In the case of 2 or 3 solo string parts playing in unison and in a fast movement how can I avoid getting that annoying sound, not sure how to describe it though, but it's not the natural timbre of the instrument anymore...Phase problem or something...? And why doesn't this happen with live instruments? Or does it?
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Solo string parts in unison problem
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In the case of 2 or 3 solo string parts playing in unison and in a fast movement how can I avoid getting that annoying sound, not sure how to describe it though, but it's not the natural timbre of the instrument anymore...Phase problem or something...? And why doesn't this happen with live instruments? Or does it?
Is it the same solo instrument? If so then you are getting phasing because the same samples are playing against each other. In the "real" world nobody is playing on the same instrument so it doesn't happen. FWIW I did an overdub session where the cellist was multitracking and was so accurate he was seriously phasing with himself.......!
DG
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In the case of 2 or 3 solo string parts playing in unison and in a fast movement how can I avoid getting that annoying sound, not sure how to describe it though, but it's not the natural timbre of the instrument anymore...Phase problem or something...? And why doesn't this happen with live instruments? Or does it?
Is it the same solo instrument? If so then you are getting phasing because the same samples are playing against each other. In the "real" world nobody is playing on the same instrument so it doesn't happen. FWIW I did an overdub session where the cellist was multitracking and was so accurate he was seriously phasing with himself.......!
DG
wow [:D]
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Ah, that perf trille, I love it !
2 instruments phasing is a quite common case, in a string quartet, if the 2 violin play the same note, they often phase, because they are playing the same vibrato…but hey, that's a living sound and it ( the vibrato) change in time and space. it's more human than playing with the 2 same VI solo violin…
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You an always use the pitch wheel to transpose the part down and/or up a tone and transpose the part in the notation to play the unison. That way you are not triggering the same sample and you don't get phasing. Jay Bacal is the one who suggested this and it works wonderfully. You can have 3 parts playing the same note without triggering th same sample.
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@mattdean said:
You an always use the pitch wheel to transpose the part down and/or up a tone and transpose the part in the notation to play the unison. That way you are not triggering the same sample and you don't get phasing. Jay Bacal is the one who suggested this and it works wonderfully. You can have 3 parts playing the same note without triggering th same sample.
Really? That's cool! Thanks! [:D]