"It is with some trepidation that I enter into talk...."
I felt conflicted when I posted too. I held off last year -- and many here probably held off longer. I waited for one week before NAMM, and when their website (finally) updated, it was time. At that point, it becomes the elephant in the studio that no one is talking about.
More importantly (at our best) this forum is above idiotic side-choosing and biased deprecation of any product. The maturity of the above posts shows it.
What fascinates me is, we have this core issue of taking finite, essentially dead samples and making them sound alive. And every company has their own take on how to do it with minimal hassle to the user.
The element of Ai that most resonates is the single desk recording. We'll see how effective that is. I can't deny that samples of a violin section recorded en masse, whether 14 or 20 players, will create a sound of limited variety, and where there is less variety, there is less life. I've heard sampling companies take on the issue of compelling strings for twenty years. The per desk approach has promise.
And yet, VSL has the means to do the exact same thing, and surely the brains and the experience.
So, will Ai's approach result in strings that are significantly better than our own admixture of solos, chambers, and ensembles? And is the improvement worth two more computers and some five figure amount? When puzzling over my VSL purchases, the question was never if VSL was better. The question was, "Is it ten thousand dollars better?" And that will be Ai's tallest hurdle.
I felt conflicted when I posted too. I held off last year -- and many here probably held off longer. I waited for one week before NAMM, and when their website (finally) updated, it was time. At that point, it becomes the elephant in the studio that no one is talking about.
More importantly (at our best) this forum is above idiotic side-choosing and biased deprecation of any product. The maturity of the above posts shows it.
What fascinates me is, we have this core issue of taking finite, essentially dead samples and making them sound alive. And every company has their own take on how to do it with minimal hassle to the user.
The element of Ai that most resonates is the single desk recording. We'll see how effective that is. I can't deny that samples of a violin section recorded en masse, whether 14 or 20 players, will create a sound of limited variety, and where there is less variety, there is less life. I've heard sampling companies take on the issue of compelling strings for twenty years. The per desk approach has promise.
And yet, VSL has the means to do the exact same thing, and surely the brains and the experience.
So, will Ai's approach result in strings that are significantly better than our own admixture of solos, chambers, and ensembles? And is the improvement worth two more computers and some five figure amount? When puzzling over my VSL purchases, the question was never if VSL was better. The question was, "Is it ten thousand dollars better?" And that will be Ai's tallest hurdle.