Thank you for listening and the comments.
I particularly appreciate your point about "uncontrolled" harmony deployment. I am not very strong with handling harmony yet and its very good to confirm that from a trained year.
Regarding the color, (firstly i note that C was using MIRx, B was MIRpro with Mozartsaal conductor position and A with just Algo.)
While the differences might be because of the rooms, I feel that the sustain and detache patches of the solo strings have an artificial feel at some points. If I may request you do one more quick listen, I uploaded a fuller version of that piece. The problem occurs for instance around 0:55 - 1:03 seconds, where I use the detache, and it sounds a bit synthy.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m5ube7n9uepfeef/stringq2_MIRPRO.wav?dl=0
https://soundcloud.com/ankumar333/stringq2-mirpro/s-7NEiL#t=0:55
It feels like some frequency stretching is going on. I would appreciate your opnion on if this is what is expected. I just want to make sure I am not doing something wrong, I expected these samples to sound good 'out of the box' (much the same way as any cometently recorded live violin piece will sound on a CD).
Regarding performance, I am quite amazed by how well VI works with sibelius. I didnt tweak a single controller for this, its all played out of Sibelius notation. thanks to cool programming by VSL.
Best Regards
Anand
Just got to listen to your examples, and the biggest difference in colour seems to me to be between the example C vs A and B (added emphasis on the middle/higher "ssssss" region, probably around or above 10 kHz - A & B are much "softer" there). A & B are different in colour as well, but the difference sounds to me like the difference in the way the rooms amplify different parts of the frequency spectrum (that is, "room response" coloration) - strongly noticable in the emphasized lower (around 100 Hz) and middle (between 500 Hz and 1 kHz) areas of example B. (Especially the very "reverberant" amplification of the 100 Hz area seems to point to a room response, not to a change in the frequency content of the dry signal.)
BTW, a very promising string quartet exercise - you have a strong feeling for "non-trivial" formal development and harmony deployment (though still a bit "uncontrolled", at least for my ears and taste...). I would say, you just continue developing and polishing your compositional skills in this direction 👍
...and, very good performance shaping work as well..