To continue with my Synchron-Striungs-Explorations here is one of the most demanding Orchestral Bravuras written in the 20th century.
The piece was commissioned in January 1941, to honor the centenary of the Vienna Philharmonic, which gave its premiere in Vienna, Großer Musikvereinsaal, 14 April 1942, (Wikipedia)
(You perhaps better listen first how the Vienna Philharmonic under Karl Böhm, or Casellas Compatrios from the RAI uinder Bruno Maderna have been able to realise this incredible challenging brilliant score from one of the most importatn italian Piano-Virtuosos of the early 20th century. )
An interesting problem came up with Casellas Tempoadvice "Il tempo deve essere - secondo il grado di virtuosità dell' orchestra - il piu veloce possibile..." OK My DAW has actually no limit for the tempo like that, but I decided to try to chose a tempo as fast as it seems to me stil as musical transparent and audible as possible, while this was still for the first and last movement even faster than the two most brilliant interpretations (Böhm+VPO and Maderna+RAI) are.😛.
So have fun with this wonderful boisterous kind of music realised with VSL Synchron Strings (and other VSL-Libraries)
Alfredo Casella: Paganiniana op.65 Divertimento for Orchestra on themes of Paganini
I realised the I, II and IV Part with Synchron Strings, while the III. Part demanded exactly 14 Stringplayers (4 Violins, 4 Violas, 4 Celli, 2 Basses of which except the 2 basses all Instruments are written in their own System) which makes a very chambermusical reduced Stringsensemble, which could not be better realised than with Dimension Strings.
Again this is music you will scarcly hear done with any other existing Stringlibrary (nor from any middle-rate kind of orchestra or programmer) which I fear are all presumably more or less far from being as ready to cope with kind of stuff as I see the Synchron Strings are prepared to.