Vienna Symphonic Library Forum
Forum Statistics

191,219 users have contributed to 42,789 threads and 257,330 posts.

In the past 24 hours, we have 2 new thread(s), 8 new post(s) and 40 new user(s).

  • last edited
    last edited

    @BachRules said:

    VI is post-multimbral, providing 127 timbres via program changes. That's 111 timbres more than the vintage "multitimbral" synths provide.

    Trying to convince me that I should be using another method or using another DAW is a fruitless effort.

    Vienna Ensemble not only harnesses, but relies on the 16/32 MIDI channel specification, just not within the Vienna Instrument player itself. Which to me is perplexing and quite unfortunate.

    Furthermore, I am not finding a way to send program changes on a note by note basis within the score.

    My question has been answered:

    Vienna Instruments lacks the functionality that I prefer.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @george_11239 said:

    Trying to convince me that I should be using another method or using another DAW is a fruitless effort.

    I wouldn't try to do that, as I don't mind whatever you decide to do. I was responding to your big, red claim about multitimbrality, your likening VI to a "vintage synth", and your opinions about elegance. If you prefer Play's brand of elegance, I say go for it.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @BachRules said:

    If you prefer Play's brand of elegance, I say go for it.

    I stand by my words in that for me, if Vienna Instruments was multitimbral I would be able to select articulations by MIDI channel.

    It's not that PLAY, Kontakt, Omnisphere and the like is what's elegant, it's the process of selecting those articulations within a score that is extremely elegant and quick. There's no time-consuming fiddling with nudging program changes or keyswitches around, just an uninterrupted focus on the score, and within a fraction of a second change the articulation via MIDI channel without having my eyes even leave the score.

    These continued references to vintage synths are unneccessary. My tongue-in-cheek comparison of Vienna Instruments to old hardware was due to its lack of multitimbral capabilities, just like a vintage synth.

    Nonetheless, the limitation in Vienna Instruments has been confirmed. I can only request and hope that multitimbral capabilties be implemented in a future update of Vienna Instruments. That would be extremely beneficial for those who prefer the functionality that multitimbral offers.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @george_11239 said:

    If this is indeed by design I am very suprised by what I think is a glaring oversight of an elegant way to compose in the score (selecting articulations with MIDI channels).

    The Vienna Instrument player appears to be bountiful in ways of selecting articulations, especially suited for real time performances, but composing with the proverbial quill and paper it doesn't seem to offer an elegant method of selecting articulations (without cluttering the score with keyswitches).

    By design/an oversight is a contradiction.

    You don't like keyswitches is all this says to me. The VI Pro interface offers vastly more than another interface in terms of what can be done in one 'instrument' instance.

    The analogy of one Kontakt .nki within a multi/VI within VEP is fairly apt, except that VEP can give you 48 MIDI ports instead of one.

    Anyway there is something for Logic now in terms of articulation mapping

    http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=417124


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    Anyway there is something for Logic now in terms of articulation mapping

    I appreciate that, but this is exactly what I don't want - to be distracted from the score and nudging program changes or keyswitches.

    Thanks for all the suggestions. I certainly hope the brilliant folks at Vienna consider the multitimbral implementation.


  • I just tried this with Play and it crashed my machine. True story.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @BachRules said:

    I just tried this with Play and it crashed my machine.

    That is irrelevant to the topic of this thread. The point was to find out how I could access articulations within Vienna Instruments with unique MIDI channels. And it's not possible in the current version.

    My Preferred Workflow

    The attached image is a screenshot showing a few articulations in the score which were quickly and easily assigned with the highlighted MIDI channel selection box shown on the left. If Vienna Instruments was multitimbral I would happily be able to do this.

    Once a portion or the entire piece is written, it is then I leave the score and focus on editing the dynamic curves. But while in the score, I just want to write and not be distracted with clumsy program change or keyswitch nudging -- for me, that's not very conducive to creative writing.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    The attached image is a screenshot showing a few articulations in the score which were quickly and easily assigned with the highlighted MIDI channel selection box shown on the left... in the score....
    So when you talk about your eyes never leaving the score, you mean you have to move your eyes to the left to that "MIDI channel section box". If you're willing to move your eyes that far, there are solutions, but I'll withhold them since they're not the specific solution you're fixating on, and so you'd deem them irrelevant no doubt.

  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    there are solutions

    I wasn't looking for an alternative solution, I was inquiring how I go about changing articulations within Vienna Instruments by MIDI channels.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    I wasn't looking for an alternative solution

    and so I'm prepared for you to remain unsatisfied.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @BachRules said:

    But Play is really zero-timbral, because it crashed.

    This is pointless and again irrelevant to my inquiry. Vienna Instruments is not multitimbral, whereas other samplers are.

    I am not requesting Vienna to remove any of the articulation accessing features that others enjoy and have become reliant on, but merely asking for the implementation of what I consider to be basic functionality.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    I am not requesting Vienna to remove any of the articulation accessing features that others enjoy and have become reliant on, but merely asking for the implementation of what I consider to be basic functionality.

    You are asking them to divert their limited resources into adding a feature for solving a problem which already has other solutions (the alternative solutions requiring no more eye-movement or "clumsy fiddling and nudging" than your own preferred solution). Diverting reources into a redundant solution would mean diverting resources away from different issues, hence my reservations.

    If the functionality you want is truly "basic", VSL will hear requests from numerous customers for this functionality. If that doesn't happen, maybe the functionality wasn't so basic after all.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    You are asking them to divert their limited resources into adding a feature for solving a problem which already has other solutions

    I am requesting a feature that would be beneficial to working within a score editor.


  • I did not read the 3 pages of this discussion, if you use Logic it is easy to do, you just need a few Transformers in the Environnement


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Cyril said:

    ...if you use Logic it is easy to do, you just need a few Transformers in the Environnement

    Thanks a lot Cyril, I super appreciate the suggestion and will check it out.  I thought there might be a way within the Environment.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @civilization 3 said:

    By design/an oversight is a contradiction.

    You don't like keyswitches is all this says to me. The VI Pro interface offers vastly more than another interface in terms of what can be done in one 'instrument' instance.

    It is not a contradiction, in that Vienna Instruments was designed without multitimbral capabilties

    I feel pretty sure the designers were aware of virtual instruments that used more than one MIDI channel and that is was a conscious choice. The word 'oversight' does not agree with 'designed not to'.

    I don't use it or need to, but the thing I showed you claims to "allow the user to select and display articulations directly from the Main window without the need for Key Switches, Program and Control Changes embedded within Logic’s editors." so my assumption was the point is a clean score, ie., a Logic version of Expression Maps.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    the thing I showed you claims to "allow the user to select and display articulations directly from the Main window without the need for Key Switches, Program and Control Changes embedded within Logic’s editors." so my assumption was the point is a clean score, ie., a Logic version of Expression Maps.

    I do appreciate the heads-up regarding the articulation switcher at the link you posted. I just wish I could do it by simply assigning unique MIDI channels to the articulations within Vienna Instruments.

    I surely don't mean to discredit the functionality that Vienna Instruments has to offer (in which I realize is quite extensive), I simply enjoy my workflow and wish I was able to do so with Vienna Instruments.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @civilization 3 said:

    the designers were aware of virtual instruments that used more than one MIDI channel and that is was a conscious choice

    Yes of course, I understand what you are saying. I just thought that perhaps the decision to exclude mutitimbral functionality was overlooking composers like myself that prefer the articulation selecting method I've described.

    I used to work for Dave Smith making (multitimbral) synths, and we would often omit certain features while looking straight at composers who wanted those features, because to succeed in business we had to aim for the center of the bell curve instead of the sides.


  • last edited
    last edited

    @Cyril said:

    ...if you use Logic it is easy to do, you just need a few Transformers in the Environnement

    Thanks a lot Cyril, I super appreciate the suggestion and will check it out.  I thought there might be a way within the Environment.

    the way to do it :

    if midi = 2 send before the note the keyswitch let say C0

    if midi = 3 send C#0 before the note

    and so on

    If you are an Environment guru you can use the Map in the transformer so you have one transformer, otherwise you put your transformers in cascade

     Do not forget to duplicate the item (note, cotroler....)


  • [quote=civilization 3],

    YES

    You need to write to the Logic team, more we ask more there is chance they do it.

    I have been asking it for 10 years.

    When it was the German team, they told me to use a Notation Program !

    I have post on the Apple audio develloper forum, the US team does not answer

    You can enroll for the audio develloper forum and ask