The simulated instrument should mimic how the real instrument reacts, and this instrument fails, almost as if a gross error or simply no attention was paid to the MIDI velocity -> velocity layer map. As others have noted the instrument mapping is either aggressively biased to the ff side or the velocity layers sampled were very skewed perhaps due to the mapping used for the 'robot'. Now, this would usually not be a problem as every other tool on the face of the earth has velocity curve editors, but that critical feature does not seem to be present in Vienna Ensemble, except for the very limited 'MIDI Sensitivity'.
Thank you for pointing this out. I have not contacted tech support about it because I was hoping it would get fleshed out here in the forum but so far it hasn't.
At first I thought it was just my setup but then other people noticed it as well. It's hard for me to believe that this was an intentional choice by VSL. However, what do I know about making piano samples? I just know that it's way too harsh for my ears, and when I turn down the midi sensitivity to something that's manageable, I lose the dynamic range when I do want to play loud. I don't have this issue with my VSL CFX. I'm hoping there will be an update in the Synchron Piano Player that will address this issue. Unless of course it was by design. In that case, I wish I would have known before I purchased it.
God Bless,
David
F308, D-274, 280VC, Yamaha CFX, Bösendorfer Imperial, Vienna Imperial