Linos wrote: ↑Mar 29, 2022 3:12 pm
Bill, I never even thought about the difference in sound when recording an ensemble together compared to individual instruments/sections. It's an interesting thought. I don't even use the a2 and a3 patches that come with woodwinds libraries. I prefer to use individual instruments because I write individidual lines most of the time anyway. I should compare how to individual instruments stacked sound compared to the a due patch.
This is the outcome of a misspent youth!
I do not want to suggest that this difference is at all important it matters to me in much the same way I prefer to use a guitar, some stomp boxes, an amplifier and loudspeaker cabinet, and one or two microphones to record guitar. Is it necessary? Even I concede it is not. Does it make ME happy? Yes. If I am happy do I play better? I think so, but then what do I know?
In the beginning or my music production phase I worked exclusively with individual instruments. In fact I thought Garritan's approach with GPO was awesome - made for me even. But even back then I knew that these voices were not blending together like they would, which led to a long, stormy relationship with reverb plugins and ensemble style libraries.
Some may remember that I was bitterly disappointed with the original Albion. OK, maybe I just wasn't a Spitfire kind of guy (sorry "cousin" Paul and Christian). So I tried Project Sam Orchestral Essentials. A little better, but not something I'd want to work with regularly. It was just easier to work with individual instruments and/or sections. Then I tried Cinesamples CineOrch - a very limited library of an orchestra recorded in situ. WOW!
On a lark I tried Swing!. That was the one that helped me get over the hump. I went back and tried working with Albion again, and this time it went better. I ended up with the entire Symphobia series, several Albions, and a couple of the Ark Metropolis series.
Don't get me wrong, these are seldom the choice to start a project. Like you I most often start with paper and pencil, or an acoustic guitar, or sometimes a piano. It is just easier for me to think about the music when I see it written down. I also start in Finale from time to time, and that is the approach I'd like to use, kind of the best of both worlds, especially now that I have it on a laptop (so the couch is still "home").
And wow did I wander!
The point I intended to try to make. I like the sound of an orchestra recorded in one pass, I like the sound of a rock or folk or jazz ensemble recorded in one pass (yeah, cause that happens a lot!). Live to 2-track remains one of my favorite recipes - just don't ask me to be one of the players, I get nervous enough when I'm one of the engineers.
All else being equal (which never happens) I'd work with live players in a one-pass setting. Since I can't have that I'd work with ensemble style libraries that offered the flexibility of individual instruments ( which may happen some day, but not today).
Since I still have trouble thinking in terms of the pre-mixed ensembles I usually work with individual instruments, in spite of the shortcoming perceived by me.
And you know what?????
No one notices or cares. Well, you guys maybe, but the audience doesn't care. They care about the melody, the harmony, the instrumentation, the construction, but not which library I used.
I can't tell you how liberating this is - every single time I realize it is true (yeah, work in progress here!).
In fact I went out and bought a Line6 Helix a couple years ago. At first I only used it while playing in pit bands, cause no one is there to listen to the pit orchestra (pity). And when the world didn't end I took it out to a regular gig. No one except the sound guy cared one whit, and the sound guy preferred the Helix because it lowered the stage volume, making his job a little easier.
TL;DR
I understand that it makes sense to use the tools that work best for you, and for the majority of folks that will be the individual instruments. If that lets you write and produce great music then I think that's all that matters.