Download "Experiments in Scales _ VSL in Dorico.rar"
I am new to Dorico, but I have been using VSL for a considerable time with Cubase Pro. I decided to switch to Dorico because I want to write directly into the score. However, I also want to create the most accurate demo possible of my music. From what I understand, the Expression Maps should ensure that the nuances in the score result in the desired nuances in the sound — meaning that the notation and sound should correspond. But based on my experience so far, this is absolutely not the case! Here is what I have done.
I am using Dorico Pro 5, and I have downloaded the VSL Expression Maps. I set up a track with "Synchron Duality Strings 1st Violins – VelXF sus" and chose the "VSL SY Duality Strings – Violin, Violas" in the Expression Maps. I began composing music and noticed a completely different sound than I had in mind. So, I stopped writing and set up A VERY SIMPLE EXPERIMENT: I had these violins play the C major scale sixteen times, ascending and descending over one octave, but with a wide variation in dynamics and articulations. There are many more things to investigate than I have done so far, but I have already reached several STRIKING CONCLUSIONS:
- Different VSL articulations, specifically "Short nts." on one hand and "Long nts." and "Perf. Legato" on the other, result in huge volume differences, even though they are all notated at the same overall dynamic level (e.g., "mf").
- The eight basic levels of dynamics (ppp, pp, p, mp, mf, f, ff, fff) are not clearly distinguishable. The audible distinction between adjacent dynamic markings is inconsistent: ppp><pp is inaudible, pp><p><mp><mf><f is barely noticeable again and again, but the difference between f><ff is suddenly much too large, and between ff><fff, it may be even larger. From bars 1 to 32, the same four-bar phrase is played with the same articulations, allowing for direct comparison of the basic dynamic levels. When comparing individual bars, everything becomes very clear (compare, for example, bar 2 with 6, 10, 14, etc., and bar 3 with 7, 11, etc.).
- Crescendos and diminuendos do not have a smooth progression (even though a linear dynamic curve is displayed in the "Synchron Player/Control" mode). In bars 53->58, I wrote crescendos and diminuendos over eight notes – from ppp to fff and back. It’s mainly the three loudest notes that make the big difference, leaving too little happening in the other five notes. Whether I use written dynamic markings or hairpins makes no difference. This phenomenon aligns with what happens with the eight dynamic steps from ppp to fff. (Perhaps redefining the values for the basic dynamics could fix this?) What I find completely bizarre is this: I noticed that the differences are controlled by CC1, "Vel.XF". The Velocity levels in Dorico’s Play Mode clearly show this as well. But where the massive audible differences occur, the Velocity levels show the smallest differences!
- The different types of accents create too large a volume difference compared to the chosen base dynamic. Play bars 33 to 44, and this becomes very clear. Bars 37-38 are particularly shocking. Just listen, you’ll hear what I mean. In bars 45->48, I aimed to keep everything within the mf level – including the staccatos, accents, etc. – they should be clearly audible but not excessively louder than the "regular" notes. To make this sound acceptable, I had to lower the base dynamic of the "special" notes by no less than 3 to 4 levels! (from mf to pp or even to ppp).
- There is hardly to no audible distinction between several articulation markings. The difference shouldn’t be massive, in my opinion, but it should be noticeable. After all, if this didn’t matter, there would be no reason to provide so many articulation marks. In bars 33 to 44, I applied different articulation markings to similar notes. It’s interesting to compare notes across different bars. For example, there is no audible distinction between the "Accent" and "Marcato" marks (compare bar 33 with 41). Similarly, placing a "Stressed" mark makes no difference to a regular note (compare the last two notes of bar 35 with those of bar 43). Comparing the same notes with those in bar 39, which are marked with "Tenuto", I hear a miniscule difference, which is, in my opinion, just a fraction too small to be meaningful. (For example, compare the B-A notes in bars 35 and 51.) And another issue: bars 36 and 44 feature similar notation, with and without "Tenuto", for the E-D notes. But something strange happens here. The next two notes are identically notated in both bars, C-G with a "slur". However, the "Tenuto" in bar 44 apparently provokes the following "slur" to be played significantly louder than the one in bar 36. I find this inexplicable.
- In the Synchron Player/Control module, I see "Dim.Ctrl/B" as a third parameter, but it lacks a CC designation. Instead, I see "Speed". For most notes, this value hovers around 33, but for some notes (typically at the beginning of a phrase), the value is zero. I would like to control this parameter from the score because I usually want to start my phrases with more decisiveness. But I see no way to control this parameter from the score. Therefore, I have to use a rather extreme workaround to eliminate this unwanted effect, resulting in an awkward notation in the score.
- Expression CC11 is not utilized at all, despite its potential to greatly enhance nuanced expression.
- If I want a phrase to sound "normal" (as I would play it when looking at the score), I have to resort to a lot of "tricks" given the current situation. To illustrate this, I added bars 61 to 64 at the end. I tried to make the standard phrase (as played eight times in bars 1 to 32) sound as neutral as possible in terms of dynamics. I aimed for an expressive mf rendition, without being excessive. Regarding the "tricks": bar 61, first note – the goal was to achieve a "normal" start, i.e., to neutralize the "Speed zero". All subsequent dynamic and phrasing marks within this "normalized" passage aim to neutralize the inconsistencies in the Expression Map. Aside from these interventions, which should ideally be avoidable, there are some positive aspects worth mentioning. The way the staccato quarter notes in bar 61 contrast with the eighth notes and rests in bar 63 is very clear – it sounds exactly as it should, IMO. Similarly, the difference between the slur over 4 notes in bar 62 and the two slurs, each over 2 notes, in bar 64 is also spot on. Notably, in bars 45 and 46, the distinctions between all articulations are correct, although I had to notate ppp to eventually achieve a mf sound.
MY GENERAL CONCLUSION:
It is an unrealistic goal to make my music sound in Dorico as I intend it from the score with this Expression Map. To achieve a satisfactory sound, I have to do an unreasonable amount of extra work, which moreover ruins my score. Therefore, this is essentially a no-go. I suspect that I can adjust the Expression Maps to suit my needs, but I’m unsure if this would actually solve the problem. And I don’t yet know how to do that, either. If you have successfully modified your Expression Maps or adjusted settings in ways that have solved similar issues, please tell me. I hope this topic can encourage people to guide me in the right direction – and perhaps this can also prompt VSL to improve the Expression Maps. I know many consider Dorico to be a notation program, but I bought it as a composition program, where I can also create demos. If Dorico, in combination with VSL (which I purchased because of its high-quality sounds), cannot deliver this, and I need to use a second program to achieve it, this complicates the process enormously. I would find this very unfortunate, and it may lead me to explore other combinations of notation software and sound libraries that indeed might achieve this. Thank you in advance to everyone for your positive contribution.