I was amazed to find out the same age old argument is still being discussed.
I use several Sound Libraries including VSL.
Sibelius is for composing music and hearing your work on virtual instruments. But no one is satisfied with the sound of their sound libraries, no matter how expensive and sophisticated, no matter how many libraries you own, the experts will still tell you, as they did 15 years ago, that you must meticulously and in my opinion tediously manipulate each and every note in your score with a DAW if you really want realistic sound. Lots of tutorials on how to go about this. They all make me feel it’s like buying a new Lamborghini and then learning that if you really want it to go properly you have to get out and push it all the way home. Considering the amount of work that goes into creating the expensive and incredibly sophisticated sound libraries one would expect them to sound fantastic. What I keep asking myself is how come no one seems to be able to create software that will make the sound libraries sound good. I remember ages ago Sibelius was boasting about the humanizing tool that one could instantly turn on. That was a step in the right direction. Looking and listening to the tutorials for using DAW’s to make the libraries sound like real instruments it is clear that all this could be done automatically by very sophisticated software, not necessarily very expensive software. I can just hear the reaction of all the experts. “A but you don’t understand that each piece needs special treatment” To which I say, if there is self-learning artificial intelligence that can challenge any human, it must be possible to produce very sophisticated software that will automatically understand how to best alter the sound of each note in each particular Sibelius score to make it sound decent.