Well Mathis I've done all sorts of things to "fake" a louder dynamic - simple volume, layering with bass drum, filters, etc. - but it would be good to have the actual samples of fff timpani for example because the timbre is so different. I remember trying to use some very good timpani samples at the end of a piece that had a fff timpani solo, and they sounded terrible even though they were excellent quality in general. So I got an old Roland S-50 sample floppy disc I had lying around the studio - it was not even multi-sample! - that happened to be an fff that sounded extremely "savage" and was perfect. Fortunately there were only two notes in the solo, so the stretching was not a problem.
Point 3 of this last post is a very good reason, because it's true you get a more "intimate" view of the music than any other kind of score study. The only thing better is orchestral playing or actually conducting it and hearing where all the problems are and how everything is put together. So MIDI is a tremendous learning tool in this sense especially when combined with such detailed samples as VSL.
Point 3 of this last post is a very good reason, because it's true you get a more "intimate" view of the music than any other kind of score study. The only thing better is orchestral playing or actually conducting it and hearing where all the problems are and how everything is put together. So MIDI is a tremendous learning tool in this sense especially when combined with such detailed samples as VSL.