@cwillsher said:
Do you really think there will be a necessity to change that many notes? What exactly are you wanting to change? 99.9999% of the pitches will be correct, I've little doubt. The placement of notes in your piece is down to you, as are your selection of articulations. There are ADSRs and Filters available to control the patches and you have far greater control over dynamics and velocity than were available before. Without re-recording the samples precisely to your taste I don't know what you're looking to change.
Someone help me out here? This guy continues to baffle me.
Colin
In this thread
http://www.vsl.co.at/en-us/69/128/33.vsl">http://www.vsl.co.at/en-us/69/128/33.vsl
Thor is explaining it. Baffling, isn't it ? [;)]
I like to control certain notes on sample level, because in certain cases
this way the musical performance is simply more dead on.
The reason behind this is, that the samples and configurations are
manufactured isolated from the musical phrase I use them in
(or anybody uses them in).
That very often gives room for improvements.. that you cannot do on
patch level, because you change all the notes then.
Eg I want one single note have a longer release time... to better fit
the performance of the phrase... maybe it's only one note in a chord...
in this case doing it by quickly altering the releasetime for the whole patch
would be not appropriate.
As a result I often have edited patches for certain pieces or even
certain parts of them.
There are many who do not understand such an approach.
But that does not prevent me from following my own ears and tweak
the performance where I feel that it might improve it.
A real performer is also controlling every single note, if he can [;)]
Sure, many tweaks can be done by editing parameters for the whole patch,
as you mention. But not all.
If this baffles you, I can live with it [;)]
boulaki