A nice example you provided Sean. I tried to match it as closely as possible with 'artificial' reverb. As there obviously is no dry example for the brass I had to use samples to recreate it. It's not as nice, but don't let that distract you. It's about the reverb after all.
Dominique,
Thanks, that's a great example for comparison. I agree that this isn't a samples issue but a reverb thing. There are some sample differences of course. But both are great and equally usable. My example has less high and a bit more low end in it. So I'm also keeping in mind to ignore that as well.
The biggest thing I noticed was that the early reflection in the room seems to have a lot of excitement. The entire tail sounds like any verb I think would 'continue' the sound. But at the very beginning, I'm listening to the way the low and high seem to interact with the space. There is a vibrance there that I feel is missing in the dry-to-verb example.
I'm sure it's possible to emulate. But until I can peg down what it is, it's hard to talk about how. I wonder if some kind of processesing needs to be done on the early reflection. Maybe even based on the instrument. Again, call me crazy. I'm sure Dietz and Beat think I'm nuts! lol That's just what my ears tell me. Sometimes translating ears to informed knowledge and then to language is hard.
Beat, for the record... I love listening to all of your examples. 😊 I'm still not convinced it's a depth issue.
-Sean