Topic: Playable setup for Yamaha GT1 / GT2 with internal speakers? need help
I've bought PTQ Standard recently (with Steinway B, Bechstein, Steingraeber) and have spent several days trying to find a good sounding, playable setup with the Yamaha GT1 as midi controller and acoustic output – to no avail. As I'm afraid I'm getting frustrated with the task, I hope for help of other piano players here – I saw that some of you do use the same keyboard.
Connection-wise, no problems at all: Macbook pro with an external Midi-USB adapter, output from headphone port over jack plug with adaptor 4 to 3 rings into AUX (line in) of the instrument. Works fine.
But I can't find any FXP / microphone setup that sounds natural and is agreeable to play. I am an experienced classical hobby pianist, I own the GT1 for some 10 years now and I'm still quite satisfied with the (somewhat dated) samples of the instrument. My goal with PTQ is to get at least close to the benchmark set by the GT1, or have better results. What counts for me is what I hear as a player through the acoustical output of the instrument, I'm less interested in recreating concert hall soundscapes etc. All my PTQ experiments by now have been with the virtual Steinway B (I'm familiar with the acoustical instrument and know how it should sound).
Here are the problems I have.
– action noises. PTQ generates a lot of action noises that are much too intrusive when playing (maybe they are fine for recording). I've set hammer, key release and pedal noises to low values or zero, still there is a lot of (what seems to be) damper noise and, first of all, a noise like the felt of the hammer touching the strings at attack. I've tried placing the mics in greater distance, what helps a litte bit, but spoils any feeling of being near to the instrument.
– evenness of touch and intonation. I can obtain trebles that are more or less ok; but either the mids or the basses or both are flat and artificial. I've loaded the velocity curve from the file section which seems to work well. I've played around with all parameters: EQ, microphones, intonation, design ... no result comes close to the quality of the built-in sounds. Mostly lacking brilliance, body and variability.
– the overall results are just not similar to an acoustic grand and far below the naturalness of the built-in sounds of the GT1. With PTQ the instrument is, helas, no joy to play. I listened to several tracks recorded with PTQ here in the forum and some of them seem really good. Thus, my suspicion is that the specific construction of the GT1 with the speakers in the upper and lower board of the instrument makes it extremely difficult to obtain a natural feeling result. Actually, in my setup, PTQ has to be set up in a way that makes the sound seem to come from the instrument, not from lateral monitors. I've tried microphone placement within the virtual grand, changing all parameters innumerable times, but the results are still bad.
What am I hoping for with this post?
I am afraid that advices concerning details like which hammer hardness to try etc. won't resolve my problem (although: who knows). But maybe there is somebody here in the forums who uses the same instrument, is a classical player as well (I mostly play transparent, detail-rich music like Scarlatti, JS and CPE Bach, Mozart, Beethoven as well, very litte romanticism, so precision in sound control is what I am looking for) and who has already found a setup that work. Maybe after going through similar problems like mine.
Oh, yes: I've tried all the default setups, "Prelude" and "Home" are nearest (though still quite far from) what I am looking for. "Player" does actually describe my needs best, but sounds much too noise-rich, flat and generally not natural. I've experimented a lot with creating my own FXP setups, but still can't find any that works for me or at least makes me confident that with some more tweaks I'll find the sound I need. I am seriously thinking about abandoning my PTQ-experiment, but I still hope that it's just my fault and you, accomplished PTQ-users and fellow piano enthusiasts, will have the solution ...
Thanks for reading this somewhat bulky post. Cheers! Martin