BTW: How do you guys make the quotes of others appear in the little boxes
If you want to quote a thread use the button in the right, top corner of the post you want to quote. The button says : "Quote" [:D]
Christian and Rob:
Got it! Thanks.
Poppa
194,124 users have contributed to 42,911 threads and 257,919 posts.
In the past 24 hours, we have 3 new thread(s), 14 new post(s) and 80 new user(s).
BTW: How do you guys make the quotes of others appear in the little boxes
@JBacal said:
Rob-- I liked the mood of the piece you posted very much. Now back to the topic at hand...
Herb-- perhaps you could do a 1 session test to see if you can capture this sound that everyone is longing for. Maybe just an octave and a half of legato playing. Learn what you can from that session. Get some feedback from your loyal users about the results of that session. And then plan a large and comprehensive series of sessions to get the job done right.
I agree with others that for me this is the single most important set of samples that I still don't have!
Best,
Jay
@tom@aerovons.com said:
Nothing is static with live players, so far, that's the biggest difference between sampled and real. Varying dynamics, and vibrato, entering and leaving at natural moments.
TH
[quote=tom@aerovons.com]Nothing is static with live players, so far, that's the biggest difference between sampled and real. Varying dynamics, and vibrato, entering and leaving at natural moments.
TH
@William said:
I completely agree with these posts by Jay Bacall and Rob Elliot. I strongly disagree with Tom (even though i earlier agreed with him - ha-ha!)
It is not a simple straightforward thing to record strings right. If it were, why are there so many sample libraries that SUCK?
Not this one, of course, oh no. I have many sample libraries, but one in particular that I bought was a major library, and it cost a lot of money, and it used all the good instruments Tom, and all the good players, and it SUCKS. I have never once used it in any job or piece of music. It has real nice packaging though.
It is an art to record strings for samples, not a simple technique. And the art can get screwed up at any point along the way - and there are hundreds of points.
@tom@aerovons.com said:
So often you find a library, hit a note or two, it sounds good, then you go to play a phrase, and it becomes a synth part in no time[[;)]]
@William said:
I have many sample libraries, but one in particular that I bought was a major library, and it cost a lot of money, and it used all the good instruments Tom, and all the good players, and it SUCKS. I have never once used it in any job or piece of music. It has real nice packaging though.
@ariacat said:
Just want to echo the general sentiment here and vote for that "mp-mf, silky, warm, romantic, legato, round, expressive, real string sound."
DN
@cwillsher said:
PS: My two cents on the string recordings is this. Personally, I always felt that it would have made more sense to record 1st and 2nd violins as seperate libraries so that they could be either broken down to make smaller sections or combined to create a richer sound with more movement. Currently, as soon as the violin section plays two notes they effectively double in size. I obviously don't expect that to happen in 3 sessions though, just a thought for the future.
Otherwise, any of the ideas already posted would be a great bonus.
@cwillsher said:
PS: My two cents on the string recordings is this. Personally, I always felt that it would have made more sense to record 1st and 2nd violins as seperate libraries so that they could be either broken down to make smaller sections or combined to create a richer sound with more movement. Currently, as soon as the violin section plays two notes they effectively double in size. I obviously don't expect that to happen in 3 sessions though, just a thought for the future.
Otherwise, any of the ideas already posted would be a great bonus.