I use a lot of the different session guitarist libraries and I've never had a problem other than initially getting used to the triggering time which is pretty much the same as you would have in switching between chords on an actual guitar. The other thing is how to position the articulation or pattern change MIDI notes so it affects the appropriate chord/pattern at the right time. It's not hard, it just needs to be precise. It's easiest to start a chord slightly ahead of the measure and put the change note on the measure so the change note affects the right chord. If you do change patterns over the course of the song you have to remember there's only one pattern in use at a time. If you have a pattern set later in the track and then reposition the playback to a section that's earlier, you'll still have the same pattern set from the previous section. Again the fix for this is to apply the pattern note across the entire span of where that pattern will be played.
Strummed Acoustic is a tightly targeted product. It perhaps will not deal with all your acoustic guitar needs, but for polished, consistent, strummed acoustic parts with an absolute minimum of fuss, this is great value for money.
For home producers it is rare anyway to hire human session guitarists but in bigger productions when every minute count it is much faster for producer to hire approved session musician than try to do it with help of libs. Especially skilled guitarist can provide her/his own ideas to extend tune
During the two-day festival, the 1,450-seat theater will resonate with top talent, including many Grammy winners and nominees. The acoustic night features Australian fingerpicker Tommy Emmanuel, solo fingerstyle artist Laurence Juber, Hawaiian slack key player Cyril Pahinui and jazz guitarist Gonzalo Bergara. The electric night boasts founding Fabulous Thunderbirds member and blues rocker Jimmie Vaughan, surf guitar legend Dick Dale, electric jazz player Bruce Forman and multitasking virtuoso Ben Lacy.
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