@agitato said:
....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
It feels like some frequency stretching is going on...
Hello agitato
You obviously produce the music via Sibelius. A problem for composers who are using samples is, that they compose: here sfz, there sustain and here staccato... and then at first they often are disappointed about the result. Why?
One thing is that you sometimes should change the articulation from note to note even if nothing is to change seen from the musically point of view. Also tempo changes, the velocity changes are sometimes necessary for getting a natural sounding result. Furter, with samples you should not select the articulation by its name but by its sound for getting the just mentioned natural sounding result. Sometimes it is very OK to start a section of notes with a diminuendo (because of the nice bow in the volume at the beginnning) and then change to legato.... Even if it finally sounds great it would look stupid in the score to start with "dim"...
The long and the short of it: If you set great store by a natural and realistic sound I recommend to write your notes with Sibelius but to play them with a DAW because you can change every parameter note by note, so that you get the sound you really have in your mind.
As a little example:
How would you organize just the different velocities between each 16th in Sibelius?
Another short example: http://www.beat-kaufmann.com/vitutorials/vi-tips--tricks-4/index.php (Nr 34) It shows the difference between a really simple! playback of a notation program and the same but more treated version - out of a DAW.
... So your "détaché-stretching-part" can be solved by changing articulations between each note. Try to find the best sounding combination can take quite a lot of time.
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About Convolution Reverbs
Most of those revebs are coming with a lot of different room prints of different concert halls. Altiverb is famous for hundreds of such roomprints (Impulse Responses = IRs). And because all of these rooms have their own sound also the music (played through it) has the sound of the certain selected room. There is nothing wrong. As Dietz mentioned above you either like those "colours" or not or you search one which has not so much colours. VSL offers in general a good pool of venues which are at least not coloured by capturing those IRs.
Here is a solution (Nr. 36) how you can reduce the typical room modes when you are using a "common" Convolution Reverb of VSL (not MIRx / MIRPro).
All the best and a lot of sucess with your samples
Beat