I was looking through the instruments represented in the Orchestral Cube and noticed you have Solo Brass and then Trumpet, Trombone, and Horn Ensembles.
As you know, different sounds are achieved with 1 trumpet, 2 trumpets, and 3 trumpets simultaneously, as well as 1 horn vs. 2 horns, vs. 3 horns vs. 4 horns. Are the different combinations of #'s of instruments doubled up taken into account? I hope the only options are not solo vs. 3 or 4 instrument ensemble.
Of course it's possible to double up instruments in the sequencer, but this doesn't sound the same as actually recording two trumpets playing in unison.
What I would like to see is actually three or four different recordings of each instrument doing everything so that I can simply have one line in my sequencer playing Trumpet 1, another playing Trumpet 2, and another playing Trumpet 3, and then when two or more of them are playing the same note, it all mixes naturally because the sample sets for the three trumpets are all different. Are you doing something like that?
As you know, different sounds are achieved with 1 trumpet, 2 trumpets, and 3 trumpets simultaneously, as well as 1 horn vs. 2 horns, vs. 3 horns vs. 4 horns. Are the different combinations of #'s of instruments doubled up taken into account? I hope the only options are not solo vs. 3 or 4 instrument ensemble.
Of course it's possible to double up instruments in the sequencer, but this doesn't sound the same as actually recording two trumpets playing in unison.
What I would like to see is actually three or four different recordings of each instrument doing everything so that I can simply have one line in my sequencer playing Trumpet 1, another playing Trumpet 2, and another playing Trumpet 3, and then when two or more of them are playing the same note, it all mixes naturally because the sample sets for the three trumpets are all different. Are you doing something like that?