Hello Wrathy
Thanks for the scor excerpt.
About the oboe
It depends on how it shall sound in the end. Should you hear some accents within the 8 notes? Should there be no accents even not on beat one.
I understand your wish "legato" that you dont want any gap between the notes.
3 possibilities (without X-Velocity)
Possibility 1
Use the repetition samples. Chose those which are so long (itself) that no gaps can happenbetween notes.
In other words: The single repetition sample should sound longer than it sounds within the group.
Result: It will sound in legato-style but not so how a musician would play it. So...
Infact, it isn't that easy...
Possibility 2
I prepared the sequence from bar 125 till 129.
Unfortunately I didn't know anything about the tempo and about accents on 1 and on 3 ...?.
Nevertheless, I made an interpretation which will show you 3 things:
- 1. Use a lot of different samples for reaching the musical aim.
- 2. Use samples not because of their names but because of their sounds (already mentioned in a post above)
- 3. Use a DAW for adjusting volumes from sample to sample, for inserting controller curves and other things.
See: Your sequence
See: Image of the rolleditor
Listen: Played with Oboe 2
What about the samples for the first four 1/8s:
I played the first note with a single note (portato-medium) because the legato-samples often don't start with enough attack with their starting note.
Then I changed to the legato-articulation with the 2nd note, 3 and 4 I played with repetitions. So that's the basic recipe I used.
Of course I always repeated this combination for the next four 1/8 and so on (...more or less). I always used samples that sound best. Therefor I used a diminuendo instead the portamento-medium...
Bar 128: It would be also possible to play each 4 notes with legato and start new with the next 4 notes. If the starting notes sound too weak at 128 with just legato you could use a sample with more attack (fp ?) for them.
Observe the roll editor of the example (Image above):
I used several samples and I had incredibly to adjust the volumes (Velocity) that all the samples fit to each other. This leads to a next point:
If you like to get out all of the possibilities of the samples you need to use a DAW.
It doesn't make sense to mark sfzs, diminuendos etc within a score just for getting the right sound with the samples.
You also can't set every second note a p, an f, an mp and so on.
So if you really want to have a nice interpretation of your music then compose it, export a midifile, import it in a DAW and "make music then".
Be happy that you are able to listen to a quite nice orchestra with your score program but do not expect more.
Best
Beat
PS
Seeing all the tasks you need for just some notes: Producing 3minutes of music means also having a job for 3 days and more.