Hehhe! Well, there isn't much I can add to the previous two posts, except to say I agreed to listen to this, simply because I did it many months ago myself, using First Ed. and no perf tools.
On paper, Fanfare for the Common Man looks pretty straightforward, but to get the nuance that Copland wishes through punching notes into a sequencer using a mouse has got to be fairly difficult I would imagine. I wouldn't try that personally.
I have the same problem with brass parts in that I make them too perfect, thus not allowing the brass parts to breath (which if this were real players, they would soon run out of breath).
The only thing I would add, and noticed more than anything else, is the speed of it. It's way too quick with nothing like enough spaces between the phrases. The percussion, and this is just taste, could way more aggressive. But that's just me. I'm not saying that we should do mock-ups exactly like our favourite recordings btw.
On paper, Fanfare for the Common Man looks pretty straightforward, but to get the nuance that Copland wishes through punching notes into a sequencer using a mouse has got to be fairly difficult I would imagine. I wouldn't try that personally.
I have the same problem with brass parts in that I make them too perfect, thus not allowing the brass parts to breath (which if this were real players, they would soon run out of breath).
The only thing I would add, and noticed more than anything else, is the speed of it. It's way too quick with nothing like enough spaces between the phrases. The percussion, and this is just taste, could way more aggressive. But that's just me. I'm not saying that we should do mock-ups exactly like our favourite recordings btw.