Hello All,
I was just thinking about this whole issue of "making it sound real" with VSL, and it carried me right back to the whole question of idiomatic writing. It seems to me that, so long as you write a violin passage like a violin passage -- really phrasing it, and placing it on the instrument as though a violinist you greatly admire was going to read through it TOMORROW -- then it immediately sounds MUCH more realistic on VSL. I realize this probably seems obvious, but I'm absolutely conviced that it's true, and I often wonder whether some of the less satisfied VSL users are perhaps trying to make a violin or clarinet play something that is really written, in form and spirit, for some other instrument - most likely, just a general keyboard. I mean, a great musician can rescue this sort of writing, and manage to make it sound appropriate, but a sample library is not so clever!
Anyway, in connection with this idea, I wondered how likely it is that the composers who manage to get the most realistic performances out of the VSL are also composers who have, in fact, had their music performed by professional musicians? I certainly know that nothing wises you up to the above issue of idiomatic writing like being faced with a musician who finds your music poorly written for their instrument -- it's a painful, but highly effective learning experience.
Naturally, the mixing process is of enormous importance, and I've not had enough experience of that with VSL yet to really speak about it. But I wondered what peoples' thoughts might be on this essential issue.
J.
I was just thinking about this whole issue of "making it sound real" with VSL, and it carried me right back to the whole question of idiomatic writing. It seems to me that, so long as you write a violin passage like a violin passage -- really phrasing it, and placing it on the instrument as though a violinist you greatly admire was going to read through it TOMORROW -- then it immediately sounds MUCH more realistic on VSL. I realize this probably seems obvious, but I'm absolutely conviced that it's true, and I often wonder whether some of the less satisfied VSL users are perhaps trying to make a violin or clarinet play something that is really written, in form and spirit, for some other instrument - most likely, just a general keyboard. I mean, a great musician can rescue this sort of writing, and manage to make it sound appropriate, but a sample library is not so clever!
Anyway, in connection with this idea, I wondered how likely it is that the composers who manage to get the most realistic performances out of the VSL are also composers who have, in fact, had their music performed by professional musicians? I certainly know that nothing wises you up to the above issue of idiomatic writing like being faced with a musician who finds your music poorly written for their instrument -- it's a painful, but highly effective learning experience.
Naturally, the mixing process is of enormous importance, and I've not had enough experience of that with VSL yet to really speak about it. But I wondered what peoples' thoughts might be on this essential issue.
J.