Re: I am slowly coming back to Pianoteq
Deyvidpetro wrote:By no means am I slating Pianoteq at all in fact out of all the VST's I have I have come back to Pianoteq because it instantly inspires me and I literally get lost in it. I confirm the authenticity of it when I went to a Steinway and Sons dealer in Frankfurt and the Model B sound like a replica it was amazing I was stunned, truly. So it is amazing g what they have achieved. Like I said I feel Pianoteq is an investment not just a sample library.
I find these comments interesting because when I hear piano sounds I hear so many different elements: harmonics, temperament, sound speed, pitch, velocity, dampers, dynamic range, etc, it makes me wonder if all you need is the ability to manipulate the sound in such a way as to match these behaviors to the sounds of the desired piano. This would be hard to do unless you have the instrument you want to imitate. It's like finding that biting point. Pianoteq Pro has all the corresponding features of a physical acoustic piano, I wonder what could be added? What makes the models what they are?
Pianoteq Pro has all the corresponding features of a physical acoustic piano...
Yet something besides any of the rolling casters is missing...
A microphone likely is an highly important feature in PIANOTEQ PRO that is it is perhaps partly responsible corresponding or amounting equally in importance to the successful professional recording of a physical piano. And, although a preamp is also an important feature of any highly regarded professional recording of the piano it is yet (discarded like the caster) nowhere found within this software version.
While PIANOTEQ PRO may have mainly all the features of a physical acoustic piano, the specific electronics hardware that went into many contemporary recordings of the modern instrument itself, out of the various genres enjoyed marginally today, has yet to become fully modeled and featured inside the software. But, any of the selfsame electronics what convincingly are present today out of the recordings has always distinguished amateur usage from the professional...
They might separate the amateur from the pro (er visa versa). Might they also eventually PIANOTEQ from PIANOTEQ PRO usage?
Matter-of-factly many of the electronics today make up marvelous modern models of recording arts and science...
For which (liked or not) rewards to highly recognized audio mixing engineers who record pianos are annually given! But, any of those makes his living out of recording pianos.
...I wonder what could be added? What makes the models what they are?
It would just make me happy, if MODARTT adds these often professionally used electronics. Which in the form of preamp models its users could connect to the current or yet an even somehow broadened selection of modern microphone model types. What along with preamps seems all in all to make up, irregardless of specific piano brands, the bulk of widely accepted listenable piano recordings ultimately what they are!