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thesoundtestroom video for iSymphonic Orchestra, Some New Info from the Dev

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Comments

  • At this price point I would hope it can do round robin. Anyone know if this is the case?

  • Forgive my ignorance, @Coloobar, but what does "round robin" mean in this context? :)

  • As a player you should never ever have to worry about round robin, all it means is that the sample you are playing has been multisampled so that every key hit is slighty different, for instance it works well with drums, especially snare drums. So if you are programming or playing a snare fill it avoids that machine like feel, Or strings bow on, bow off, pianos are good because we hit piano keys slighty differently each time.

    For instance you record five hits of a snare or piano, guitar etc. first pad or key hit will play sample 1, second will play sample 2 and so on till it rolled round again, hence the term round robin. If its done well it should be a very subtle effect, just more human

  • Many thanks for that explanation, Doug :)

    So, in this case, assuming it does do round robin, iSymphonic will not only have a unique sample for each note but also more than one sample per note. When any given note is played (even at the same velocity), iSymphonic will randomly play a different sample of that note.

    I appreciate that there might be different samples applied to different velocity ranges but that would be a separate matter.

    Is that a fair interpretation?

  • edited August 2014

    Yes, but judging by the the sound of the brass accents (in the staccato orchestra patches that have them) on repeated notes in the various demos, it doesn't have round robin. This is one reason it sounds like an Ensoniq Mirage to me.

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