I've read through the later posts and offer the following....
Poppa, right on man (You too, Angelo and Bill, for the same point). The means of expression, particularly musical, remains ever fluid, and no one medium could ever be actively dismissed as mediocre, because as we know, its the performer's responsibility for the sound of the final result, and if that performer is mediocre, close minded, and already readily dismissing a potential opportunity for an even wider pallette of medium, then the end result is going to be, well, mediocre.
Daryl nailed a good point too. Which medium do you want to use? Are you writing for live, or sampled? (or the alien gig....Britney Spears)
Live's been done for the better part of 500 hundred years or so, as an orchestral, or ensemble reference. (and of course, several thousand years before that for 'expressing one's self'.)
Mike, personally, i wouldn't send you anything, because i'd have no certainty that you'd take it seriously, given the vast gulf, and credibility gap between live and sampled, that you've expressed as your view in this debate. Too closeminded for me, and the enthusiastic dismissal of performance with samples as a viable opportunity, makes me wonder if you weren't wiser to refrain from mentioning 'virtuoso' as a means of making your barbed and somewhat derogatory judgement of someone else's capability as a musican. There is a small but growing band of sample performance 'virtuosi' who continue to push the limits of this new, and (IMHO) exciting medium, and with further development, and, to put it bluntly, practise, there's no telling just how far we can go. Virtuosi are the outstanding performers in their field, whatever the medium may be (generally), so to make a comparison using this criteria seems, well, somewhat naive. Those in glass houses.......
In all of this, we come back to individual talent. We know of several chaps here and elsewhere who can perform with samples to an extrordinarily talented level.
There's no doubt it's only the hardware and software interfaces that may in fact be holding these fellows (and us?) back from attaining even greater heights of performance, and just as the pipe organ and piano unleashed composers and performers, and gave them a big chunk of creative capacity and freedom, samples, (maybe in the guise of a 'soft' instrument, replete with almost infinite layers, articulative segments, and a realistic means to perform/manage those segments and sounds) have great potential to release modern day composers from the restriction of using a complete, and traditional, 'live' orchestra.
Daryl made another excellent point about the reality of writing for 'live'. It's fairly simple stuff, and when played well, is wonderful. (And i'm a former orchestral player with conducting experience as well.) Ok if you write for live.
But if you want to express something beyond orchestral capacity, and it's not only possible, but creatively neccessary, then a 'virtual orchestra' comes into it's own. We hear the world's best orchestras playing stuff WRITTEN for them, specifically. Of course they're going to sound good. There's a lot of myth attached to symphonic ensembles, and you'd be surprised just what goes on inside a performance, including all the 'humanity' that is touted as a clumsy difference between live performance, and sample instrument performance.
There was also a comment about the differences between orchestras, and their performances. The same thing applies with sample instruments. Although the source sound may be the same, part of sample performing seems to be blending and layering, and it's here, and in the mix, that we'll hear the 'individuality' in sample performance. Those with talent will build their own 'signature', and those who aspire to greater recognition will and/or emulate/plagarise/practise/sit on their arse throwing cheap shots, and failing to understand their own mediocrity.
No doubt this debate will continue, but it still comes down to the skill of the performer and quality of the arrangement, be it a composition with a live ensemble, replete with 100plus muso's all doing their interpretation, or a single performer playing 100 parts from the same thought/emotive/perception source. If you're good enough, the medium of your choice will sound good, provided you can 'play' it well. (virtuoso?)
Regards,
Alex.