The Hard Part of Music Technology: Making VSTs Actually Work
Creative tools are powerful. Modern music software can give a single musician access to cathedral organs, orchestral libraries, synthesisers, pianos, choirs, percussion, sound design tools and film-score textures that would once have required a whole studio.
But there is another side to music technology that is much less glamorous.
Before you can play the music, you often have to make the technology behave.
Over the past two days, I have been adding VST instruments to the Wersi OAX 1000 Pergamon organ system and trying to make them work properly. Some installations have been beautifully straightforward. Others have been a reminder that music technology is not just about creativity. It is also about routing, MIDI channels, manuals, latency, presets, drivers, crashes and a fair amount of patience.
At Philip M Russell Ltd, music is not just a hobby. It supports film production, science videos, sailing films, teaching resources and company media. The aim is not simply to install impressive software. The aim is to create a reliable musical workstation that can be used for real recording work.
That is where the hard part begins.
The Dream: A More Powerful Three-Manual Organ Setup
The wider project is to upgrade the Wersi organ setup so that it becomes more flexible, more playable and more useful for film and media work.
The three-manual layout is important because it makes musical performance feel much more natural. Instead of trying to squeeze everything onto one or two keyboards, different sounds can be assigned to different manuals.
For example:
The lower manual might carry a warm pad, string layer or accompaniment texture.
The middle manual might be used for piano, organ or orchestral colours.
The upper manual might carry a solo flute, lead synth, choir or melody instrument.
The pedals can then provide bass, organ pedal tones or orchestral low-end support.
In theory, this gives far more control. It allows music to be played in a more expressive and organised way, especially when creating themes for films, background music for videos or more complex arrangements.
In practice, the software has to understand what each keyboard manual is supposed to do.
That is not always as simple as it sounds.
Installing the VST Is Only the First Step
One of the misleading things about music software is that installation can make you feel as if the job is nearly done.
You run the installer. The plugin appears. The licence activates. The instrument opens.
Then you press a key.
Nothing happens.
Or something happens, but not on the manual you expected.
Or it plays once, then stops.
Or it works on MIDI Channel 1, refuses to work on Channel 2, then suddenly behaves when you try a completely different routing.
This is the point where music technology becomes detective work.
You are not only asking, “Does the software work?”
You are asking:
Is the VST being seen by the host?
Is the correct plugin format being loaded?
Is the MIDI signal reaching the instrument?
Is the manual sending on the channel I think it is sending on?
Is the instrument listening on that channel?
Is the audio routed to the correct output?
Is the sound library actually loaded?
Is the licence manager happy?
Is the sample engine installed in the right place?
Is there a conflict with another plugin?
Is the preset saved, or will it all disappear when the system is restarted?
The creative dream is instant sound. The reality is often a chain of small technical decisions, any one of which can stop the whole system working.
Organteq 2: When Installation Goes Right
Organteq 2 was the good news.
It installed smoothly and behaved in the way you always hope software will behave. This is exactly what you want when building a working music system. The software went in cleanly, responded sensibly and gave the impression that it had been designed with musicians in mind.
That matters.
When an instrument installs easily, you can get on with the musical decisions: tone, registration, manual assignment, balance and performance. You can think about the sound rather than the plumbing.
Organteq 2 is particularly useful because a physically modelled organ can offer flexibility without the same level of sample-library management that some larger systems require. For a setup intended to support film music and organ performance, that is a major advantage.
The lesson from this part of the process is simple: good software design saves creative energy.
Hauptwerk: Powerful, But Not Always Straightforward
Hauptwerk is a different sort of challenge.
It is a very powerful virtual pipe organ platform, capable of producing extremely realistic organ sounds. But that power comes with complexity. Large organ sample sets, multiple manuals, stops, audio routing and MIDI assignments all need careful configuration.
In my case, Hauptwerk did not immediately play properly. That is frustrating, because when a piece of software is capable of sounding superb, you naturally want to get to the musical result quickly.
But complex instruments often need a more careful setup stage.
A virtual organ is not just one sound. It is a whole instrument. Each manual, pedalboard, stop, coupler and expression control may need to be mapped correctly. If one part of the MIDI setup is wrong, the whole thing can feel broken even when the software itself is technically working.
This is an important distinction.
Sometimes the problem is not that the software has failed. The problem is that the system has not yet been told clearly enough how all the parts should communicate.
HALion: Fun to Install, for All the Wrong Reasons
HALion was enjoyable in a rather different way.
It is an extremely capable instrument platform, but the installation and setup process can feel like a puzzle. Sound libraries, authorisation, plugin paths, content locations and host recognition all have to line up.
This is where “installing a VST” stops sounding like a simple task.
A modern virtual instrument may involve:
A plugin file.
A standalone application.
A licence manager.
A downloader.
Several sound libraries.
Content folders.
Preset databases.
MIDI settings.
Audio settings.
Updates.
Possibly a restart.
Possibly another restart.
And then, after all that, the host still has to find it.
This is why two days can disappear very quickly.
From the outside, it might look as though you are simply “adding some sounds”. In reality, you are building a small digital studio and trying to make sure every part of it talks to every other part.
The MIDI Channel Mystery
One of the most common frustrations is the MIDI channel problem.
A manual does not simply “play a sound”. It sends MIDI data. That data includes note information, velocity, controller information and usually a channel number.
The VST then has to be listening on the right channel.
If the manual is sending on Channel 1 and the instrument is listening on Channel 2, nothing happens.
If two manuals are accidentally sending on the same channel, both may trigger the same sound.
If a plugin is set to omni mode, it may respond to everything.
If the host software is filtering MIDI in a particular way, the signal may never reach the instrument at all.
This is why a sound can suddenly work when you try a different channel. It can feel random, but it usually means the routing is revealing something about how the system is actually configured.
The practical lesson is to test one thing at a time.
One manual.
One MIDI channel.
One sound.
One audio output.
Once that works, save it. Then move on.
Balancing Sounds: Loud Is Not the Same as Useful
Getting the sound to play is only the first stage. The next problem is balance.
Different VSTs often load at very different volumes. One instrument may be quiet and refined. Another may nearly take your head off. Some orchestral patches are designed to sit inside a mix. Some synths are designed to dominate immediately.
For film music and video production, this matters.
A sound that seems impressive on its own may be useless under narration. A powerful organ registration may overwhelm the spoken voice in a science video. A dramatic orchestral patch may be too distracting for a sailing film where the purpose is to support the images, not fight them.
So the task becomes more subtle.
The sounds need to be balanced not just musically, but practically.
Will this work under speech?
Will it sit behind video?
Will it still be clear on laptop speakers?
Will the bass become muddy?
Will the sound be too sharp after compression?
Will it still make sense once uploaded online?
This is why presets are useful starting points but rarely the final answer.
Saving Presets: The Boring Job That Saves Hours Later
One of the most important parts of this whole process is saving reliable presets.
When a working combination is found, it must be saved properly. Otherwise, the same setup work has to be repeated again and again.
A good preset is not just a sound. It is a working configuration.
It should remember:
Which VST is loaded.
Which sound or patch is selected.
Which manual controls it.
Which MIDI channel it uses.
How loud it is.
Where the audio is routed.
Whether effects are active.
Whether it is intended for performance, recording or experimentation.
This is especially important when the system is being used for company work. If a piece of music is needed for a film, a video intro or a teaching resource, the system must be ready to use.
Creative work should not begin with two hours of troubleshooting.
The long-term aim is to build a library of dependable setups: organ performance, film strings, ambient textures, science-video backgrounds, sailing themes, dramatic stings and simple piano-based cues.
Reliability Matters More Than Novelty
There is always a temptation with music technology to keep adding more.
More instruments.
More libraries.
More effects.
More sounds.
More possibilities.
But for serious work, reliability is more important than novelty.
A smaller system that works every time is far more useful than a huge collection of software that crashes, loses settings or refuses to communicate with the keyboard setup.
This is particularly true when recording. A creative idea can disappear quickly if the technology interrupts too often. When the musical idea arrives, the system needs to capture it.
That means the setup has to be tested under real conditions.
Can it run for a long session?
Does it survive a restart?
Are the presets still there tomorrow?
Does the audio crackle?
Is the latency acceptable?
Can the manuals be played naturally?
Can the sounds be recorded cleanly?
A music system is only finished when it can be trusted.
Music Technology Is Still Engineering
This process has reminded me that music technology is not separate from engineering. It is engineering in a musical form.
There are inputs, outputs, signals, routing paths, timing issues, hardware limitations, software conflicts and configuration decisions. The creative result depends on the technical structure underneath.
That links very naturally with the wider work at Philip M Russell Ltd.
Whether we are building science experiments, filming boats, creating teaching resources, restoring equipment or designing practical workshop solutions, the same pattern appears again and again.
The exciting result sits on top of a lot of careful setup.
Students often see the final demonstration, the finished video or the polished explanation. What they do not always see is the testing, failure, adjustment and problem-solving behind it.
The VST installation process is a good example of that. It is not glamorous, but it is real problem-solving.
The Personal Reflection: Two Days Well Spent, Even When Frustrating
Spending two days installing and configuring music software can feel frustrating. There are moments when it seems as if the system is being deliberately awkward.
But it is also satisfying.
Each solved problem makes the setup more capable. Each working preset becomes part of a growing creative toolkit. Each correctly assigned manual makes the organ more playable. Each balanced sound brings the system closer to being genuinely useful for film and recording work.
There is also a valuable reminder here: creative technology rewards patience.
The final result is not just a bigger list of instruments. It is a better working environment.
When the system is finished, it should be possible to sit at the organ, choose a setup and start creating music for a video, a film sequence, a science demonstration or a sailing project without first having to fight the technology.
That is the real goal.
Conclusion: The Best Creative Tools Are the Ones You Can Trust
VST instruments are extraordinary. Organteq 2, Hauptwerk, HALion and other music tools can turn a digital organ and computer system into a remarkably powerful creative workstation.
But the hard part is not always writing the music.
Sometimes the hard part is making the software behave well enough that the music can happen.
Installing plugins, assigning manuals, solving MIDI channel problems, balancing sounds, saving presets and preventing crashes may not sound very artistic. But they are the foundation of the artistic process.
For Philip M Russell Ltd, this work is part of a bigger aim: building a reliable creative system for music, film, education and media production.
The technology should not get in the way of creativity.
It should be ready when the idea arrives.