Thank you all, very much!
I must say, it was absolutely HEAVENLY to compose these demos with VSL... you actually here your music come to live while working. With every part I recorded over an existing one, live on the keyboard, there goes this shiver down your spine... the performance legato patches really are THE big step from typical midi-mockup* to 100%-acceptable. Like some way: music is between the notes. The subtle breaths, glisses, slides, clicks, tongues...
You don't listen to the midi anymore.
What has been said above is very true - it's more about the music now, the notes, the composition, the orchestration. Of course you still have to make a good mix, same goes for a real orchestra obviously, but the great performances of the individual instruments are there to begin with!
Galleddrim (is that a Tolkien name or something?) - these demos were played back by only one Gigastudio PC, 768 MB RAM. I did however use multiple bounces on the "Camouflage" piece, because it used the biggest patches, a lot of performance legatos. They eat quite some RAM. The other 3 demos range from 15 ("The Moonlit Dance") to about 25 ("Turning Tide") midi tracks. So not that much, to get a full embodied sound. The reverb used is Lexicon MPX500, with different orchestral ambience layers setup (busses) throughout the orchestra (close, mid, far).
As we all know the VSL samples are recorded in a controlled environment and don't have any ambience tails. You could call them dry. This is NOT the same as close! They haven't been recorded too close, but (from my user experience) at just the right distance, so you don't get too much close-mic'ed instrument artifacts, which make it difficult to get them sound further away. The VSL samples seem to have just some more distance (not too far either), and therefore respond great to external reverb. You can move them around just the way you want. So VSL being dry is not an issue! I wanted to bring up this point myself, because I've read too much negative posts on forums (of non-owners!) about VSL being too dry or close.
Thank you all very much for the nice compliments!
I will continue writing VSL demos!
Take care,
Maarten
* hence: without the #