PS, the issue with the flipped presets is present in both Portrait and Wide, unlike the General Purpose issue, which is only in Portrait, it is however not behaving like that when I select any other venue, like The Sage or Teldex
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As far as I can say this is mainly a incoherence in the listing of the presets. I already made VSL's software engineers aware of the issue, but I didn't get an answer from them up to now. Shouldn't be too hard to fix.
And Re: 2nd Violins seemingly pointing "away" from the Main Mic: This has been done on purpose, really. :-)
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library -
I understand re the 2nd violins, it was just hard to spot this before you told me. Aside from fixing the issue with the mixed up presets, may I give a suggestion to add Violin 2 variations to the root in the preset folders, so that you could chose V1, V2, VA, Cello, Bass, from the same menu, rather than going into to the menu again and selecting I or II (even though V1 and V2 are just variations of the same, it would still seem more elegant in the menu and save some mouse clicks, in my opinion)
Yep, even though technically you of course have access to the accurate presets, knowing that there is consistency in selecting the instruments/presets is quite important, so that we don't have to double check every time. So a fix would be great! And, the General Purpose is pretty key for hybrid mixing so that would be awesome to get fixed in SSV Portrait!
Out of interest, what is your personal view of SSV Wide vs Portrait? When I bought it I was just about to start a project, so I made some quick tests and felt Portrait sounded more natural to my ears, but I didn't really do extensive testing. If you have some thoughts to share that'd be really interesting!
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Out of interest, what is your personal view of SSV Wide vs Portrait? When I bought it I was just about to start a project, so I made some quick tests and felt Portrait sounded more natural to my ears, but I didn't really do extensive testing. If you have some thoughts to share that'd be really interesting!
They follow different ideas, obviously. "Portrait" is the classical MIRx setup, in any sense of the word: Lots of room, long reverb and an explicit sense of depth. "Wide" adheres to the "Synchronized" approach with more direct, in-your-face instruments, less reverb and a clear focus on width rather than depth. The former would be my choice for pure orchestral pieces, while the latter lends itself clearly to the popular "hybrid orchestral" arrangements.
HTH,
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library -
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Mac Studio M1 Ultra macOS Sonoma 14.6.1 Studio One 6.6 -
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Well, in a way it doesn't harm anything directly, but I suppose that could be said for most graphic updates. It is however one of the few plugins in my system that still is not retina ready, and reading the text on my 4k screen is quite a challenge. It would definitely be a worthy upgrade for such a lovely piece of software, especially since you have a very nice graphic profile since coming with VE6 and Synchron Player.
Happy users make more users, I guess could be one argument? ;)