Back to serious mode on the subject, obviously.
I totally agree with the notion that if, for example, you need a fast swell into a dynamic change, and you would write a harp gliss/violin octave run/doubled with flutes, what sense does it make to try to recreate the nuance of that sound note-by-note, IF you have an excellent sample of the gliss/runs that sound correct in the context of the orchestration? Sure it's easier...sometimes. But does that in and of itself make it wrong? Or cheating? Even if it SOUNDS better?
It smacks of art for art's sake...and certainly work for work's sake. Geez, of course we'd all LOVE to have an 80 piece orchestra playing on every gig we score. But even the illustrious Mr. Evans seems doomed to the necessity of sample-based scores.
And yes, even if Mozart admonished me, my answer would be the same. Pay for my orchestra and I'd be DELIGHTED to skip to sampled runs.
And "anyone on the other side of this argument is to blame"? Well, despite Evan's occasional egomaniacal rantings, I've always grinned and looked past it because he's obviously extremely talented and intelligent. (Even though I've been doing this for over 20 years, I know I still don't know a lot, and I'm eager to learn wherever I can.) But comments like this? Despite these fine qualities and your musical lineage, I've just stopped paying attention, Mr. Evans.
No doubt you will see this as my loss. But something tells me I'll survive, somehow.
Fred Story
I totally agree with the notion that if, for example, you need a fast swell into a dynamic change, and you would write a harp gliss/violin octave run/doubled with flutes, what sense does it make to try to recreate the nuance of that sound note-by-note, IF you have an excellent sample of the gliss/runs that sound correct in the context of the orchestration? Sure it's easier...sometimes. But does that in and of itself make it wrong? Or cheating? Even if it SOUNDS better?
It smacks of art for art's sake...and certainly work for work's sake. Geez, of course we'd all LOVE to have an 80 piece orchestra playing on every gig we score. But even the illustrious Mr. Evans seems doomed to the necessity of sample-based scores.
And yes, even if Mozart admonished me, my answer would be the same. Pay for my orchestra and I'd be DELIGHTED to skip to sampled runs.
And "anyone on the other side of this argument is to blame"? Well, despite Evan's occasional egomaniacal rantings, I've always grinned and looked past it because he's obviously extremely talented and intelligent. (Even though I've been doing this for over 20 years, I know I still don't know a lot, and I'm eager to learn wherever I can.) But comments like this? Despite these fine qualities and your musical lineage, I've just stopped paying attention, Mr. Evans.
No doubt you will see this as my loss. But something tells me I'll survive, somehow.
Fred Story