Thanks for your reply, Herb!
"By the way, every string player is trained, that up and down bow sounds similiar. If you could detect the bowing direction (in an ensemble!) during legato playing, than you are listening to very bad players."
This is very true! But how well does the tool reproduce z.b. a fast line of lets say 12 notes played in one bow.. Or for that matter a slow pp legato line also in one bow motion like in Mahlers 2nd symph 2nd movement m.m.21 and forwards (celli, vle and vls.)..
I'm not trying to do some sort of "oh, but can you do that then..." and I know there are technical limitations still, as you wrote. But would you describe the agility of the legato tools for the upper strings as being able to replace common presampled runs (like in Advanced Orchestra etc.) or is there still some way to go before this can be achieved?
"No double stops are recorded until now. We don't know if we will record them for ensemble strings. Much more important are for example arpeggios. IMO."
I, for one, would looove to see some marcato (Sffz) double stops of the most comon intervals, at least for the violins. I tried to mock up the famous passage from Stravinskys "sacre" (rehearsal mark 13) with the G.O.S. library, but had to realize it just didnt make it with unison samples layered as double stops. Do you see my point?