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  • M. Rozsa - Ben Hur, Love Theme

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    I've always loved Miklos Rozsa's concert music. But his film music is simply irresistible. First try at the appasionatas. Love them.

    PS: MIX A is MIR "right out of the box". MIX B is making use of some ideas from Dietz's presets


  • [quote=servandus][...] MIX B is making use of

    Great! That's exactly what they were meant to be used for. [Y]  :-)


    /Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
  •  I only had time to listen to the mix B but it is fabulous!  This really displays the intense quality of the Appassionata strings and it sounds completely real.  There wasn't any of the "Curse of the Whiny Thin Sampled Violins"  on this at all.  This is one of the best performances done with VSL strings I've heard, and would be a great demo for them (though copyrighted of course).   The fairly small oboe part was my only complaint, as it needed to be more lyrical, more espressivo.  Was that the French Oboe?  Though that is trivial compared to how great the strings sound. 

    I also think Rosza is a great composer and he is along with Herrmann and Korngold the biggest inspiration to me among all film composers.  He started writing the same score with variations later in his career, but it still worked better than almost anybody else's!  Also, if you listen to "Thief of Bagdad" and then "Ben Hur" or "El Cid" (which just had a tremendous new recording released by Tadlow Records) or "Lost Weekend" or the little-known "The Power"  you hear an enormous range of musical ideas. 


  • Hi Servando,

          what a beautiful piece of music and very skilfully realised with the Appassionata Strings. I prefer the second mix except for one section at the end where I think on Mix A at 2:55ish there is a strum from the harp which I like in Mix A which is a little lost in Mix B (I'm not really sure what this is called on the harp so please excuse my ignorance). Only a very minor thing I know. I also think the percussion seems a little more present in Mix B rather than Mix A. Fantastic job, I wish I had more experience of the music in order to offer more helpful feedback but I guess I leave that to others as I'm sure they will know the music better.

    Regards,

        Tom


  • I've heard this music many times, in the film, the original sound track as well as concert recordings in multiple copies on both CD and LP including ones conducted by Rosza, Charles Gerhardt, and many other conductors and orchestras.  Suites from it have been recorded many times, along with El Cid and Quo Vadis.  So this recording by servandus is very impressive because it is so expressive, even compared with the live performances. 

    March of the Charioteers is another one of the highlights of this tremendous score.  It is an awesome march as powerful as anything John Williams ever did.  Quo Vadis has a similar "balls to the walls" Roman macho march featuring heavy brass and percussion that I remember hearing on a tiny clock radio as a teenager and being instantly blown away by.  In one four minute blast my neural circuits were permanently altered. 


  • ok, I will have to track down the original soundtrack so I can appreciate first hand what you are saying. I am taken aback by the quality of the music that is being produced of late, not that it should surprise me at all given the talent of the people involved but it is still seriously impressive. I know MIR may have a lot to do with the fact that it relieves so much of the engineering that would normally go into producing a good mix but there does seem to be a lot of musical inspiration going on in terms of sharing some fantastic works. I hope it continues as it is an absolute pleasure to be able to listen to the quality material being produced. Thanks Servando again for sharing this.

    Tom


  • Thanks Servando for sharing these (too short ...) 3 min of emotion. Beautiful music and really great performance. Bravo ! Philippe

  • Yes, Phillippe you are right in it being 3 minutes of pure emotion.  I totally stopped listening to samples, and had to force myself to stop being carried away.  I was actually reminded of how intense what Rosza did in his scores by hearing this servando VSL performance.  What powerful string scoring!    And the VSL strings sound perfect for this music!


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      Thanks Dietz, William,Tom and Philippe. I'm very fond of Rozsa's music, and it was both a pleasure and a torture to work in this beauty, so I'm very happy that you enjoyed this.

     

    @Another User said:

    March of the Charioteers is another one of the highlights of this tremendous score.

    Don't tempt me, William, don't tempt me!! I have the full score in my hands (^_^)


  • Hi Servando,

         unfortunately, like you, mixing is still something I struggle with and try my best to avoid at all costs (along with mastering). I also bought the Bob Katz book some time ago along with a plethora of other books in an effort to improve my mixing and engineering skills. I spent several years producing mixes that were OK but not really what I had wanted. I also find that the longer I spent on the mixing and post-production work, the more I lose interest in the musical aspects of anything I am doing - it feels too much like work for me (if that makes sense?).

    For this reason, MIR for me is such a fantastic product in that it allows the realisation of a first mix without much of the complexity normally associated with this process. I fully accept that there is still much that needs to be done from this starting point however just getting to this first stage is a huge leap forward which then allows the fine tuning to be done (or not! depending upon the goals of the individual and the purpose of the mix).

    I'm probably not qualified to do anything else other than enthuse about what MIR brings to this whole creative process at this point in time but I would say that you aren't very far off with what you are doing so far. I'd be interested in how William acheives some of the fantastic depth, warmth and expressiveness in his mixes as this was one of the things that blew me away. Not only the music but also the finished product was superb which I know isn't something that is easy to acheive.

    Tom


  • Servando

    Weren't you just the other day trying to spread the stereo field and trying to find anything that sound good, that was far off in your computer, getting advices etc..? How surprising in just a few days, you achieve this mastery in mixing? Sorry, just had to validify the discussion in using the MIR. I just purchased it also, to my surprise. It hit the spot for composing. You get the initial starting point on where to begin. And by the way, I'm floored also by your production. And will mention again that VSL has stepped into new boundaries. Perfectly temperedly tuned music heard for the first time. Getting back to MIR. ( Not trying to be conflicting between redundant styles or poise anyone in a tyranical conflict of interest or repression ). But I just found out that the Mozart style comes from his concert hall, to my surprise, the MIR defaults on his hall, and if you play his style with the appassionata strings, first of all, they sounds like any ordinary live strings. But with a magestic grandios flavor. Which is one way to use them. An exception; ( software replacement advantages, as apposed to lushness ). It sounds so realistic, that it exemplifies the sound from which is part of this sound and tradition. The hall is rounded which somehow gives a clear sound of the violins with clearity of the basso also. Complete Clearity of the traditional classical style. This is a surprise to me. I tried switching to shubert's hall, but it did not achieve the traditional mozart sound. So now we know the secret to the sound. This software is the state of the art, hands down... And for your pieces here, again not to take away from your hard work, in which you so eloquently described also. But stunning music. As great art is, exceeding beyond reality. Better than the real thing. Congratulations in this achievement. Now I'm signing off to try to get to this plane myself. Alot of work ahead, and not sure if the age will accomodate or justifies the means. But its worth a shot ! As you so eloquently exemplified here. Will look into Dietz presets also. Thank you.   


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    Thanks for the friendly feedback, 874!

    @874 said:

    [...] But I just found out that the Mozart style comes from his concert hall, to my surprise, the MIR defaults on his hall, [...]

    Stating the obvious (just to avoid confusion): The Vienna Konzerthaus was built more than a century after Mozart died in Vienna in the year 1791. Mozartsaal got named like that to honor one of the most remarkable geniuses of western music, but of course he never played there. 😊

    BTW - MIR's default Venue is a small excerpt from the Great Hall of Vienna Konzerthaus, not Mozartsaal.

    Kind regards,


    /Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
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    @Another User said:

    How surprising in just a few days, you achieve this mastery in mixing?

      Believe me, I have no mastery over mixing at all. Forget about mastery, I have no experience with mixing at all. You can listen to everything I've done with samples in my soundcloud (except for a couple of really bad tracks I did before the style copy, which is the first one I finished). I just follow what my ears ask for, and I'm desperately trying to guess what knob, what fader, what mic, what position, what reverb time, what, what, what... I should move or use. The big help of MIR is that I can do this much more intuitively, and that is compensating my lack of experience. I'm glad you like this mix, I also like it. I love how MIR makes my music sound... but to say I've achieved mastery over mixing... that's too much (^_^)

      In any case, thanks a lot for your kind words. I agree with you in that every room has a "liking" for certain styles. I found that Mozart Saal is great for medium ensembles (I even did a version of Herrmann's Psycho in this hall, and sounded great). I haven't used the apps in it yet, though. I subconsciously associated the apps and Rozsa's music with the Grosser Saal, so I did not even try other venues. But after reading your post, I will definitely give it a try.

      So, thanks again for listening and your comments, and I wish you much fun and success with your MIR projects.

      Best regards.


  • Ahh, Yes Vienna Konzerthaus.. Thats the big sound....

    BTW dietz, your Austrian team of builders came here to my home town and built the same configuration type concert hall for us. Sound quality is supposed to be the same configuration...   Thanks for the correction.. 


  • this is very, very impressive...congratulations. there is still some room for improvement in strings and woodwinds in particular (I suppose there always is ;-), but this is excellent work already. my personal favourite for the champion in terms of sound as well as musical quality is the (a2, layered?) "solo" violin at the very beginning, especially in Mix A...holy cr*** that sounds good...


  •    Thanks a lot, Goran. I'll leave this sequence rest for a while, and then I'll get back to it to see if I can improve it with your suggestions. What you and William said about the woodwinds in general, and the solo oboe in particular, is also quite clear to me, and I also suspected the basses could also have a little more presence in the mix as Tom suggested, but it would be really helpful if you could be a little more specific about the possible improvements in the strings, as this is actually what I'm focusing on first, and is far more important for me right now. So far, I'm quite glad with how the string section sounds (including the initial solo), and maybe except for the phrasing in the codetta, which is maybe a little monotonous, I wouldn't really know what else to change. So, I'd be very grateful if you could point those passages I may be totally overlooking.

      Thanks again for listening, and for your encouraging words.

      PS: btw. the solo violin in the introduction is actually not layered, but I think it could be the ubiquitous use of VelXF which may be giving you the impression of layering... especially in the progressive vibrato patch?? It's impressive how your "sample-trained ears" can associate what you hear with a specific technique... Wish I can sharpen my ears that way someday (^_^)


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    @servandus said:

       Thanks a lot, Goran. I'll leave this sequence rest for a while, and then I'll get back to it to see if I can improve it with your suggestions. What you and William said about the woodwinds in general, and the solo oboe in particular, is also quite clear to me, and I also suspected the basses could also have a little more presence in the mix as Tom suggested, but it would be really helpful if you could be a little more specific about the possible improvements in the strings, as this is actually what I'm focusing on first, and is far more important for me right now. So far, I'm quite glad with how the string section sounds (including the initial solo), and maybe except for the phrasing in the codetta, which is maybe a little monotonous, I wouldn't really know what else to change. So, I'd be very grateful if you could point those passages I may be totally overlooking.

      Thanks again for listening, and for your encouraging words.

      PS: btw. the solo violin in the introduction is actually not layered, but I think it could be the ubiquitous use of VelXF which may be giving you the impression of layering... especially in the progressive vibrato patch?? It's impressive how your "sample-trained ears" can associate what you hear with a specific technique... Wish I can sharpen my ears that way someday (^_^)

    What I would change in the strings (as the very first change) is the relation of the room reflections component width to the dry component width - the dry component is too wide, making the sum sound too edgy (at least I hear it that way). Then eventually take same additional "edge" away with an eq, but I would be very careful with that - it is in my experience very easy to project the "edginess" stemming from the above mentionend problem into the frequency area, but this is more often then not a delusion - the problem initially percieved as a frequency problem could either dissapear completely or be drastically reduced as soon as the width relations of signal components are properly set.

    That would be my first suggestions, for what they're worth 😉


    The solo violin -  in that case I believe it is the slight VelXF "overdose" which occasionally breakes through - but it is a nice effect, it actually doesn't bother me as "unnatural" in any way. It reminds me of a similarly sounding effect Bruckner employs in the slow movement of the Eight Symphony (the 3 solo violins in unisono-passage)...

    "Sample-trained" ears are a double-edged sword (although I won't complain too much) - the subject always reminds me of the audio engineer whose name I forgot but who said he would sometimes hear bad edits in concerts :-))


    P.S. Compliments on Vayatelas, these are very impressive piano compositions...


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      Thank you very much for your hepful explanation, Goran. Much appreciated!! I will definitely take it into account in my eventual revision of this "Love Theme". In fact, I'm paying close attention to this in a little piece by John Williams I'm working on right now. I guess the trick is finding the right spot between that "edginess" you talk about and eventual "muddiness". I'll try to find it. 

    @goran_tsch said:

    "Sample-trained" ears are a double-edged sword (although I won't complain too much) - the subject always reminds me of the audio engineer whose name I forgot but who said he would sometimes hear bad edits in concerts :-))

      [:D] [:D] [:D] I think I'll take it easy... [:D] [:D] [:D]  

      So, thanks a lot again for your time, Goran. It's this kind of useful advices I'm getting from you all which allow me to discover new things on which I can concentrate and, if I'm able to apply them to my sequences, share better performances with you all.  

       Happy to be in this forum. Thanks everybody!

      PS: Glad you enjoyed the Vayatelas!


  • I have to say I disagree with those criticisms of Goran about the strings.  They are too technical and show what happens when someone is not listening to the overall sound, but focusing on irrelevant details.  I had absolutely no impression like what he is talking about upon first hearing this, and it sounded like totally real espressivo strings.   I don't think that anything should be done except use French Oboe,  as this particular piece is one of the best string demos I've heard.  It is better than many of the original VSL demos as a matter of fact.   I think this is a function of MIR, Servando's performance, and Rosza's string writing, which is extremely rich and full and shows his great skill in creating themes which use the instruments very characteristically.  When I did the Vaughn Williams 2nd Symphony demo here, I noticed how much mileage you can get with truly great string writing by a composer who uses the instruments' sonorities and characteristics with intimate knowledge of the orchestra, which is what Rosza always did in his scores. 


  •  The other thing that disturbed me with the Goran criticism is he is advising somebody to tamper with MIR.  Splitting up dry and wet, subjecting them to different EQs, it makes no sense when the sound is this good.  There is actually an inner integrity to the sound you get from MIR that needs to be kept intact.  And it is quite close to what happens with a real concert hall recording.   So I disagree with the concept of screwing around with components of the MIR sound as if it is just another reverb.