I have been experimenting with the VI Solo Stings collection, working it into a few of my earlier pieces. The sounds and the flexibility are wonderful, and the matrix organization is very well thought out.
I do have a concern. I have always used VSL in conjuntion with Finale and Logic as a composing tool - a way to hear pieces as I work. I do all of my work in Finale, creating and tweaking the VSL patches in Logic as I need to. I send the Finale MIDI data through the IAC ports to Logic, with Finale acting as the playback engine.
I wonder whether with this release the VSL team is relegating people who use VSL in this manner to more of a back seat than we perhaps already have. I have a dual 2.5 G5 with 8 GB of RAM. With that amazing setup I can hardly run the 22 instances of solos strings (6 6 4 4 2) that I need for my current piece. I get lots of clicks, pops and other sound anomolies, as well as logic crashes when I try to edit the matrices.
I am attempting to load only a single matrix into each VI instance. I had started out trying to use the combi matrix, but gave up on that, and have constructed some really stripped down matrices, roughly equivalent to the "basic_all" combination of the VSL solo strings. Even with this configuration I have many problems.
I understood that there would be some performance hit with the VI, but I am somewhat shocked by how much. With my previous 4 GB of RAM, I was able to play back full orchestra pieces in real time (3333 4331 timp perc harp strings). I bumped my computer up to 8 GB of RAM for VI, and it is clear to me that, unless I am missing something, I will never be able to even remotely approach this with VI.
This brings me to the freeze function, and my earlier musing that users such as I are becoming more peripheral. The freeze function seems useless for my application (I hope I am mistaken here). I need to play back, change an note here, a rhythm there, add a measure, etc., and play back again. I would have to freeze and unfreeze every instrument every time.
I am asking the VSL team to make some comments about their support for this type of usage. I love the instruments and the company, and I really want to be able to use VI for my work. Am I misssing something in my preliminary assessment, or will something change? Are we notation software playback people (NSPP's) a factor, or are we the destined to be slowly relegated to the outer darkness, where we shall become lost, wandering souls?
Thanks,
Michael
I do have a concern. I have always used VSL in conjuntion with Finale and Logic as a composing tool - a way to hear pieces as I work. I do all of my work in Finale, creating and tweaking the VSL patches in Logic as I need to. I send the Finale MIDI data through the IAC ports to Logic, with Finale acting as the playback engine.
I wonder whether with this release the VSL team is relegating people who use VSL in this manner to more of a back seat than we perhaps already have. I have a dual 2.5 G5 with 8 GB of RAM. With that amazing setup I can hardly run the 22 instances of solos strings (6 6 4 4 2) that I need for my current piece. I get lots of clicks, pops and other sound anomolies, as well as logic crashes when I try to edit the matrices.
I am attempting to load only a single matrix into each VI instance. I had started out trying to use the combi matrix, but gave up on that, and have constructed some really stripped down matrices, roughly equivalent to the "basic_all" combination of the VSL solo strings. Even with this configuration I have many problems.
I understood that there would be some performance hit with the VI, but I am somewhat shocked by how much. With my previous 4 GB of RAM, I was able to play back full orchestra pieces in real time (3333 4331 timp perc harp strings). I bumped my computer up to 8 GB of RAM for VI, and it is clear to me that, unless I am missing something, I will never be able to even remotely approach this with VI.
This brings me to the freeze function, and my earlier musing that users such as I are becoming more peripheral. The freeze function seems useless for my application (I hope I am mistaken here). I need to play back, change an note here, a rhythm there, add a measure, etc., and play back again. I would have to freeze and unfreeze every instrument every time.
I am asking the VSL team to make some comments about their support for this type of usage. I love the instruments and the company, and I really want to be able to use VI for my work. Am I misssing something in my preliminary assessment, or will something change? Are we notation software playback people (NSPP's) a factor, or are we the destined to be slowly relegated to the outer darkness, where we shall become lost, wandering souls?
Thanks,
Michael