Logics vanilla MIDI tracks have to be wired to an instrument in the Environment to do what you describe earlier. Yes new users rarely do this because it's a PITA, I think at this point the only reason to do this is to cut down on CPU usage that the new method brings with it's more complex almost instrument tracks when you have dozens or hundreds of them wired to a VEP plugin for instance. I'm sure you know all this.dewdman42 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 18, 2021 11:43 am In a sense, LogicPro is structured more like DP specifically when DP is being used with a single sequence of MIDI tracks that are bundle-connected to instrument tracks in a single V-Rack. However, its a tighter connection, in so much that in LogicPro you can automate plugin parameters of plugins that are hosted in a V-Rack...which we can't do today in DP primarily because that sequence->vrack connection is handled with a MIDI bundle.
Otherwise, LogicPro's multi-timbral setup is very similar as DP's with multiple tracks acting as MIDI tracks...feeding a single instrument channel...and they all have access to plugin parameter automation.....which DP can't do. I really do not see any inherent advantage that DP's old school limitations are a benefit.
Anyway, I don't really get why some of you old school folks are so set on having limited MIDI tracks for handling multi-timbral instruments. DP's MIDI tracks are completely blind about plugin parameter automation. That is the main problem, which is even worse of a problem when the instrument track is on a V-rack where it can't be automated at all. The secondary problem is that its annoying when you are not using V-Racks, that you have to setup a separate track for the instrument, resulting in 2x the number of tracks...
I find it interesting to note that in LogicPro it is possible to work either way. You can setup raw MIDI tracks that are cabled to instrument channels with 2x the number of tracks if you want too, that is their old school way...or you can use the new school way since Apple took over, which is to use something more akin to a set of multi-instrument tracks. Apple's new track wizards all use the new way of course. But its not that hard to do things the old way, I have setup numerous templates both ways. 99% of Logic users do not use it the old way....for a variety of reasons. that should tell you something.
Regarding LogicPro's summing stacks, they are hit and miss, I rarely use them myself. And you certainly don't have to if you don't want to, its just an option, you can setup nearly the same thing in DP, its just that there is not an automatic way to set it up with one menu click like there is in LogicPro...and DP doesn't treat the summed bus like a folder, as it does in LogicPro. So yes for that particular situation LogicPro is simple, quick and elegant..no question. On the flip side, its not nearly as flexible as DP's architecture unless you want to dig deep into the environment and then it is...but most users won't want to.
One thing that would be cool is if DP had the concept of a "patch" like LogicPro has, so that you could setup whatever kind of submix routing you want of a few channels, with instruments, etc..and save it as a patch so that next time it will be a one click operation to bring it back.

So within that last paragraph is your answer, in DP a single MAS VEP plug in can host 768 generic MIDI tracks, since mostly we're talking about orchestral of folly stuff in VEP, (at least that's common tasks in my experience), so generic MIDI CC's are fine in this case.
I 100% get wanting to have V-Racks be able to host track automation (which is what you're using when you don't use MIDI automation), but all of this is relatively new. I can't recall, but some thing or another breaks the whole tied to tracks part of that type of automation, so I think it's now possible. In the past MOTU flatly stated that since V-Racks do not have tracks plug ins hosted in them can't use track automation.
Anyway, your ideas are cool, but I'm not getting anything in Logic like a V-Rack? That's... ? There's nothing CPU saving about the way Logic does multis, granted I'm making it sound like it's a big hit etc. but I'm just saying, there's no hit to a MIDI track pointing at a V-Rack, and it's not tied to the open Sequence in a V-Rack like a multi instrument setup is in Logic. Different birds.