Please Errikos, correct me if I am wrong, but I think the point here is actually the attitude with which many composers face composition nowadays. The kind of sample libraries he mentions are just expressions of an increasingly dominant current in which creativity is willingly being replaced by productivity by both parts, composers and library developers alike, maybe under the pressure of that "reality" we call music industry (we are accepting, creating and supporting it in this way in any case, so we would be indeed under the pressure of our own creation)
I think the problem has nothing to do with clichés. We need clichés; our cognitive process and communication abilities rely upon them. The only problem is the level of abstraction of these clichés. Take a Romanesca, for example. It's a harmonic schema found everywhere in Baroque and Classical music. Every composer used it at that time. There was no problem or confict about it. Or an Alberti bass, an instrumental pattern every keyboard composer used. It's in fact a loop. The library developers of the time could have done much money sampling them. Mozart, Hadyn, Beethoven... not bad composers (^_-)... would have surely used these libraries.
The main thing here, I think, is just this: the Alberti bass was an accompaniment figure, so it was quite concrete; even then, library developers should have allowed not only key and tempo changes in their lopps (as Paul said) but also implemented the entire harmonic classical vocabulary with its different inversions, spacings, etc. in order to be used by those composers. Still, no one is regarded as a great composer by having written great Alberti basses... It's just absurd. But if we take the Romanesca, that's another story. As a harmonic figure, it was much more abstract, and not only any key, tempo, inversion, voicing, spacing, etc. changes could be applied to the schema, but composers were free to use any melodic or rhythmic motive, any contrapuntal texture, not to mention instrumentation. There were not enough hard disks at that time to record so many variations... so no serious composer would have used a sample library for that. Still, no one is regarded as a great composer by having written great Romanescas... We could go on to any level of the musical structure, but I think you all understand what I'm trying to say. Composition is much more than that. A dictionary can't make a Shakespeare. That's is not to say we shouldn't have better and more comprenhensive dictionaries. We certainly should. It would help good composers. But in the process, we are bound to remember we can not make one thing into another, because if we do, instead of helping good composers we can create a myriad of mediocre ones. Anyway, I don't actually think we can avoid that. It's just the price we have to pay.
So, I think Errikos is furious against the lack of creativity, or even more, the lack of perception we are indeed sacrificing creativy for productivity. He put as an example this new library, because it's part of this game (not the game itself). I myself don't have a problem with commercial music and its many aspects. But I am not deaf enough to deny the fact that any of these various aspects has barely anything to do with the actual quality of the music. We can not uninvent the bomb, Paul, that's true... but how would it be if we could just not throw them every two senconds? Are we bound to be that compulsive? (^_-)
Just my point of view, anyway.