The method of working can be constantly evolving, as you refine your setup and experiment new ones.
My suggestion is to divide the process in several steps, and create setups for each of these steps.
First comes the composition step. I leave it to you to decide how you are more comfortable. I suppose it happens between you and your instrument.
Then comes the orchestration step. For this, you should load the sampler with all the instruments of the orchestra, one instrument per channel. The VSL programs you choose must give you access to different playing styles. In your sequencer, you can do the orchestration like you would do with any sound library. For now, there is no audio involved, only midi.
The next step is the interpretation step. This step is, for me, where the strength of VSL resides. Load the sampler with all the needed articulations of a single instrument. Set the output of the midi channel to any (create another midi track if you need to load articulation on more that one port in your sampler), and send the notes to the desired articulation. There is a tutorial by Beat Kaufmann that you should read.
For this step, you can create a template for each instrument, but you may want to modify it to fit your current needs. For example, you are working on the violin track. Are loaded all the articulations, but you need only the leg-perf instrument, the dyn-all and dyn-spec instrument. Then you can get rid of the pizz and tremolo and other articulations. Also, you may want to load the viola and cello instruments of your orchestration setup in case you want to hear the violin with them. I personally don't have templates for this step.
Once you are satisfyed with the interpretation of your melodic line, bounce the audio of this instrument only, without any effect (like reverb). Place the audio track in the sequencer and mute the corresponding midi track.
Do that for every instrument.
Now you have all the audio files. If you room is not calibrated with your sound system, I don't recommend you do the mix yourself. You would amplify frequencies that are absorbed by your studio, and diminish frequencies that are too present. This is true even though you don't touch the EQs. The simple fact that you play with the volume of the instrument is a form of EQing. Also, I recommend that you use a convolution-based reverb.
I hope this helps.
Bertrand
My suggestion is to divide the process in several steps, and create setups for each of these steps.
First comes the composition step. I leave it to you to decide how you are more comfortable. I suppose it happens between you and your instrument.
Then comes the orchestration step. For this, you should load the sampler with all the instruments of the orchestra, one instrument per channel. The VSL programs you choose must give you access to different playing styles. In your sequencer, you can do the orchestration like you would do with any sound library. For now, there is no audio involved, only midi.
The next step is the interpretation step. This step is, for me, where the strength of VSL resides. Load the sampler with all the needed articulations of a single instrument. Set the output of the midi channel to any (create another midi track if you need to load articulation on more that one port in your sampler), and send the notes to the desired articulation. There is a tutorial by Beat Kaufmann that you should read.
For this step, you can create a template for each instrument, but you may want to modify it to fit your current needs. For example, you are working on the violin track. Are loaded all the articulations, but you need only the leg-perf instrument, the dyn-all and dyn-spec instrument. Then you can get rid of the pizz and tremolo and other articulations. Also, you may want to load the viola and cello instruments of your orchestration setup in case you want to hear the violin with them. I personally don't have templates for this step.
Once you are satisfyed with the interpretation of your melodic line, bounce the audio of this instrument only, without any effect (like reverb). Place the audio track in the sequencer and mute the corresponding midi track.
Do that for every instrument.
Now you have all the audio files. If you room is not calibrated with your sound system, I don't recommend you do the mix yourself. You would amplify frequencies that are absorbed by your studio, and diminish frequencies that are too present. This is true even though you don't touch the EQs. The simple fact that you play with the volume of the instrument is a form of EQing. Also, I recommend that you use a convolution-based reverb.
I hope this helps.
Bertrand