Great. The reason it doesn't hurt to install this on your main drive is that unlike a sample library, these are models. I have 170 Wallander instruments which -- in total -- occupy 584.5 Megabytes. By comparison, my Ivory Piano occupies 44.04 GIGAbytes. My Stradivari Solo Violin, by Garritan (actually by Lucato and Tommasini) occupies 788 Megabytes, and that's for one single violin!oldecuriosity wrote:Shooshie wrote:It doesn't show up in the Instruments section? Go to /Library/Audio/Plug-ins/Components/ and look for WIVI.Component. If it is there, you should find the VI in the Add Instruments menu. If it's not there, then you might first try running the installer again and see if you accidentally ran a custom install. If not, then one of us will have to ask Arne Wallander what's up with his demo installers.
Shooshie
Thanks, Shooshie. The problem was that I tried installing it on my VI drive; once I moved everything to my main hard drive (not my favorite idea though) it worked great. Haven't put it through any huge tests, but so far it sounds great. Thanks for the tip.
- Neil
Compare VSL Special Edition, which has (I think) 113 instruments: 57.51 GB. Wallander, by comparison, is only .58GB -- approximately the decimal points of the VSL installation. VSL, then, is 114 times larger and 57 instruments fewer.
Do the math, and the actual ratio is (if I did it correctly) Wallander is .51% the size of Vienna on a per-instrument basis. Let me restate that: Wallander's instruments average one-half of one percent the size of VSL's.
This is also why you can put darn-near as many Wallander instruments in there as you want, and a Mac Pro will handle them all without flinching.
I don't think I have to make that case any more significant than that. This is the difference between having a very responsive and realistic orchestra (winds and brass, so far) on one computer, vs. setting up a computer network with Vienna Ensemble Pro, of Plogue Bidule, or some other peer-to-peer network, of massive hard drive storage, and after all that, accepting that you have very limited control over the behaviors of the instruments of a sample-based library.
The two exceptions that I know of were the Gofriller Cello and the Strad Solo Violin by Lucato and Tommasini, sold briefly by Garritan. These were very large single instruments (one half GB and 3/4 GB, respectively), but they gave the most realistic control over the instruments of any sample-based library. Those instruments feel like real instruments, because they had carefully matched all the sample layers (velocity layers) so that they matched phase exactly, plus they made them so they would fade between velocity layers as you changed dynamics up or down. Nobody else has done that. But they retracted their instruments from Garritan, and I have not seen them on the market since. I was lucky to grab them while they were there.
So, that leaves us back at Wallander. In addition to sounding as good as Lucato's and Tommasini's brilliant sample-based libraries, they are a fraction of a percent as large. People should be amazed at WIVI, and I repeatedly am amazed that they miss the point entirely. Rather than add a smidgen of EQ to get the timbre they want, they instead go to another product with a fraction of the control, and 200 times the footprint.
Oh well... you can lead a horse to water...
Shooshie