No! Homeopathic is but...... "omeopathic"????Lovesign wrote:Is "omeopathic" actually a word ??
Hey people - if 127 velocity layers for a drum sound (or whatever) floats your boat, go for it and enjoy it - I have absolutely no problem at all but I am reminded of the Hans Christian Anderson tale of 'The Emporer's New Clothes' (likewise for recording full level bass samples at 24-bit/96kHz... come on!).
My perspective doesn't come from using hardware samplers with limited memory and velocity zones (although that is a good teacher with regard to sample 'economy', a skill that is rapidly declining in these 'bloatware' days) - it comes from almost 20 years of developing professional sound library and an inate knowledge of how players... ermmm... play. In the case of drums (unless you're doing Buddy Rich, Gene Krupa or Brand X mock-ups) that is usually 'full-on'. Yes, there are 'ghost' drops and subtle flams and pressed rolls, etc., but most of the time in most musical applications, it's 100% 'whack' to get yerself heard and have maximum impact.
Let's face it, in the vast majority of today's music, there is little space for subtlety especially when the final result is gonna be compressed for maximum level at the mastering stage and/or encoded for MP3 (to be heard on tiny earphones) or played on FM radio with a highly compressed (at the transmitter), 15kHz bandwidth! Even on CD on an 'average' hi-fi system, is yer average listener gonna buy some music just coz the drum samples have 127 velocity levels? I doubt it!
It might be also pertinent that some of the best records have been made with 8-bit drum machines with a velocity range of 3 - off/medium/full!
As I said before, no 'diss' or criticism intended of the new BFD offering and if you feel that your music will benefit from such detail, then put your hands in your pocket and buy it. I, for one (given my long experience), am not convinced. Maybe that's just me though!!!
But.... good luck to all at FX-Expansion with this new library and more power to your elbow. Go for it and be successful. I am sure you will be.
Steve

