Topic: Mozart Sonata no.10 in C major, k 330

https://youtu.be/HnPYdYM0ymM

In the past, I found that it is good to play pop or jazz music using virtual piano,
but not classical music.
Classical music needs a lot of different "Touching", thus many subtle tone color changes.
I am so happy to find out a way to play classical music for virtual piano.
Thanks for Pianoteq, its different presets give me the chance to do this.
No other virtual piano can do such kind of recording.
Here I have broken through the limitation of tone color control and the limitation of 127 degrees of dynamic changes.

Best wishes
k.c.Paul

Re: Mozart Sonata no.10 in C major, k 330

k c Paul Li wrote:

https://youtu.be/HnPYdYM0ymM

In the past, I found that it is good to play pop or jazz music using virtual piano,
but not classical music.
Classical music needs a lot of different "Touching", thus many subtle tone color changes.
I am so happy to find out a way to play classical music for virtual piano.
Thanks for Pianoteq, its different presets give me the chance to do this.
No other virtual piano can do such kind of recording.
Here I have broken through the limitation of tone color control and the limitation of 127 degrees of dynamic changes.

Best wishes
k.c.Paul


You play Mozart with such elegance. It sounds, as I said before, like  appreciating each and every note.
Tone color changes and dynamics, yes. There are unlimited possibilities with Ptq. Those nuances bring your performances to another level, like you are having good control over the music.

Only one thing I was thinking of. Some places high notes and some places forte I could wish a little bit softer hammer hardness to avoid metallic sound ( but it is only my personal taste, and I have new headphones that give a very clear soundstage image, wide. maybe it is partly them…

btw, When you click on ”note edit” in vers. pro, (dont know if you have pro) there are over 30 parameters one can edit note by note. Maybe it could give a bit same result with one piano versus layering many pianos…just a thought. Maybe you are alrady using it.

Anyway, you have done very much and I think it is a never ending story, because Modartt are making Ptq better and better too so we get ”new” sounds to use….
Do you use soft pedal…
And, I think you should get much more views/listens. What you do is very special.

Best wishes,

Stig

Waiting for next with great interest

Re: Mozart Sonata no.10 in C major, k 330

Pianoteqenthusiast wrote:

btw, When you click on ”note edit” in vers. pro, (dont know if you have pro) there are over 30 parameters one can edit note by note. Maybe it could give a bit same result with one piano versus layering many pianos…just a thought. Maybe you are alrady using it.

Anyway, you have done very much and I think it is a never ending story, because Modartt are making Ptq better and better too so we get ”new” sounds to use….
Do you use soft pedal…
And, I think you should get much more views/listens. What you do is very special.

Best wishes,

Stig

Waiting for next with great interest

Yes, it is a never-ending story. I will (with Pianoteq) improve more as time goes by.
I don't have Pro version, but I sometimes use eq to darken the high pitch sound. I don't satisfy with some of the high notes. Figuring out how to fix them. Maybe, new versions of Pianoteq will solve it.
I would like to do Beethoven's sonatas, but I don't think it's time to do these.
I play Beethoven's Sonatas every day, but not recording them on midi.... just waiting for a better version of Pianoteq that's capable to make such recordings. But I am glad that Pianoteq 8 can do Mozart's Sonatas so nicely.

Re: Mozart Sonata no.10 in C major, k 330

beautiful performance.  i would love to hear some Beethoven too!

Re: Mozart Sonata no.10 in C major, k 330

budo wrote:

i would love to hear some Beethoven too!

Sure, but later.