Hi,
They are for use in Dorico. Dorico has no way of triggering unison patches automatically. By default it will give me horn 1 3 and 5 as horn 1 and horn 2 4 and 6 as horn 2. Occasionally a few of the horns may be in unison briefly and then there will be phasing. If I have 6 horns in unison, it will play three copies of horn 1 solo and three copies of horn 2 solo together.
Since I care about the correctness of the score and parts in terms of actual performers playing them, I cannot guarantee that horn 1 will always be different from horn 3, sometimes horn 1 may be in unison with horn 3 and horn 2 will be different and other times horn 1 may be in unison with horn 2 and horn 3 will be different. Other times, horn 1-3 may all be in unison, and most often they will have individual parts. So there is no good way of selecting which horn sample should be on which horn part in a way that avoids phasing.
My plan is after working in Dorico is to export the MIDI to bring into Cubase with the same VE Pro project, and then to look for passages with unison horns and convert. But Synchron brass is missing regular size horn unisons (a2) and only has a6 so I probably cannot do anything about a2 passages, I will have to use two solo horns together for those anyway. a4 is close enough to a6 that I can substitute for those.
But what I want to be able to do is open up any score for 6 individual horns in Dorico and hit play and not have to worry about phasing, without having to manually edit each score at first.
The best brass libraries for use in Dorico tend to be those that have several soloists, since Dorico cannot trigger unison patches by default. It expects instead to get multiple brass soloists, as many as you might want for a piece. I mostly want for things to sound pretty good until I get to the stage where I can swap out the soloists for a4/a6 patches in places where it would make sense, and I would do this in Cubase.
I also hope that VSL might expand the brass library one day with more soloists. The situation would be significantly better if there were four horn soloists instead of two, and another solo tenor trombone. I would find that much more useful than a12 sections and crazy things like that.
@Andreas8420 said:
Hi! If they are supposed to all play in unison, I'd go with the ensemble patches and size them up/down. If they play different lines, then why bother? Just use the two, and you get different samples with all pairs. Having them all play in a full orchestra context, a good mix, and sound orchestration will have a much larger impact on getting natural results. Best, Andreas