Beat,
Thanks for the reply. Although I'm more concerned with hall response than depth. Please listen to the examples I've shared on Google Drive. They are all from wet sampled instruments. Keep in mind these are different spaces and different samples. But I believe we gain something in this comparison:
http://goo.gl/1ryfxn
1 - Close (VSL is clearly more capable of getting an imtimate sound, very useful)
2 - Mics in the hall (VSL and 'other' sound pretty comparable in terms of washyness in the space)
3 - A mix of mics. Can MIR accomplish something to this effect? I'm not sure if wet/dry fading really does...?
Now the big deal to me is this...
4 - Horns & Bones. Listen to the way the room responds to the amount of power coming from the instruments. It's georgeous to me. I'm in love. lol I am EXTREMELY invested in getting comparable results from VSL. The amount of flexibility alone in the way VSL's instruments are designed would prove this invaluable to me. I still think having multiple libraries has it's uses. But in this case, I feel it's the one thing I desire most from VSL that I can't get. I fully admit it could be my lack of know-how. But I'm still lacking demos from others that accomplish this. I'm wondering what can be done. That certainly isn't a crticism though. VSL is brilliant. I'm being very picky about a reverb issue, not the samples.
Thanks,
Sean