1. (as you say) How playing multiple notes at the same time changes the way the instrument responds
2. How playing at different intensities changes how the instrument responds.
3. The many subtle ways your physical interaction with the instrument change the sound
4. The way playing notes in succession at different rates can alter the sound
5. The physical space or choice of amplification can affect the instrument - even an acoustic guitar can "feed back" on itself to some degree
6. A bunch of other things I haven't thought of.
Sophisticated samplers (and sophisticated sample libraries) can simulate some of the above. But physical modelling synths are probably a better way forward.
A naive sampler misses:
1. (as you say) How playing multiple notes at the same time changes the way the instrument responds
2. How playing at different intensities changes how the instrument responds.
3. The many subtle ways your physical interaction with the instrument change the sound
4. The way playing notes in succession at different rates can alter the sound
5. The physical space or choice of amplification can affect the instrument - even an acoustic guitar can "feed back" on itself to some degree
6. A bunch of other things I haven't thought of.
Sophisticated samplers (and sophisticated sample libraries) can simulate some of the above. But physical modelling synths are probably a better way forward.