Hi Andi,
I am having an issue which I believe is a Sibelius problem, however I was hoping you might know of it and possibly a workaround.
I am running, Windows 7 Professional x64, Sibelius 6.2 and Vienna Ensemble Pro (latest version) on a SAS-X3530 PC from Aavimt Technology (Intel Xeon Quadcore - 2.8 Ghz Processor, 12GB PC12800-XMS DDR3 RAM, 2TB SATA/7200RPM HD. I am using a M-Audio Profire 610 Digital Audio Interface with the latest drivers installed correctly. The following issue takes place with the buffer set at 1024.
I have 3 VE Pro Ensembles loaded up with 28 brass instruments, that I have connected correctly with soundsets supplied by VSL. Everything is running fine, except when I start playback, Sibelius appears to send two very short midi messages in succession to every channel which results in a lot of small clicks. It seems that the instruments are being triggered on and off so quickly that it is creating all these little glitches before actual playback starts. Then playback commences generally ok, except every now and then I can notice a small glitch as a new instrument comes in. The same thing happens when I stop playback - a multitude of small little clicks as all the instruments stop playing instead of a smooth release of the samples.
As a test I have exported a midi file of the score, and imported it into Cubase 5, connected up the exact same Vienna ensembles (without even reloading them), and it plays back without any glitches whatsoever when I start or stop playback. One interesting thing is that Cubase does not send the same midi message to all channels like Sibelius on playback start so it begins smoothly, and when I stop playback the samples seem to release correctly and cleanly without any glitches.
The cpu is hardly being touched, and there is plenty of RAM to spare, so I believe I have narrowed the problem down to Sibelius playback. I have gone through all the preferences and tried turning anything off that might be causing it, but this hasn't helped.
Do you guys know of this problem and is there a way to solve it?
Kind Regards
Erin Mckimm