@mvanbebber said:
Can you post 'your' version of the Copland? I would love to hear it! About your comment on the 'punching notes into a sequencer' - like I said in the first post, I will be using all my samples with sibelius 3, so I kind of have to make the most out of that combo. I can use cubase sx2 for some editing, but I don't want to spend a whole bunch of time on it because I don't really have that much time for that.
How can I fix the breathing problem? Just add some rest where they should breathe?
mvanbebber
Yes you could hear it, but I have no way of posting it. And I haven't used the legato function.
Can't you play the notes into a sequencer via a keyboard, for inaccuracy? That's what Bill was alluding to. If every note of say a brass 'choir' chord starts more or less the same time, it sounds organ-ish.
In real life, say you have three trumpets, three french horns, two or three trombones and a tuba and their respectives notes all start on the same beat: what do you think that would look like if you were able to somehow show it as midi?
And these same instruments: Do they stop playing the notes of this chord all at the same time in real life, even if the notes on the score say they should?
Do they get louder at the same time, even if they're supposed to? With some brass samples, you may wish to start the note quite a way forward of where it's supoosed to start btw. Give it time to catch up with itself.
Thats what the others meant by breathing. Reverb of course. Lots of reverb for a piece like Fanfare. Loud piece of music. That's why Copland called it Fanfare.........
Try and imagine where the brass players would breath before they play the next note. Play little games with yourself. Like Ist trumpet is a big guy with big lungs - 2nd trumpet is a little broncial today - 3rd trumpet tries to outdo Ist trumpet, but is a heavy smoker - and so on. Even give them names! [[;)]] Write their 'names' on the score. Tell them off when they make a mistake. [:O]ops: Get a little insane.
The higher and louder a brass player plays, generally, the more 'rasp' there is to the note. Also, good reverb, like Altiverb or Waves helps with 'space'.
Regarding the percussion - if you are at the max on velocity - turn up the volume.
Lastly - why do we do other composers mock-ups? A friend of mine once told me when I was having to do a mock-up of some composer or other - why do we torture ourselves like this?
Good point, don't you think.
There's a book coming out - or is out by now by Paul Gil (something, I can't remember sorry) which looks good and may be of interest to you.