piece -like a synthesizer? What does Rimski say about that in his book? [[:D]]
Much more fun to make up your own rules, I would say.
PR