Re: MIDI controllers/effects
<snip>Also, please, do yourself a favor and dont use the default Microsoft GS Wavetable Synth.<snip>
I concur!
I can't believe that nowadays "the soundcard" is relevent for any of this - we do no longer load sound fonts or virtual instruments into the sound card, but into the DAW; the sound card gets raw audio from there, nothing else. Or do I miss something?
Umm, I hope you're speaking for yourself here... I do not use, nor have any intention of ever using, a DAW. Nothing against them, but I'm not interested in creating electronic music. For MY needs, notation is what is required so that a "meat machine" musician can create the sound, with all the variety and interpretation of the human element. Rendering to mp3 or whatever is only useful to me for basic demonstration purposes of what I compose/arrange.
Re the drums, I cannot help you, as I am not into drums - but maybe a simple bank select (on the staff or in an instrument change) could help?
As for percussion sounds, there are several options. In a "standard" General MIDI synth you usually have several "kits" available. All on channel 10 (for most synth's. Some are on 16, and some allow more than one - VSTi's give much more flexibility). The patch selection defines which kit, generally patch 0 unless you want something different, like a Jazz kit, or a Rock kit, or Brushes etc. This is synth dependent - can't "play" a kit that's not in your synth/soundfont/VSTi.
In addition to the drum kit, there are also other percussion sounds available, still on channel 10 (usually...) and using the same patch as the drum kit, but different "notes". I suspect the sound you're looking for comes from the percussion sections of the synth rather than the standard drum kit "notes". There is a DRUMREF.NWC in examples that is useful.
As I spend time (trying to) do concert band arrangements I've created a template that has many, many staves in the drum kit, AND the percussion section that are all transposed for individual sounds and layered for printing. This way I can put a note on, say, the hi-hat, and because of the transposition it appears in the correct place on the chart, all while playing the right sound. This was tedious to set up, and can be somewhat time consuming to use, but the end result works well.