Yes, it is difficult, definitely... with no definite answer. It's something of a compromise either way: On the one hand, a robot playing the key doesn't sound right to me, but it has more accurate velocity control; on the other hand, a human playing the key has the right touch but the velocity control is not so accurate.Lode_Runner wrote:The reason I felt that a machine would do a better job than fingers for the sound of the hammer striking the string? When you're working with as many as 25 velocity layers, I think that it would be very difficult to accurately physically play a key at 25 different velocities with human touch.
For me, a big problem with even the best computer controlled robotic actions is that nothing actually strikes the key. This leaves staccato (and other articulations where the finger strikes from a distance) lacking in realism.
If we had unlimited time and unlimited hard-drive space, we'd have a human playing the samples and during the sampling sessions, record everything in 100 velocity layers. For that, we'd choose 16 for the end product.
