If anyone's interested, here's a little thing I knocked out last night with this program:
http://www.sanctusangelis.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=649
http://www.sanctusangelis.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=649
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I guess that means "the music irritated the hell out of me, but the performance was convincing"
@Dietz said:
Uhm - Paynterr, please be aware that we are on the pages of the Vienna Symphonic Library, so you will see a lot of people biased towards sampled instruments here, by definition. We don't have to be well-balanced, so plaese don't consider these opinions to be "snobbery".
All the best,
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
@William said:
I'm sorry, but I would never use waveforms that were re-synthesized of an electrified hampster. I prefer samples. The Sopranino Hampster (D flat Rodentophone) is a remarkably expressive sound and must be represented authentically.
@William said:
I like the fact that the notes in samples are actually played rather than synthesized, but the problem ultimately is that there is never enough of them, whether one is trying to find the ideal expression needed by a composition, or having each note played be an alternate sample. And this is even with the hundreds of thousands being recorded by the VSL.
@Nick Batzdorf said:
Hey Dietz, have you ever tried a VL1? [:)]
[...]
@Nick Batzdorf said:
But the sounds that do work, such as the muted trumpet, clarinet, harmonica, "chiffy" jazz flute...those sounds really do have the same effect as the real instrument when you use a wind or breath controller, and I have to say it's more expressive than playing samples. All the note-to-note transitions, subtle tonal nuances, etc. are there.