Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Hello here, i want to share a first test with pianoteq5, i have a good feeling with this K2 !

http://youtu.be/Zoiv7GyVmm0

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Very good.

I would like to hear this Chaplin film soundtrack  The Roll Dance with pianoteq:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGSNx9gjhtw



Starts in 08:10


If someone have the music sheet and could create a vídeo.

it would requie adapt, use other pianoteq instruments to fill where other instruments are used.

This is one kind of piano that would be nice on pianoteq. Not a honk Tonk tune, but with a certain "can metal clics" like that are fun. Charming sound.
Maybe U4 coul adjusted to sound similar to that.

Last edited by Beto-Music (25-05-2014 14:51)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Gilles wrote:
pjb12345 wrote:

I'm finding v5 pianos very exciting to play! There's so much more dynamic colour and expressive range and also vivid presence - as if the piano is physically really occupying the space.

I have posted a little video about my first impressions:  ...

Great demo! Under your expert hands, the very real differences between all the new instruments are very well put into the spotlight...

Thanks very much!

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Pianotrancer wrote:
pjb12345 wrote:

I'm finding v5 pianos very exciting to play! There's so much more dynamic colour and expressive range and also vivid presence - as if the piano is physically really occupying the space.

I have posted a little video about my first impressions:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mF9xh5Y...8yzyTHLq1A

I loved your demo. Your Pianoteq sounds better than mine! Mind you, your playing is far better than mine- so that may be it. I'm interested to know what audio you are using. I use my laptops built in soundcard- which is okay but not great.
This begs the question; in pianoteq users opinions, what is a good usb sound card to buy at around £30.00 I can't afford an expensive option so am somewhat limited.

Thanks very much. I use the RME Babyface and am very happy with it. I've used RME cards for a while now and always like them. I'm really not sure what to suggest for £30, sorry.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Beto-Music wrote:

Great video Phil

Did I saw right or you have two V-pianos on your studio ?


pjb12345 wrote:

I have posted a little video about my first impressions:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mF9xh5Y...8yzyTHLq1A

.

Thanks! It's true. I do have two V-Pianos. I love them. To be honest though, I much prefer Pianoteq's internal sounds. But the V-Piano is so nice to play. It feels amazing.

Last edited by pjb12345 (25-05-2014 20:43)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Other frum member also like to use V-piano as controller to play pianoteq

I think was Piet de Ridder. 
He was very good forum member, and I would like to hear his coments on V5.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

I've just spent another day with V5 and I think it's absolutely brilliant. In how many ways - well I can
name quite a few.

First - the "brightness" and "metallic overtone" issues. Does V5 generally sound brighter and perhaps more
"metallic" to me? Yes, and thank God! A piano is metal strings, after all. I've spent so much time with previous
versions trying to get brighter and more metallic sounding pianos. This is exactly what I want, I do a lot of
pop and rock production and this sound is what is called for.

But I'll go further - as a recording engineer, I've spent a lot of time brightening up and compressing piano tracks
for pop and rock productions. A LOT of time. As a matter of fact, that's just about job number one in mixing a
pop or rock track with a piano - getting the piano to stand out and cut and stab. Ask any engineer. A piano that
is naturally bright and percussive? That's what works. Here's a very short list of songs that feature (if you listen closely) insanely bright pianos -

Bohemian Rhapsody (Queen)
Death on Two Legs (Queen)
Somebody to Love (Queen)
Pinball Wizard (Elton John)
Burn Down the Mission (Elton John)
Stay the Night (Chicago)
Hello (Lionel Ritchie)
St Elmo's Fire (David Foster)
New Toy (Lena Lovitch featuring Thomas Dolby)
Right Now (Van Halen)
Baba O'Riley (The Who)

This doesn't mean I can't get mellower, smoother, darker piano sounds out of V5 - totally can. Anyone can. Because here's a rule of audio engineering - you can always "cut" what IS there, but you can't "add" what ISN'T
there. Want to make your V5 piano smoother, rounder, darker, less metallic? Start with adjusting the harmonics,
move on to the equalizer, shorten some of the sliders, move the strike point, lower the hammer hardness...in short, get to work programming it. That's the strength of Pianoteq - you can "make" your dream piano. You're not stuck with somebody's samples.

In past, there have been some user complaints about lack of punch in the middle octaves of Pianoteq pianos. This
concern went away largely with the release of V4, and I'd say that now with V5 released we can forget about ever hearing this complaint again. The middle octaves feel solid, punchy, clear and present on all models in V5 (to my
ears).

There has also been some concern expressed about over-emphasized L-modes in certain models. I think to some degree this comes from people who don't have a real piano sitting right next to their mixer chair in their studio.
I do have a real piano (Yamaha C3 Midi Grand) sitting two feet behind my mixing desk chair and let me tell you,
that instrument exhibits loads of sympathetic metallic ringing. If you have just worked with digital pianos, then
you wouldn't be aware of this so much because that type of behavior isn't something that can be sampled, as it is
interactive and actually occurs after notes are struck, and is dependent on which notes are struck, at what velocity, and their position relative to each other. You can't "bake it into a sample". So, this matter of metallic
overtone ringing isn't an annoying one to me. I do see that Modarrt plans to release an update soon that will address it, nevertheless, which I applaud.

Yes, the difference between V4 and V5 is quite dramatic, to my ears. I've had to go back and re-do my presets
from V4, mainly to dial back all the highs I added in equalizing, which is no longer necessary with V5. But the
difference to me is not just a matter of brightness or "metallicness". Across the board, V5 exhibits more concise
imaging, a more transparent high-end, more punch and presence...it just sounds more real. Like I'm in the control
booth and listening to the real thing, mic'd, on the other side of the glass. AND, it is finally a great pop-rock piano
instrument. I've been with Pianoteq since version 1, always believed it would win the virtual piano war eventually,
and I now believe that with V5 it has won.

Last edited by Dave Polich (26-05-2014 01:22)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Dave Polich wrote:

Stay the Night (Chicago)

That's interesting - I actually can't detect any acoustic piano sound at all in that one - I hear what sounds like a bright FM electric piano sound, and other synth sounds, but no piano. If you're sure there is piano, I just can't hear it.

That aside though, thankyou so much for posting - I love learning from professionals. I think a large part of what I often like in piano recordings is the post processing.  Btw, the short instrumental "interlude" in New Toy is one of my all time favourite bits of music.

Greg.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

I love the mic options as well.  Some great condenser and ribbon mic models in that list!  I was almost expecting to see some mic pre models...tube & solid state!     Maybe in 5.5   ( Half joking. )
  I ended up deleting all of my user presets from 4.5 and starting fresh with all the enhancements of V5.  Previously, I removed the onboard reverb in favor of my dedicated 3rd party reverbs. I don't know if the onboard reverb was even updated but it sounds great to me in the factory presets now.  About the only criticism I have is, with my old eyes, I would like to see a bit more contrast in the mic view and the text for the condition slider.  Overall, I think it's a truly great update!
   -Perry-

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

One must remember, that quality of PT sound depends largely on your settings and equipment. If they are low, it's like: you install new game "Watch Dogs" in low quality and say: "oh, the graphics is not as good, as they say".
Not long ago I tried PT with Cubase and for few hours couldn't understand, what happened with my ears: sound is much worse, than in standalone. I couldn't even hear big differences between v4 and v5 (some users mentioned it)). After all, I found, that the reason is lower settings of Cubase project.
When I use PT standalon, my choice is 96 kHz and "Asio DirectX Full Duplex Driver" (which is much better than "generic Low Latency Asio Driver". The second sounds very poor.)
And of course if you use bad headphones or little plastic loudspeakers, sound wouldn't be great. Remember it before you write: "oh, the sound is not as good, as they say"

Pianoteq 6 Pro (D4, K2, Blüthner, Model B, Grotrian, Ant.Petrof)
Studiologic SL88Grand, Steinberg UR22mkII

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Well remambered !

A nice tip to help judge the sound, is to always also hear a good recording of a real piano before test pianoteq. If the true piano recording do not sound good in the speaker system you are using, you can't wait pianoteq to sound great.

Headphones can sound ok for some musics, but only a few expensive ones sound good for solo piano.

Kridlatec wrote:

And of course if you use bad headphones or little plastic loudspeakers, sound wouldn't be great. Remember it before you write: "oh, the sound is not as good, as they say"

Last edited by Beto-Music (26-05-2014 16:15)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Beto-Music wrote:

Headphones can sound ok for some musics, but only a few expensive ones sound good for solo piano.

I don't agree with this at all -  some cheap headphones still sound very good for solo piano. Perhaps not as accurate, and not AS good, but still very pleasing indeed.

Btw I was waiting on hold the other day on a lousy VoIP phone connection, and the piano music that was playing still sounded very beautiful.


Greg.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Kridlatec wrote:

When I use PT standalon, my choice is 96 kHz and "Asio DirectX Full Duplex Driver" (which is much better than "generic Low Latency Asio Driver". The second sounds very poor.)
And of course if you use bad headphones or little plastic loudspeakers, sound wouldn't be great. Remember it before you write: "oh, the sound is not as good, as they say"

A little confused, I use ASIO4ALL and although i can set ASIO as 96khz, the max i can set pt is 48Khz. Should the rate in ptq be the same as the ASIO settings?
Also, can you explain Asio Direct x full duplex driver- i thought it was either asio or Direct x.
I'm not particularly knowledgeable of these things, so forgive me if I misunderstand

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Just recorded Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9 no. 1 with Pianoteq 5 and love it!

http://youtu.be/dM6EGaEK2RU

Congrats for the team of Pianoteq and keep up the good work!

Wim.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Pianotrancer wrote:

A little confused, I use ASIO4ALL and although i can set ASIO as 96khz, the max i can set pt is 48Khz. Should the rate in ptq be the same as the ASIO settings?

It's all pretty complex, until you get your head around it.

So the Standard version will only go up to 48k internally (Options->Perf->Internal sample rate).  This means that all PT calculations are done in (say) 48k.  If your sound card (or your DAW project) are set to a different sample rate (eg. 96k), PT will 'resample' its 48k calculations to that, ie. it just converts them.  This way it's compatible with these rates, but if they are higher, you will not get the full quality.  On the other hand, that also saves some CPU (higher rates = more CPU).

The Pro version though can go internally up to (I think)192k.

If you can, match the internal and sound card/DAW sample rates.  Then PT doesn't have to do this translation, which is a little less CPU work and (potentially) a slightly purer sound.  But if you want to work in a higher rate than your version of PT supports internally for other reasons (eg. in a DAW), that's fine too.

Last edited by ReBased (27-05-2014 23:02)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Thanks Rebased. Should I be using a better version of asio4all? You mentioned asio direct x duplex? Where can i download this?

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Pianotrancer wrote:
Kridlatec wrote:

When I use PT standalon, my choice is 96 kHz and "Asio DirectX Full Duplex Driver" (which is much better than "generic Low Latency Asio Driver". The second sounds very poor.)
And of course if you use bad headphones or little plastic loudspeakers, sound wouldn't be great. Remember it before you write: "oh, the sound is not as good, as they say"

A little confused, I use ASIO4ALL and although i can set ASIO as 96khz, the max i can set pt is 48Khz. Should the rate in ptq be the same as the ASIO settings?
Also, can you explain Asio Direct x full duplex driver- i thought it was either asio or Direct x.
I'm not particularly knowledgeable of these things, so forgive me if I misunderstand

I use the software at 48000Hz, and the quality is very very! good.
I think that you should benefit playing at 96000Hz only if you have very high end material.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

wimlassche wrote:

Just recorded Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9 no. 1 with Pianoteq 5 and love it!

http://youtu.be/dM6EGaEK2RU

Congrats for the team of Pianoteq and keep up the good work!

Wim.


Very nice sound and playing

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Pianotrancer wrote:

Thanks Rebased. Should I be using a better version of asio4all? You mentioned asio direct x duplex? Where can i download this?

Hello, Pianotrancer. I use 96 KHz mostly because higher rates of PT makes latency twice lower in my case. It slightly influences sound, but for the quality it is more important, what is the rate of your soundcard. When I switch from 192 KHz to 41 KHz in settings of my s-card, PT becomes poorer. But it depends also on equipment (on my second computer and Audigy 2 I don't have such big differences)

About asio direct x duplex. As I understood it was installed with my Cubase. For my taste, this driver goes better then asio generic low and Asio4All (in my opinion it sounds deeper or, may be, not so harsh and unrealistically clear).

Last edited by Kridlatec (28-05-2014 11:24)
Pianoteq 6 Pro (D4, K2, Blüthner, Model B, Grotrian, Ant.Petrof)
Studiologic SL88Grand, Steinberg UR22mkII

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

stamkorg wrote:

I think that you should benefit playing at 96000Hz only if you have very high end material.

And if you are a bat....

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

What does resolution have to do with realism?

This always comes up in the forum: "...you must run pianoteq at 192Khz, and the best headphones available for it to sound realistic ... "

This doesn't make any sense - even on the cheapest mp3 player with $5 headphones, you can still identify a real piano when you hear it.
It doesn't sound like you're standing next to it, nor in the concert hall, but it does sound like a real instrument playing through a cheap sound system!

It's the same with computer graphics rendering - low resolution images of real life are usually more realistic than high resolution CG renderings ...

I'd really like to be persuaded otherwise (because resolution is easy to pump up, information inst!)
So dear forum members, what do you think??

B.T.W - Modartt I'm excited about the new version, thank you for it - though I have yet to find the time to give it a real spin. Looking forward.

-- E

M-Audio Profire 610 / Roland Fp-3 / Reaper / PianoTeq!
www.myspace.com/etalmor

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

etalmor wrote:

What does resolution have to do with realism?

I got the impression they were referring more to fidelity, than "realism", and higher sampling rates & resolution is better of course, although I agree with the person who said that it's generally best to avoid a sample rate conversion unless it's really necessary.  I haven't yet attempted to compare the sound of Pianoteq when using an internal rate of 96kHz to 44.1 or 48kHz. (I can't try 192kHz because I don't have the Pro version)

For final "presentation" of a recording, I'm aware of at least one study by the AES that concluded that it was not possible to discern any difference between CD quality, and higher resolution material. (but I know this is VERY hotly debated).  Even if this study is correct, I don't think it applies to Pianoteq's internal processing, because errors can accumulate due to the calculations.

Greg.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Pianotrancer wrote:

Thanks Rebased. Should I be using a better version of asio4all? You mentioned asio direct x duplex? Where can i download this?

That wasn't me.  I use a higher-end soundcard with its own ASIO drivers, so I haven't used the generic ones for a while.  I did try ASIO4ALL once a few years ago, but it wasn't particularly stable on my setup at the time.

Basically ASIO gives you two things - a pure audio path (the sample rate you choose is not changed again by the sound card drivers, something the non-pro audio ones often do behind your back with other driver types like MME or DirectSound), and much lower latency.  The generic ASIO drivers try to give you that for cards that don't have their own, but the underlying hardware (eg. the sound card chip built into your motherboard) may not allow very low latencies, like pro audio cards do, or have other limitations.

Theoretically, one ASIO driver should also not sound any different than another, as the whole idea is to pass the audio without changes.  But with generic drivers maybe you can't guarantee that.

If possible, I would recommend a more pro-audio sound card or sound interface, with a native ASIO driver.  They don't have to be super expensive (although there are some very expensive ones too).  I don't know the current cards/interfaces and prices, but try to look around for recommendations.  Also note that some give you stable lower latencies than others.

BTW, having spent a bit of quality time with PT recently, I find that I now actually prefer a audio driver latency of 3ms + internal PT latency of ~8ms.  Even though I can use much lower PT latencies, on my Ensoniq TS-12 piano-style keyboard (which even has note-off velocity btw) it feels most like I'm triggering a real hammer this way.  In the past I played with the lowest PT latency I could, but now I find this doesn't feel like a real piano.  So maybe getting ultra-low latencies actually isn't that important for PT (although it's very important for eg. guitars).

Last edited by ReBased (28-05-2014 13:30)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

wimlassche wrote:

Just recorded Chopin's Nocturne Op. 9 no. 1 with Pianoteq 5 and love it!

http://youtu.be/dM6EGaEK2RU

Congrats for the team of Pianoteq and keep up the good work!

Wim.


Very good performance.

But, if you allow me to say, the reverb it's too much, quite exagerated.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

vjau wrote:
stamkorg wrote:

I think that you should benefit playing at 96000Hz only if you have very high end material.

And if you are a bat....

This made me laugh.  Thank you, vjau.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

I'm still in a state of amazement (it's increasing, in fact) as I continue to play with v5. The D4 is simply a dream come true. My own prisitine Steinway concert grand!!

I recorded this little improvisation to illustrate how extraordinarily expressive an instrument this is. The Rachmaninov-esque textures are brought to life by its magnificent tone. Right across the full range of the instrument (pitch and dynamics), there is beauty and living warmth. The bloom on the tone right through the entire decay of every note is wonderful. As the sustained sound evolves, it seems to live and breathe and I'm in love with it! It must be a truly beautiful instrument that has been modelled here! I've performed on concert grand Steinways but I don't think I've played one as delicious as this. Thank you all at Pianoteq for this...

https://soundcloud.com/phil-best/improvisation-119

Last edited by pjb12345 (28-05-2014 15:53)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

You play very well, very nice sound.
Do you use a preset here?

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Hi,

i like your demos/improvisations. .....(I love them!!!!!) Very sensitive

.fxp?

I need time and i would like to build a .fxp "Steinway B" (K2 is near)

With Pianoteq 5, we have part of the soul of an Steinway

Even if i want it darker....

Olivier

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Simply beautiful ! Thanks...

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Bluthner 5 is the best piano I've ever heard - or played on...

To those still missing the vibe, I would recommend:

Asus Xonar Essence STX - lower cost card that matches the best in the game (STU model for laptop)
Grado SR80i - *Open* headphones with a more linear response (superior soundstage presence/air to closed, for much lower cost)
Casio PX150* - Same touch as the more expensive model, one of the only to have HD midi

Software tweaks:
Set pianoteq to use native Asus ASIO, set latency to 1.3, set midi to HD
Use pianoteq eq feature to plug in a light EQ to the inverse of the Grado response curve for most linear accuracy
Set ASIO driver and Pianoteq to 24bit
Get Bluthner and Standard version (set mics to 'Recording' preset)! And tweak reverb length/db..

I used to use LA Scoring Strings impulse response for my convo reverb, but now the small hall/concert sound awesome!

Last edited by Sage (31-05-2014 14:55)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

I' not sure what my soundcard settings are; It's a Realtec HD card. But what I have found is that seting my ASIO4All to the same 44100 rate as Pianoteq. Routing my audio out to the unbalanced inputs on my KRK powered monitors, and using pianoteq's "Pop" eq on the D4 is absolutely amazing in terms of clarity.
I am using the audio buffer at 64 samples both on the Asio control panel and on Pianoteq- which is giving me 1.5ms latency. Wow--- I'm in Heaven!

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

I haven't upgraded from 4.5 yet. I have down loaded the try-out version and noticed that you can't load more than piano at at time, e.g. If I select D4 pianos the non of the others remain selected. I'm trusting that no one is experiencing this with the full versions.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

DonSmith wrote:

I haven't upgraded from 4.5 yet. I have down loaded the try-out version and noticed that you can't load more than piano at at time, e.g. If I select D4 pianos the non of the others remain selected. I'm trusting that no one is experiencing this with the full versions.

To select more than one instrument in the preset manager, you now have to use shift-click (or right button click). This was changed to be more consistent with usual selection methods in other softwares.

Last edited by Gilles (29-05-2014 15:37)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Hi, in the last couple of month I upgraded my audio hardware (it had been previously already decent).

I did much AB-ing, also much comparison Pianoteq against good sampled instruments (mostly VintageD which is some sort of a long standing standard among the sampled pianos.)

I must say that the upgrade (mostly due to the bigger/better near field monitors) had on the first hand a dramatic effect on the sound quality and even playability and on the second had the most beneficial effect on  the modelled sound of Pianoteq, than on the sampled instruments.

One possible explanation for this would be that with sampled instruments there is an inherent invariability of the played back recorded sounds which will be more perceptible - even if on an subconscious scale of perception - with the better sound quality, while some rich details where variability and randomness of the Pianoteq model gets more present just above some quality threshold of the sound reproduction path.

HW upgrade: Audio interface: from Focusrite 6i6 to RME Babyface was a markable improvement (the Babyface is about the same quality level as my old and much cheaper EMU0404USB was.)

Boxes: Genelec 8020 were thankfully substituted by Dynaudio BM5A MK2 - a big improvement.

My HW upgrade wasn't cheap (and there are even better DACs and more expensive monitors), but I think there are much easier satisfying solutions, especially when one uses decent headphones or earphones (then preferably with the Binaural perspective setting in the preset).

But built-in realtek audio simply cannot be on par with Pianoteq sound output quality and it is a pitty to let it degrade.

Even with my now good enough HW I experience an improvement:

- with native vendor ASIO driver over the generic ASIO4ALL (with all of the interfaces I have tried)
- with the driver (=host) bitrate set to maximum (this effect was product-specific: EMU's max 192000 was much better of it's lower rate, possibly because of the suboptimal resampling within its internal driver. ) This setting doesn't even require PTQ PRO to experience with and the CPU overhead it causes is also not so dramatic as the next setting:
- and yes, despite the very honest advice of Modartt I personally experienced some further improvement of the internal processing sample rate set higher than the default 48000 (up to 192000 in the case of RME BF and the EMU) but good CPU i7 HW was needed to do 192000.

All these improvement are adding up with the result that I am very enthusiastic about the realism Pianoteq achieved just with this new v5.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Well, just to take a break from the discussion and because Dave Polich mentioned it, an old cover sound alike that's been made by me for an ad came to mind
I did all parts transcription, recording, mixing, mastering and played all keyboards.

Everything is real but the piano and synths.. Pianoteq3

Here it is just for fun

http://www.screenplay.it/showreel/audio/DR%20MOTOR.mp3

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Sage wrote:

Use pianoteq eq feature to plug in a light EQ to the inverse of the Grado response curve for most linear accuracy

This article might assist those who are going to attempt this:
http://www.stereophile.com/features/808head/index.html

The main point is, I think, that headphones are not designed to have a flat frequency response. Rather, they are designed to SOUND like loudspeakers that DO have a flat frequency response, listened to in an average listening environment.  Thus, before attempting to compensate for the frequency response, we need to first determine whether the frequency response is the raw frequency response of the headphone, or whether a correction has already been applied.

Greg.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Sustain is far shorter, on par with digital pianos. I have to slide the soundboard impedance way up to approximate the sustain of a real piano (and what I was hearing in PT3).

Tone-wise, it's better than PT3 in certain aspects, but still not as convincing as high-end sampled pianos. I think the way to go eventually will be sampled attack + modeled decay. I'm guessing the first few milliseconds are mathematically the messiest and most difficult to model.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

joshuasethcomposer wrote:

I think the way to go eventually will be sampled attack + modeled decay. I'm guessing the first few milliseconds are mathematically the messiest and most difficult to model.

So I'm not the only one to think this exactly

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

joshuasethcomposer wrote:

Sustain is far shorter, on par with digital pianos.

Eh, what? Very much no.

Hard work and guts!

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

joshuasethcomposer wrote:

Sustain is far shorter, on par with digital pianos. I have to slide the soundboard impedance way up to approximate the sustain of a real piano (and what I was hearing in PT3).

Tone-wise, it's better than PT3 in certain aspects, but still not as convincing as high-end sampled pianos. I think the way to go eventually will be sampled attack + modeled decay. I'm guessing the first few milliseconds are mathematically the messiest and most difficult to model.

You're probably right about the complexity of attack, but I think it's also about our human perceptual system. When identifying sound the attack is the most important part of the sound. Anyway I agree that still there's something artificial quality present is PTQ's sound. Real thing is just so complex. I think sampling can still catch certain aspects of sound (especially the attack part) and modeling others (natural decay and string interraction). In the end it's matter of taste, music style etc. which qualities do you prefer more.

To me it's a fantasy to say that modeling beats sampling in all aspects of piano sound.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

The sound really is refined to the point of besting samples in every way. Simply put, my real piano downstairs sounds *faker* than my Bluthner 5, because it is so much easier to hear every nuance in the 4th gen piano (not obscured by room dynamics/listener position/piano type/tuning). So, I am really hearing many more layers of intricacy and detail in the Pianoteq sound - no joke

But then again, I've got an amazing sound card, headphones, and keys, with great care put to calibrating every element..

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

EvilDragon wrote:
joshuasethcomposer wrote:

Sustain is far shorter, on par with digital pianos.

Eh, what? Very much no.

You're not doing the developers any favors by mindlessly cheerleading. Sustain is significantly shorter and/or weaker than on previous versions. The only way to get it on par is to increase the soundboard impedance, significantly. But that makes the attack more artificial-sounding (at least to my ears).

Version 5 (D4):
http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?file=PT5.mp3

Version 3 (C3):
http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?file=PT3.mp3

Same midi file. Same output level. v3 sustain >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> v5 sustain

Last edited by moshuajusic (31-05-2014 03:18)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Have you checked that passage with a real piano?  I recall thinking version 3 sustained unrealistically long when listening to Hugh Sung's Clair de Lune.  But I have never carefully analyzed this.  And it may have not so much been the length of the sustain in v3 that bugged me but, rather, the lack of development of the sound in v3 during a given sustained note.

joshuasethcomposer wrote:
EvilDragon wrote:
joshuasethcomposer wrote:

Sustain is far shorter, on par with digital pianos.

Eh, what? Very much no.

You're not doing the developers any favors by mindlessly cheerleading. Sustain is significantly shorter and/or weaker than on previous versions. The only way to get it on par is to increase the soundboard impedance, significantly. But that makes the attack more artificial-sounding (at least to my ears).

Version 5 (D4):
http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?file=PT5.mp3

Version 3 (C3):
http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?file=PT3.mp3

Same midi file. Same output level. v3 sustain >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> v5 sustain

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

kippesc wrote:

Have you checked that passage with a real piano?  I recall thinking version 3 sustained unrealistically long when listening to Hugh Sung's Clair de Lune.  But I have never carefully analyzed this.  And it may have not so much been the length of the sustain in v3 that bugged me but, rather, the lack of development of the sound in v3 during a given sustained note.

First to clarify: letting the notes ring out, sustain is about the same for both versions. Around 30 seconds. But version 5 is much weaker to begin with, as you can clearly hear in the samples I posted. And yes, I have a real piano at hand. Version 3 is a lot closer to the real thing.

Visual (v5 on top, v3 on the bottom):

http://s30.postimg.org/cxe4ydqu9/PT3vs_PT5.jpg

You can see how the notes in PT5 are attenuated much sooner. Again, this is much more characteristic of digital pianos than real pianos or even PT3.

Last edited by moshuajusic (31-05-2014 04:21)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

You intrigued me, so I decided to some tests of my own....

The decay of the D4 behaves and lasts exactly the same as my Steinway sample libraries.

The Bluthner's decay is (slightly) longer than the D4 (just like in real life) and matches up with the decay of my Fazioli, and Bosendorfer sample libraries (give or take a second of decay...very quiet by that point...)

Last edited by njaremko (31-05-2014 04:32)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

joshuasethcomposer wrote:

You can see how the notes in PT5 are attenuated much sooner. Again, this is much more characteristic of digital pianos than real pianos or even PT3.

Can't agree with you. I've often said, that sustain of previous versions was unrealistically loud and long, well before v5. Especially in the high range, where PT became so "singing", that it was hard to record pieces (for example, chopin nocturnes) with melody in treble range. That is why, I am very pleased, that Modartt fixed sustain.

Pianoteq 6 Pro (D4, K2, Blüthner, Model B, Grotrian, Ant.Petrof)
Studiologic SL88Grand, Steinberg UR22mkII

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

joshuasethcomposer wrote:
kippesc wrote:

Have you checked that passage with a real piano?  I recall thinking version 3 sustained unrealistically long when listening to Hugh Sung's Clair de Lune.  But I have never carefully analyzed this.  And it may have not so much been the length of the sustain in v3 that bugged me but, rather, the lack of development of the sound in v3 during a given sustained note.

First to clarify: letting the notes ring out, sustain is about the same for both versions. Around 30 seconds. But version 5 is much weaker to begin with, as you can clearly hear in the samples I posted. And yes, I have a real piano at hand. Version 3 is a lot closer to the real thing.

Visual (v5 on top, v3 on the bottom):

http://s30.postimg.org/cxe4ydqu9/PT3vs_PT5.jpg

You can see how the notes in PT5 are attenuated much sooner. Again, this is much more characteristic of digital pianos than real pianos or even PT3.

Thank you Joshua for this excellent visual which clearly demonstrates that the double decay is closer to the real thing in version 5 than in version 3, which is precisely a point on which we have been working hard.

Of course one cannot discuss your taste, and I perfectly admit that you prefer the decay of version 3. But then, as you have mentioned, you have several tools that you can mix in various ways:
- increasing the Impedance
- augmenting the Cutoff
- reducing the Q factor
- reducing the Direct sound duration.

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

joshuasethcomposer wrote:

Version 5 (D4):
http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?file=PT5.mp3

Version 3 (C3):
http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?file=PT3.mp3

Same midi file. Same output level. v3 sustain >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> v5 sustain

Yes, I find the v5 sustain more realistic and akin to the pianos that I have played in my lifetime. Of course, each piano is different, and some pianos (like your own at home) might have that very long decay which v3 had, so you're making that logical connection in your head, when it doesn't necessarily have to be true for each and every piano existing on this planet. Thanks for illustrating that so clearly.

And as Philippe said, this was the point of v5, making things more realistic. I'm not "mindlessly cheerleading", I participated in the beta tests and it was a lot of work to get things right - but Modartt managed to nail it.

Opinions and tastes... just like assholes, we all have those!

Last edited by EvilDragon (31-05-2014 08:03)
Hard work and guts!

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

A very entertaining read, through these pages of dispute, conviction and analysis.

I've 'been with' Pianoteq since v2 and have watched and listened to the development with interest and a certain confidence.

I've long had a vigorous interest in 'digital' pianos, and have invested quite a bit, financially, in the pursuit of this interest.

I would hesitate to state that I am a professional violinist, since many of my colleagues could care less about 'sound reproduction', declaring themselves more interested in ensemble, expression, whatever. Of course, we are spoiled with 'real sound' every day. This includes, for me, easy access to 2 Hamburg Steinway Ds, 2 New York Ds, a Bösendorfer 290 Imperial (not just any 290 – the 290 previously own and toured by Victor Borge, no less) and a medium-length drive to the Stuart & Sons factory, where I've enjoyed a behind-the-scenes tour conducted by Wayne Stuart himself (and with whom I have discussed the Pianoteq modeling software, much to his interest, by the way). Those big pianos of his, apart from sounding beautiful, are unbelievably exquisite pieces of furniture. I hope we see a model of his work at some point, and would gladly facilitate that achievement.

Since v4, I have felt things where moving along very nicely for this stunning product, not just in sound quality, but in 'fashionability' of the sound.

Now, with v5 (notwithstanding severe comments from some) we have a truth of sound coming from the tone generator engine that is absolutely convincing. I would absolutely challenge even a sophisticated listener to identify the model, as distinct from reality, in a blind listening test, and to a statistically significant degree.

This is to address the accuracy of the sound – not the exact experience of playing the instrument. No doubt this is a yet more stringent test, and dependent upon so many variables as to be outside of the 'responsibility' of the virtual instrument designer/manufacturer. But the interactive luxury of this sophisticated model is incomparably greater than even the most exhaustive efforts from sample-based instrument builders. There is really no comparison.

No doubt, further developments are possible, and will be welcomed, as regards the sound engine. I do feel, though, that the primary remaining challenge is the construction of a truly immersive interface, one worthy of the exceptionally 'true' engine now available, and of those we expect will exceed even this current level of excellence.

It may be that the best way to 'experience' a piano is not the way we are obliged to experience a real acoustic grand or upright. This 'real' experience is simply a function of what must needs happen in the business of activating and generating the sound. I think we all agree it is a compelling experience, but it would be rash to say it is definitive, inherently optimal. We are so busy emulating, we have not quite got to the point of dreaming afresh.

Well, Wayne Stuart has... sort of... and good on him. And I should say, with the extraordinary array of adjustable parameters available in the Pianoteq environment, none of us has the slightest excuse for not jumping on board that voyage to a brave new world.

It's kind of funny. When we hear the instruments Liszt and Chopin had to work with (never mind Beethoven) it is hard to grasp how they were so 'turned on' by that sound to conceive the undeniably powerful masterworks bequeathed to us. I think we are all too easily guilty of seeing things through a very narrow lens. Not intended as a criticism, just a provocative thought. Meanwhile, it is really cool to have the facility of a monster piano playable at full volume, even in the wee hours of the night. This, all by itself, is a singular service to our civilization.

Cheers,
Stephen.

Last edited by stephenphillips (31-05-2014 11:57)

Re: Pianoteq 5 impressions

Nice ...