Vienna Symphonic Library Forum
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    @Another User said:

    One BIG problem with EW Symphonic Choirs is that the ranges are wrong for standard choral literature.


    EWQLSC is a gorgeous library. I love it.

    But you have to use it for what it can do, not what it can't do. Anyone who expects to do standard choral literature is going to be disappointed. This is human voice, and you're just not going to pull that off - in fact someone tried to do the Mozart Requiem with it a couple of years ago, and despite all the raving on Nothernsounds, it was a complete disaster in my opinion.

    You have to treat sampled choirs as a different kind of instrument from real choir. They usually want to be doubled with other instruments, and you rarely want to use them exposed. Maybe VSL's choir will be different - and I hope that it's an advance over what's out now, otherwise what's the point? - but it's hard to imagine a sampled choir that doesn't have more limitations than capabilities.

  • The bonus files were only for those who bought the whole Symphonic Cube before a certain date, right?

  • Hi Nick, you're certainly correct that every sampled choir has limitations, and that EW has fewer than most -- we're on the same page there.

    However, I truly feel that the developers let themselves off the hook too easily when they say "oh well, every sample library has its limits." Because in this case, their advertising claims -- that you could compose choral literature using this library -- are quite false. Or so would any choral conductor or composer say. To have a Soprano section that cuts out at A above middle C and doesn't go down any further is, as I said above, simply removing a part of the standard range of the "instrument." Like a violin with no G string. We're not talking the far outside limits of sopranos range here! This is standard stuff.

    As a result, I've not been able to ever seriously use EWQLSC in my choral composing, beyond a few passages here and there in film-scoring type demos. Yet the manufacturers sold it to me with the claim that I could (it says so in the manual). So there's the problem for me (and for many users of EWQLSC).

    But anyway, this is the VSL board, so back to the marvels of the Vienna Libraries. And I'm totally with you in looking forward to what Vienna will do with a choral library!

    All the best,
    Steve Main

  • Well, I don't want to apologize for the range limitations - that is a real issue. And it's not like I have no criticisms of the library after using it for a while either.

    Probably the best workaround is if you're using Kontakt: stretch the upper range.

    The only reason for my post is that I really like the library, and it's the state of the art at the moment. It's not like all the notes other than the missing four at the top are total crap. [:)]

  • "You have to treat sampled choirs as a different kind of instrument from real choir. They usually want to be doubled with other instruments, and you rarely want to use them exposed." - Nick Batzdorf

    So what does that mean?

    That sampled choir sucks? Though you love the EW sucking choir?

    It is an interesting question, why does sampled choir have to be doubled? Because it cannot do the most basic things that a real choir does?

    One does not make similar statement about strings, or brass, does one? In other words, you can do a real string piece for sampled strings, or a brass piece for sampled brass.

    But not choir. I would tend to agree, so it suggests that the most difficult thing possible to sample is choir. Though some people think it is strings, others think it is piano. I tend to think the human voice is more difficult than anything else. Look at the "Vocaloid" from EW. That tanked, right? I haven't heard a peep about that since the hype. Probably solo voice, then ensemble voice, then everything else is the top-to-bottom difficulty of sampling.

  • Yes, that's absolutely right: sampled choir sucks if it's exposed and used the wrong way. This is human voice, which is far more complicated than any other instrument; you hear immediately that it's fake if you don't write to what it can do. That's true even though it's a choir, which is harder than a solo singer.

    As I said, there are lots of things EWQLSC can do really well. There are far more it can't do.

    What it can do is give you that big bombastic wash in the background, and with those phrases (the Latin ones especially) it has a lot more motion than than "ooh and aah." Nick Phoenix can do a lot of other things too, in fact he's better at it than anyone else I've seen/heard...which isn't a surprise of course.

    Actually, there's a private library out there that may be better, but it's not available commercially. Right now EWQLSO is about the best you can do.

    Bela D's children's choir is nice too, by the way, but it's a more specialized thing.

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    @Nick Batzdorf said:


    What it can do is give you that big bombastic wash in the background,


    What about the lyrical side?

  • Nick Phoenix was also behind VOTA which is great. I agree about that Bela D children's choir - that is fantastic. And the Diva sounds which are very musically done within strict limitations.

    I strongly disagree that choir is more difficult than solo voice to sample. Solo would be much, much harder to do satisfactorily. Ensembles tend to lessen the expressiveness of each individual musician to a degree, by constraining them within the ensemble. Solo allows for everything that the individual musician can do. That is why it is far harder to get a decent sample performance of solo strings than ensembles. Try doing a sample performance of 1) an ensemble violin section playing a famous orchestral work and 2) a solo violin playing a famous concerto. You will instantly know what I am talking about. The same thing happens with solo voice, though to an even greater degree.

  • If you are in the mood, I did a progressive rock homage to Halloween using EW Choirs (along with a bunch of other stuff, obviously):

    www.soundclick.com/jeffreynaness

    Not perfect, but there is no other sample libraries currently that could do something like this (and demons might be singing the lower parts anyway [[;)]] ).

    I would like to have really good RnB/Rock n' Roll back up singers. I wouldn't think that would be so difficult to do (but, what do I know?!)

    jeffn1

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    @Another User said:

    What about the lyrical side?


    Of course. There's nothing to say the voices have to move quickly. But I still say you want to put the choir behind an orchestra and not have it exposed for the most part. Remember, it's a big choir recorded in a hall.