Basic question (perhaps the basic question) - what would you recommend as the best way for getting a quicker attack on a quiet sustain articulation?
I'm working on a cello run of seven staccato notes, followed by one sustain. The velocity of the staccatos is around 70, and I am hoping for a sustained note at the same overall level, but a sustain that quiet has a very slow attack. I am currently using the sus_Vib_fA_auto articulation in the hope that the attack is a bit faster, but unfortunately it's not nearly fast enough for my purposes. I know there are various ways around this, my question is which is best?
I tried fiddling with start offset, but couldn't hear any difference when moving the slider, even with the start offset and start offset attack parameters set to maximum. The start offset mode was set to all, but given that the other options there relate to legato, and the video tutorial on start offset talks a lot about lengthening portamento times, am I correct in thinking that Start Offset is purely for legato and portamento articulations, and does nothing for any others? ...Or am I using it wrongly (again)?
I also tried using time stretch, but even with the stretch diagram set to a +50% or -50% shelf, I couldn't hear a difference in attack when A/Bing with the time stretch on/off button. Maybe I just have really bad ears? That might be it, actually...
So now I'm wondering about whether it's best to turn up the velocity for the sustained note and turn the articulation down in the slot mixer, or to add a staccato note into slot 2 and set it lower in the mix.
What is generally suggested for when a quiet sustain with a fast attack is required?
Many thanks for your help.
Pyre
AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-Core 3.59Mhz Processor, 64 GB RAM, Windows 10.0.19045, Cubase 10.5.20, Sibelius 7, VEP 5.4.16181, VIP 2.4.16399, Symphonic Cube, MIR Rooms 1-5, Suite, Choir, Organ, Imperial, Solo Voices, Dimension Strings, Historic Winds, World Winds