This has been on my mind for a while, and being as this is world class orchestral site I thought I would share it.
A couple of ideas....
Would their be a point in integrating a score function actually into the VST? What I am imagiing is a single/split stave of scrollable four or eight bars, where one could atually write your sequence, select articulations for individual notes, see a controller lane below, and where there would be custom icons/ symbols to indicate factors which are not indicated in a traditional score. Such a display would be able to read a track from a sequenced score, and display the music in the VST so that you could see a VI customised display seeing what VI is doing to your notes. One would also be able to dump the data into the sequencer.
Another advantage would be that, whatever the sequencer, whether score enabled or not, VI would be portable - learn once, use in Finale, Sibelius, Logic, SX, SE or whatever. All would be totally in house, and one would not have to cope with the foibles of various diverse score packages, though one could use them if desired - in this case simply ignore the feature.
I see the main advantage of this idea as bneing that VI would have complete control over the display and would be able to customise the visuals according to the features of the program.
Idea Two
What about a "Phrase Memory", an encyclopedia of midi/VI phrases, that are saved with settings in the instrument. Basic chords and arpeggios, typical runs and glisses - all set up and ready to customise. Any phrase could be customisable and saved under another name, transposable, patch selectable, note alterable, invertable.
All this needs a two way dialogue with the sequencer, but is it the future?
Zero
A couple of ideas....
Would their be a point in integrating a score function actually into the VST? What I am imagiing is a single/split stave of scrollable four or eight bars, where one could atually write your sequence, select articulations for individual notes, see a controller lane below, and where there would be custom icons/ symbols to indicate factors which are not indicated in a traditional score. Such a display would be able to read a track from a sequenced score, and display the music in the VST so that you could see a VI customised display seeing what VI is doing to your notes. One would also be able to dump the data into the sequencer.
Another advantage would be that, whatever the sequencer, whether score enabled or not, VI would be portable - learn once, use in Finale, Sibelius, Logic, SX, SE or whatever. All would be totally in house, and one would not have to cope with the foibles of various diverse score packages, though one could use them if desired - in this case simply ignore the feature.
I see the main advantage of this idea as bneing that VI would have complete control over the display and would be able to customise the visuals according to the features of the program.
Idea Two
What about a "Phrase Memory", an encyclopedia of midi/VI phrases, that are saved with settings in the instrument. Basic chords and arpeggios, typical runs and glisses - all set up and ready to customise. Any phrase could be customisable and saved under another name, transposable, patch selectable, note alterable, invertable.
All this needs a two way dialogue with the sequencer, but is it the future?
Zero