Topic: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Hi,

I've been exploring Pianoteq for around 6 months now. When buying, I was hoping it would be more of 'out-of-the-box' solution, only to be adjusted to taste. What I'm about to say isn't quite a rant, although it is an expression of frustration. Frustration caused by 'sound recording' presets being so far away from sound recording quality.

I experimented with everything, spending hours and hours and hours. Pianoteq actually distracted me from my primary goal - composing. Eventually I got into micing the piano, sound processing/mixing and mastering...

My best sound required 3 reverbs, a ton of transient shaping and: EQ, EQ, EQ, EQ.

Pianoteq has a lot of everything! A lot of low freq, mid freq, upper mid freq... and that in some - unbalanced way. Tried to fix this with pre-EQ. Didn't work out. I ended up with shelf cutting below 180Hz up to 18db. Plus cutting below 350Hz, plus cutting below 1000Hz, plus bell cutting at 750Hz, 1200Hz, plus cutting at 3KHz... All the time listening to reference tracks. I used heavy transient reducing on frequencies on which eq-ing destroyed the color. Why are transients so agressive? Who needs that? I could understand it in 'Prelude' (player) presets, but in recording presets?

And I ended up with this sound as my best:

https://youtu.be/mX-Jwz7H7XI

What I'm baffled with is, if Pianoteq is aimed at sound recording (according to presets), why isn't it more user-friendly and out-of-the-box' ready? I know that every piece of music is different, but any can be played and recorded on every acoustic piano. I believed Pianoteq would allow me to commit to composing, but ended up knowing things I don't want to know in numerous attempts to achieve 'sounds like a record' sound.

I chose Pianoteq because I listened to the several blind tests online and my choice consistently was it. Then I tried it. After trying and listening to a lot of sampled ones, and when I clicked on Pianoteq Bechstein I was so mesmerized. As playing experience, it is amazing. I bought it believing that with a few tweaks I could achieve good producing results. But, as a music producing experience it was and still is utter frustration. This was very intense 6 months.

I'm now looking again into sampled VST's, although I'm now more careful since I'm far from pro (hardly qualify even as a beginner), and chances are I can't predict with certainty what tool will help me achieve my goal.

I'm still left with a question: why sound recording presets aren't more sound recording ready?

Thanks for reading,
Marko

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

I know this kind of debugging and personalization of the sound can be very frustrating.  Could you please provide more information about what sound you were expecting or what genre you're targeting?  Do you have any links to the reference tracks you're trying to match?  Could you also tell us a little bit more about your studio setup and workflow?

My experience is that--with some slight modifications (usually to turn off any fx--particularly delay, turn off eq, lower the volume, turn off the limiter, and modify the reverb)--the Recording presets are exceptionally good for Classical recording when trying to emulate a recital/concert setting, like a large hall and playing Romantic solo or Romantic piano+orchestra music.  The recording presets don't work nearly as well for jazz, pop, or other non-classical genres--particularly if helping the piano "sit in a mix" is the goal.  Player, Under Lid, Cinematic, or Intimate usually fit better with the post-Romantic genres.

From your example, it seems like you're targeting a very close-miked pop/jazz sound that could be mixed to be standalone, mixed with vocals, or mixed with a small ensemble.  We can certainly give you settings recommendations or links to presets that better fit with that, but more information about what your expectations are will help us give you the best advice.

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xHiPcCsm29R12HX4eXd4J
Pianoteq Studio & Organteq
Casio GP300 & Custom organ console

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Hello Mr. Construer,

I share the frustration you have described, regarding EQ.

Rather than avoiding your question, if I may speak from experience:  The "sound" of any real acoustic piano is heavily influenced by the size, shape and acoustic treatment of the space any piano happens to actually be in.

As a person who tunes pianos professionally (and sticking with grand pianos for the time being), I can attest that a piano sounds much more lively and bass-heavy when it is in a studio or smallish room.  The opposite is also true:  a studio grand piano or a concert grand piano that sounds bass heavy and lively when heard in a comparatively small sized space ... all of a sudden sounds "lean" or or "anemic" -- light in the bass region, and with far less dynamic range when that very same piano is physically re-located to a concert stage, or in a concert venue. 

What has changed?  Not necessarily the "sound" being emitted the piano; rather, what has changed is the amount of early reflections, late reflections and outright dynamic range that our ears hear, once a piano has been re-located from one place to another.

Restated, I have heard small grand pianos (on the order of 5'3" -- ~160cm -- or less) that sound absolutely "huge" in a domestic living room of one's home.  At the same time, I have heard 7' (~210cm) and 9' (~270cm) grands that sound comparatively "anemic" when on an outdoor stage, unamplified, or in a concert venue seating more than 2000 or 3000 people.

* * * * * * *
Here is a completely different analogy:  Have you ever noticed how when we hear recordings of our own voices, we complain our reproduced voices sound shrill and weak?  This is because we have grown accustomed to hearing our own voices from within the confines of our own skulls!  Restated, we hear our own speaking voice with the added benefit of extra resonance that is not heard in external recordings.  Shockingly, despite our complaints, everyone who hears our recorded voice, swears it sounds just like they hear, live.  What's the difference in perception?  I believe it is we have superimposed our own "cranial EQ" onto our own voice!

I firmly believe that the frustration we experience with products such as Pianoteq presets ... happen to make us aware that what we are hearing from Modartt (and other vendors) does not match with the expectations of what we have heard in our own lives.

* * * * *

If I may share a mistake I am guilty of having committed:
I have over-EQ'd countless recordings/performances of Pianoteq models via headphones to enhance lower and midbass, that sound horribly boomy or bass-heavy, and sluggish when played back through a stereo system of full-range studio monitors (such as B&W Matrix 801's with Krell amplification). 


Enough of my rambling.  I hope this has shed some light on the real frustrations you have experienced in your musical life.

Cheers,

Joe

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

In addition, to this frustration already obtained with an acoustic instrument depending on its size and the room in which it is placed, is unfortunately added that caused by all the imperfections of the audio system downstream from Pianoteq (as sophisticated as it is) which significantly aggravate this frustration (regardless of the EQ settings set up, distributed or not on X amplification systems ...). My feeling - within the limit of my amateur experience - being that it is sometimes preferable not to abuse the Pianoteq EQ system (especially for listening on loudspeakers) and to leave this function for more precise adjustments to More complete external EQs downstream from Pianoteq (EQ which can possibly be free such APO), as it could be the case for the reproduction of any audio source, but anyway, for me with static (as dynamic) EQ there is no miracle, only a compromise ...  (In the state of art today - may be different in 10 years ? - [In the absence of a complete physical modeling of the properties of the room, the objects it contains, and the audio components themselves?] at best few moments of illusion at the cost of complex settings which betray this artifice as soon as the musical context changes ...)

Bruno

Last edited by bm (09-10-2020 08:26)

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Problem as I see it is we expect Pteq to sound like a good digital rendition of an acoustic.  Digitals are painstakingly designed to sell in maximum numbers.  They wouldn't do that if they actually sounded like an acoustic, with its multiplicity of keyboard and sound inequalities, unwanted resonances due to room or positioning and other undesireables.
Nothing is perfect.
Pianoteq conveys some of this and to my way of thinking, there is a realism about the product which can hit you between the eyes.  You might not like it; but you get to compare the different piano makes which tell their own story.  A Petrof might sound lovely until you compare it with something else.  So many variables also come into play!

It's just the way it is.  But I would love a volume-equaliser gradient control for the entire keyboard.  That, if it were possible, would be a first, I imagine.   And I'd gladly pay for it!

Last edited by peterws (09-10-2020 22:59)
I'm playing all the right notes but not necessarily in the right order

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

jcfelice88keys wrote:

If I may share a mistake I am guilty of having committed:
I have over-EQ'd countless recordings/performances of Pianoteq models via headphones to enhance lower and midbass, that sound horribly boomy or bass-heavy, and sluggish when played back through a stereo system of full-range studio monitors (such as B&W Matrix 801's with Krell amplification). 

Joe

Very good advice.
Similar experience here! (I hope) I've learned my lesson. I use very little or none of the pianoteq on board eq, and I always compare my pt recordings on a couple pair of speakers as well as headphones.

On a related note: the Pianoteq experience is composed of two different perspectives: the Player, and the Listener. What works from the player perspective usually doesn't work "tel quel" for a recording, and vice-versa. To simplify in the extreme: the Player perspective should seek to eliminate any long reverberation or "distance" from the instrument. You need immediate proximity with the sound for proper feedback between ear and hand. On the contrary, the Listener (or playback) perspective benefits from room ambience, to add some "air" and situate the sound in space. My two cents anyways...

Last edited by aWc (10-10-2020 00:16)
PT 7.3 with Steinway B and D, U4 upright, YC5, Bechstein DG, Steingraeber, Ant. Petrov, Kremsegg Collection #2, Electric Pianos and Hohner Collection. http://antoinewcaron.com

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Ptq has a lot of everything, yes, and I have been tweaking (trying) Ptq since 2013. And have same experiencec as many here. When it sounds good with my headphones (Grado SR 80i right now) it doesn’t always sound good with my speakers ( Presonus eris E5 right now). So, I’m always coming back to the presets - in my opinion, after all, presets are pretty much there, needs just little tweaking. Nowadays I sometimes only change impedance or symphatetic resonance or instrument condition slider or combinations of these. And my friends have never complained about the sound, not here in the forum either. But, as always, we hear different and it comes down to personal taste, as with food 

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Downstream from Pianoteq, the settings of the audio chain are always a highly personal compromise (if one seeks to approach the illusion of having an acoustic instrument in front of you), but with the latest versions of Pianoteq , and a little patience in the settings downstream, it is about a compromise already very pleasant, for me this last month, much more pleasant than the use of my acoustic piano however not very old, but which waited ( due to the covid) for a little too long the arrival of the tuner, with which (partly because of Pianoteq) I become more and more demanding ...

Bruno

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

construer wrote:

Hi,

I've been exploring Pianoteq for around 6 months now. When buying, I was hoping it would be more of 'out-of-the-box' solution, only to be adjusted to taste. What I'm about to say isn't quite a rant, although it is an expression of frustration. Frustration caused by 'sound recording' presets being so far away from sound recording quality.

I experimented with everything, spending hours and hours and hours. Pianoteq actually distracted me from my primary goal - composing. Eventually I got into micing the piano, sound processing/mixing and mastering...

My best sound required 3 reverbs, a ton of transient shaping and: EQ, EQ, EQ, EQ.

Pianoteq has a lot of everything! A lot of low freq, mid freq, upper mid freq... and that in some - unbalanced way. Tried to fix this with pre-EQ. Didn't work out. I ended up with shelf cutting below 180Hz up to 18db. Plus cutting below 350Hz, plus cutting below 1000Hz, plus bell cutting at 750Hz, 1200Hz, plus cutting at 3KHz... All the time listening to reference tracks. I used heavy transient reducing on frequencies on which eq-ing destroyed the color. Why are transients so agressive? Who needs that? I could understand it in 'Prelude' (player) presets, but in recording presets?

And I ended up with this sound as my best:

https://youtu.be/mX-Jwz7H7XI

What I'm baffled with is, if Pianoteq is aimed at sound recording (according to presets), why isn't it more user-friendly and out-of-the-box' ready? I know that every piece of music is different, but any can be played and recorded on every acoustic piano. I believed Pianoteq would allow me to commit to composing, but ended up knowing things I don't want to know in numerous attempts to achieve 'sounds like a record' sound.

I chose Pianoteq because I listened to the several blind tests online and my choice consistently was it. Then I tried it. After trying and listening to a lot of sampled ones, and when I clicked on Pianoteq Bechstein I was so mesmerized. As playing experience, it is amazing. I bought it believing that with a few tweaks I could achieve good producing results. But, as a music producing experience it was and still is utter frustration. This was very intense 6 months.

I'm now looking again into sampled VST's, although I'm now more careful since I'm far from pro (hardly qualify even as a beginner), and chances are I can't predict with certainty what tool will help me achieve my goal.

I'm still left with a question: why sound recording presets aren't more sound recording ready?

Thanks for reading,
Marko

https://youtu.be/O8aC17J6OR4

I made this video today, seemed easier to explain, at least how I see/hear things.

Although your question is regarding EQ, which I demonstrate in this vid, VOLUME is the main reason audio sounds wrong. If you are using a DAW for example to set volume levels, 0 dB will be very loud. It's early(ish) days in my understanding of broadcast audio levels, but peaking around -12 seems about right in my opinion although this will depend on your playing, a piece might be peaking too often in this area.

The overall volumes in my video are slightly under here to allow for the equalization changes.

Also note the temperament here....the last chord especially!

Hope the video is useful to you and other Pianoteq users.

Nick

Last edited by MeDorian (10-10-2020 19:19)

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Great vid MeDorian.

Often when having trouble attaining a useful sound from any VST, it's valuable to go back to simple settings. The defaults are generally useful as they are, esp. if taking into account volume ("gain staging" in audio terms - go to YouTube for lots of advice), and especially the velocity curve - get that combo right - and your audio will work so much better.

@construer, your demonstration video has multiple audio problems from my perspective. Mainly you have over-cooked it - but do what I did some years back, and forget thinking "I am an audio pro, this should work" while adding a dozen DAW FX.. I've found going gently is the best path for solo piano. I overcook it in mixes like every VST - but for clean solo do like MeDorian's video shows - and turn down the output *(get your gain-staging clearer) and lose the chain of heavy-handed processing.

Also, please consider too, that the MIDI in construer's video with all respect, is very minimalist (very little feel, sonority, movement, groove or feel of any kind - like a bland player piano roll). Of course that kind of music will sound way better IMO with either way more artistic processing of FX, or without any beyond the defaults.

That's not barking at anyone - it's always a delight to me to see how people find their personal sound - and anyone can, I believe in all of us! Cheers.

Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments)  - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

What do you use to input midi in Pianoteq? There are 0 dynamics in the video you posted, no pedal, phrasing, articulation, etc. Perhaps the problem is in there?
Edit: I can see now it's free score, that explains everything, lol!
My main suggestion is to get a good keyboard with sustain pedal. Editing a piano performance working in pure midi is a task near to impossible. After that and some good speakers you won't make so many changes to the piano sound.

Last edited by Chopin87 (11-10-2020 10:52)
"And live to be the show and gaze o' the time."  (William Shakespeare)

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Thanks Qexl.

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Thank you all for reading through my frustration and trying to help.

To answer questions...

My workflow is based on 'bedroom producer' setup: laptop and studio headphones (at home) and jbl305 in treated room (at school I work in), the later I use only to check my 'mixes'. Workflow is: composing - score editing/midi exporting - midi editing (with great deal of tempo and velocity manipulation) - audio processing.

In the example I posted, I tried Reaper which is awful for MIDI editing, so I will probably go back to Cakewalk (I need to use free/cheap options because of my students). Reaper is good for audio processing.

At first, I was trying to achieve classical recording of some Chopin piece as a reference (I forgot what it was, used it months ago). Then, I realized it is mission impossible so I searched for a recording that is the closest to Pianoteq presets and arrived at Ludovico Einaudi - Oltremare. This reference is somewhere between classical and pop sound, more closely to pop.

Processing I use is (after turning off all Pianoteq fxs): narrow q Eq to remove frequencies I don't like (only a few), then I used transient shaping because of the next step which is 'a touch of Eq' for spectral balance.

And here started THE problem.

I'm baffled by a need to boost lows and low mids, since in my experience I can't cut them down enough without destroying the 'natural sound' (I use Bechstein). I do this because I'm constantly feeling like 'the player' is nailing down keys with big metal hammers even with velocity of 5 (!?). Shelving down lows (bellow 180Hz) and low mids (bellow 350Hz) helps but creates harshness in upper mids: now everything is overly bright, especially on smaller speakers (phone or even TV) and makes 'ears bleed'. So I cut upper mids (around 3K)  and mid mid (around 800). This helps with brightness, but bring back 'hammering' effect of lows. And all I can do is repeat this cycle indefinitely.

I tried to soften the hammers, reduce hammer noise, change impedance, increase sympathetic resonance... And then I asked for help from a guy whose example of processing Pianoteq I heard and liked, and he revealed to me that mid's transients are way too aggressive. I don't have his FXs (I believe he used Neutron's transient shaper), but I have TDR deedger and free BitterSweet. This helps but not enough, and that's why I started wondering: is pianoteq really intended only for experienced audio engineers (with expensive setup) and home playing, or am I getting something wrong? Hence this post.

I did give a thought to my 'mastering' levels. I actually don't 'master', but more normalize sound with only 1 db of limiting reduction. This gives me end levels that are lower than Einaudi's. Mine are around 10LUFS short term and around 16 LUFS integrated. His are 7 LUFS short term and, I believe, 14 LUFS integrated. But, when I look at K-system scale, I'm in the red most of the time even on K-12 scale.

(I know I sound like I know what I'm talking about, but am aware that my knowledge ends with knowing those concepts exist. )

I could really use some directions what to do. I tried many, many, many configurations of presets, including pianoteq's preEq, and also mine tweaking.... And failed to avoid that forceful hammering or overly bright sound. This basically narrows down my issue.

Thanks again to all for trying to help,
Marko

PS: It's true that this piece lacks macrodynamics. With this more like pop style sound bigger changes in dynamics between sections sound awful. Other than that and lack of pedaling, it is far from minimalistic. Velocity ranges from 40-105, and tempo ranges from 40-80, with every note having its own settings.

PPS: Other than all mentioned processing, there is also a very low level of parallel compression (gentle, not a NY style) with saturation as an attempt to round transients further; short plate reverb with eq to bring back some brightness without harshness, medium PnoVerb to widen stereo image, and long room reverb to give depth. Both EQed. And before limiter, a touch of Gullfoss.

PPPS: After exploring this sound design topic for months, I am quite certain that there is a very big market for a pianoteq preset or pianoteq 7 feature that will allow composers to have 'out-of-the-box' nice result. There are a lot of composers (me included) that doesn't look authenticity in the sound but in the composition. Sound only should be acceptable. Nice generic sound is welcomed.

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

construer wrote:

Thank you all for reading through my frustration and trying to help.

To answer questions...

My workflow is based on 'bedroom producer' setup: laptop and studio headphones (at home) and jbl305 in treated room (at school I work in), the later I use only to check my 'mixes'. Workflow is: composing - score editing/midi exporting - midi editing (with great deal of tempo and velocity manipulation) - audio processing.

In the example I posted, I tried Reaper which is awful for MIDI editing, so I will probably go back to Cakewalk (I need to use free/cheap options because of my students). Reaper is good for audio processing.

At first, I was trying to achieve classical recording of some Chopin piece as a reference (I forgot what it was, used it months ago). Then, I realized it is mission impossible so I searched for a recording that is the closest to Pianoteq presets and arrived at Ludovico Einaudi - Oltremare. This reference is somewhere between classical and pop sound, more closely to pop.

Processing I use is (after turning off all Pianoteq fxs): narrow q Eq to remove frequencies I don't like (only a few), then I used transient shaping because of the next step which is 'a touch of Eq' for spectral balance.

And here started THE problem.

I'm baffled by a need to boost lows and low mids, since in my experience I can't cut them down enough without destroying the 'natural sound' (I use Bechstein). I do this because I'm constantly feeling like 'the player' is nailing down keys with big metal hammers even with velocity of 5 (!?). Shelving down lows (bellow 180Hz) and low mids (bellow 350Hz) helps but creates harshness in upper mids: now everything is overly bright, especially on smaller speakers (phone or even TV) and makes 'ears bleed'. So I cut upper mids (around 3K)  and mid mid (around 800). This helps with brightness, but bring back 'hammering' effect of lows. And all I can do is repeat this cycle indefinitely.

I tried to soften the hammers, reduce hammer noise, change impedance, increase sympathetic resonance... And then I asked for help from a guy whose example of processing Pianoteq I heard and liked, and he revealed to me that mid's transients are way too aggressive. I don't have his FXs (I believe he used Neutron's transient shaper), but I have TDR deedger and free BitterSweet. This helps but not enough, and that's why I started wondering: is pianoteq really intended only for experienced audio engineers (with expensive setup) and home playing, or am I getting something wrong? Hence this post.

I did give a thought to my 'mastering' levels. I actually don't 'master', but more normalize sound with only 1 db of limiting reduction. This gives me end levels that are lower than Einaudi's. Mine are around 10LUFS short term and around 16 LUFS integrated. His are 7 LUFS short term and, I believe, 14 LUFS integrated. But, when I look at K-system scale, I'm in the red most of the time even on K-12 scale.

(I know I sound like I know what I'm talking about, but am aware that my knowledge ends with knowing those concepts exist. )

I could really use some directions what to do. I tried many, many, many configurations of presets, including pianoteq's preEq, and also mine tweaking.... And failed to avoid that forceful hammering or overly bright sound. This basically narrows down my issue.

Thanks again to all for trying to help,
Marko

PS: It's true that this piece lacks macrodynamics. With this more like pop style sound bigger changes in dynamics between sections sound awful. Other than that and lack of pedaling, it is far from minimalistic. Velocity ranges from 40-105, and tempo ranges from 40-80, with every note having its own settings.

PPS: Other than all mentioned processing, there is also a very low level of parallel compression (gentle, not a NY style) with saturation as an attempt to round transients further; short plate reverb with eq to bring back some brightness without harshness, medium PnoVerb to widen stereo image, and long room reverb to give depth. Both EQed. And before limiter, a touch of Gullfoss.

PPPS: After exploring this sound design topic for months, I am quite certain that there is a very big market for a pianoteq preset or pianoteq 7 feature that will allow composers to have 'out-of-the-box' nice result. There are a lot of composers (me included) that doesn't look authenticity in the sound but in the composition. Sound only should be acceptable. Nice generic sound is welcomed.

Construer,
I had to read your posts twice to make sure I was not missing something.  You have not said what keyboard you are using, or one at all?  If you are using one have you calibrated in in Pianoteq?  Your sample music when compared to my reference level amplifier is too loud creating distortion.  Your processing makes it impossible to assess the quality.  It would have been better for you to dig out that Chopin for use to hear assuming that you used a calibrated keyboard.
Have you listed to all the Modartt provided Audio Demos?  https://www.modartt.com/pianoteq_audio_demos
If you have and find a problem with them then let us know which ones so we can compare your thoughts with ours.   
Ian

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Beemer wrote:

Construer,
I had to read your posts twice to make sure I was not missing something.  You have not said what keyboard you are using, or one at all?  If you are using one have you calibrated in in Pianoteq?  Your sample music when compared to my reference level amplifier is too loud creating distortion.  Your processing makes it impossible to assess the quality.  It would have been better for you to dig out that Chopin for use to hear assuming that you used a calibrated keyboard.
Have you listed to all the Modartt provided Audio Demos?  https://www.modartt.com/pianoteq_audio_demos
If you have and find a problem with them then let us know which ones so we can compare your thoughts with ours.   
Ian

Hi Ian,

thanks for your prolonged interest in my problem.

It is actually funny that you mentiond demos. There was a period in which I tried to match demo sounds. And concluded that either demos are scam or my copy of Pianoteq (updated to the last version) is defective sound wise. Second option seems to me quite ridiculous.

I would love to have the sound of Schubert's sonata demo, but if you compare it with my example: it is waaaay louder (which means it is heavily processed); it has so clear 3rd and 2nd octave - when I compare my out-of-the-box Sweet and any other preset to it, this range sounds like a rumble with barely audible changes in intonation (hence I need to heavily clear it up); and demo overall sounds so wide, clear and present yet massive. My Sweet preset doesn't sound anything like that, not even nearly.

For the example I posted, I didn't use keyboard. I have Casio PX-350M. For 'Serenity' video I did record MIDI live and then edited just pedal (Reaper recorded three lanes of CC64 for some reason). It didn't improve sound. So I went back to editing MIDI files exported from Sibelius. When I finish editing, I go back and adjust velocity curve if needed. Usually because all this processing influence volume of some velocity ranges.


It would be great if Modartt shares MIDIs and FX chains for their demos so we can learn from them and recreate sound we like.

Marko

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

construer wrote:
Beemer wrote:

Construer,
I had to read your posts twice to make sure I was not missing something.  You have not said what keyboard you are using, or one at all?  If you are using one have you calibrated in in Pianoteq?  Your sample music when compared to my reference level amplifier is too loud creating distortion.  Your processing makes it impossible to assess the quality.  It would have been better for you to dig out that Chopin for use to hear assuming that you used a calibrated keyboard.
Have you listed to all the Modartt provided Audio Demos?  https://www.modartt.com/pianoteq_audio_demos
If you have and find a problem with them then let us know which ones so we can compare your thoughts with ours.   
Ian

Hi Ian,

thanks for your prolonged interest in my problem.

It is actually funny that you mentiond demos. There was a period in which I tried to match demo sounds. And concluded that either demos are scam or my copy of Pianoteq (updated to the last version) is defective sound wise. Second option seems to me quite ridiculous.

I would love to have the sound of Schubert's sonata demo, but if you compare it with my example: it is waaaay louder (which means it is heavily processed); it has so clear 3rd and 2nd octave - when I compare my out-of-the-box Sweet and any other preset to it, this range sounds like a rumble with barely audible changes in intonation (hence I need to heavily clear it up); and demo overall sounds so wide, clear and present yet massive. My Sweet preset doesn't sound anything like that, not even nearly.

For the example I posted, I didn't use keyboard. I have Casio PX-350M. For 'Serenity' video I did record MIDI live and then edited just pedal (Reaper recorded three lanes of CC64 for some reason). It didn't improve sound. So I went back to editing MIDI files exported from Sibelius. When I finish editing, I go back and adjust velocity curve if needed. Usually because all this processing influence volume of some velocity ranges.


It would be great if Modartt shares MIDIs and FX chains for their demos so we can learn from them and recreate sound we like.

Marko

You have a keyboard that is very capable of being calibrated within Pianoteq.  A starting point for assessing audio quality is to calibrate,  play a standard piano, e.g. Bechstein without applying any effects.  In Pianoteq reduce max volume to -6dB. Set dynamics level so that when playing you are able to achieve ppp to fff.
If you are not happy with the keyboard calibration try manually adjusting the curve slightly at the bottom and top.
I have Steinway and Blüthner sounds and these don't have the Sweet preset you mention.  I would never select anything other than a classical preset when setting Pianoteq up.  I have a friend who has an acoustic Steinway model B.  He played my Pianoteq Steinway and felt it was very authentic.
Your requirement of using effects is not my expertise or interest but I hope you eventually get the sound you want.  I have Pianoteq Standard but I prefer to play my acoustic Blüthner
Ian

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

construer wrote:

I would love to have the sound of Schubert's sonata demo [...] It would be great if Modartt shares MIDIs and FX chains for their demos so we can learn from them and recreate sound we like.
Marko

The Schubert Sonata demo https://www.modartt.com/bechstein was recorded with C. Beschstein DG Sweet preset with no other postprocessing, 100% direct from audio export from Pianoteq. For checking your audio configuration, here is the MIDI file that was used: https://forum.modartt.com/uploads.php?f...Kabuli.mid. Load it in Pianoteq with C. Beschstein DG Sweet and you should have exactly the same sound.

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
construer wrote:

I would love to have the sound of Schubert's sonata demo [...] It would be great if Modartt shares MIDIs and FX chains for their demos so we can learn from them and recreate sound we like.
Marko

The Schubert Sonata demo https://www.modartt.com/bechstein was recorded with C. Beschstein DG Sweet preset with no other postprocessing, 100% direct from audio export from Pianoteq. For checking your audio configuration, here is the MIDI file that was used: https://forum.modartt.com/uploads.php?f...Kabuli.mid. Load it in Pianoteq with C. Beschstein DG Sweet and you should have exactly the same sound.

...and it sounds great when I play the midi file using my Blüthner Model One
Ian

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

I will find that Schubert midi file really helpful as a 'benchmark' for analysis and testing. Thanks, Philippe!

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

You can use the parameter freeze option in Standard and Pro to take the sound of the C. Bechstein DG Sweet preset and try it on any other model in the system--even demos.  While it won't be exactly the same sound between each model, it will be a good starting place to experiment, if you really like that preset's sound.

One other thought: whenever doing production audio work with Pianoteq, I turn off the Limiter and set the Volume to something between -15db and -9db (depending on how many other instruments I'll add to the mix).  The Limiter (because it's doing it's job at high volumes) is on by default as a protection for general users who are just doing playback on a piano (which isn't desirable in a mixing workflow since we're targeting 32-bit float with nearly infinite headroom and the limiter deletes audio data that it thinks is too loud but is actually okay since 32-bit float has more headroom that humans can survive at full volume).  The limiter therefore causes really, really awful distortion to some partials, loud attacks and overtones and its impact on playback is very unpredictable.  I like to give myself a ton of headroom particularly if I'm working in 24-bit instead of 32 (by lower the volume and disabling the limiter) and then I use no compression or eq, and the mixes come out perfectly with little mastering needed at all.  I usually target the K-12 system for solo material, so there's a good blend of loudness and headroom, and K-20 for piano and orchestra mixing (which gives substantially more headroom but requires more amplification so I need to turn up my speakers when doing that).  Then, once I've finalized a mix (which usually involves few or no extra steps), I either normalize to a specific LUFS value between -16db and -14db or normalize to something between -0.1db and -1.5db peak RMS based on what service or standard I'm going to provide a sound file to.  Youtube will automatically normalize your audio for their standards, so anything you plan to only upload there will be normalized automatically and you can skip that step--as long as the audio data isn't clipped anywhere (which it shouldn't be with the volume set lower and the limiter turned off), and they'll make it sound consistent across their catalog.

To tell if the limiter is part of the problem, look at a waveform of the audio output you're mixing.  If there are "flat lines" on some peaks, the limiter has deleted the actual peak.  Another way is looking at a spectrum scope analyzer (several free VSTs are available for that) to see if some partials, overtones, and peaks are getting clipped while others are unaffected during playback.  Compression can cause similar distortion but the peaks tend to still be intact, they're just at the wrong volume.

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xHiPcCsm29R12HX4eXd4J
Pianoteq Studio & Organteq
Casio GP300 & Custom organ console

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Thanks, tmyoung, for the excellent technical info. Over time I've learned to lower my output volume and disable the limiter. Glad to know it's not just me being fussy, I always suspected the limiter was introducing distortion but I couldn't understand why.
A brilliant tool for checking loudness levels is Youlean Loudness Meter - the basic version is free! https://youlean.co/youlean-loudness-meter/

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

dazric wrote:

Thanks, tmyoung, for the excellent technical info. Over time I've learned to lower my output volume and disable the limiter. Glad to know it's not just me being fussy, I always suspected the limiter was introducing distortion but I couldn't understand why.
A brilliant tool for checking loudness levels is Youlean Loudness Meter - the basic version is free! https://youlean.co/youlean-loudness-meter/

Indeed, all sound cards downstream from Pianoteq do not behave in the same way for a maximum level of 0db, especially in the presence of a significant use of equalization in Pianoteq. Some sound cards distort much faster than others. It is therefore more careful to lower the output volume on pianoteq a lot at the beginning (maybe 10db at least), then to raise it only gradually, stopping noticeably before the distortion appears.

Bruno

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
construer wrote:

I would love to have the sound of Schubert's sonata demo [...] It would be great if Modartt shares MIDIs and FX chains for their demos so we can learn from them and recreate sound we like.
Marko

The Schubert Sonata demo https://www.modartt.com/bechstein was recorded with C. Beschstein DG Sweet preset with no other postprocessing, 100% direct from audio export from Pianoteq. For checking your audio configuration, here is the MIDI file that was used: https://forum.modartt.com/uploads.php?f...Kabuli.mid. Load it in Pianoteq with C. Beschstein DG Sweet and you should have exactly the same sound.

Thank you, Philippe, million times. This was a game changer for me. I struggled so much to figure out what am I doing wrong - MIDI programming or audio processing. Spend so much time working on both in parallel. Once the MIDI was out of picture it took me a weekend to figure out what I should do. Now, my Pianoteq production sounds 'like a record', and I am so grateful for that.

Thank you

Last edited by construer (19-10-2020 20:59)

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

If you don't mind, could you alight the community what it was you did Constuer?

We did say the defaults are good

Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments)  - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

The file "Schubert - Sonata in A Major D. 664 - Leyla Kabuli.mid" is marvelous.
It helps a lot. Thank you, Phillippe.
However, I can't figure out what's the usage of cc81 and cc16.
There is a good use of cc67 to dim the tone color.
And, I guess that cc81 and cc16 must have some amazing effect to the sound.
Can anyone tell me what it is?

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

k c Paul Li wrote:

The file "Schubert - Sonata in A Major D. 664 - Leyla Kabuli.mid" is marvelous.
It helps a lot. Thank you, Phillippe.
However, I can't figure out what's the usage of cc81 and cc16.
There is a good use of cc67 to dim the tone color.
And, I guess that cc81 and cc16 must have some amazing effect to the sound.
Can anyone tell me what it is?

I would like to know, too. I couldn't find the official Ptq cc list either in the manual or on the site. Does anyone have a link to this list?

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

k c Paul Li wrote:

The file "Schubert - Sonata in A Major D. 664 - Leyla Kabuli.mid" is marvelous.
It helps a lot. Thank you, Phillippe.
However, I can't figure out what's the usage of cc81 and cc16.
There is a good use of cc67 to dim the tone color.
And, I guess that cc81 and cc16 must have some amazing effect to the sound.
Can anyone tell me what it is?

Yes, cc67 controls the soft pedal, it is a very important controller (soundwise). cc81 and cc16 are general purpose MIDI controllers, but are not used in the Schubert demo.

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

construer wrote:

I would like to know, too. I couldn't find the official Ptq cc list either in the manual or on the site. Does anyone have a link to this list?

I'm not sure to understand what you mean by official Ptq cc list... You can find the standard MIDI CC controllers list on the net, see for example https://www.midi.org/specifications-old...ta-bytes-2, and you can assign whatever you want in Pianoteq -> Options -> MIDI.

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
construer wrote:

I would like to know, too. I couldn't find the official Ptq cc list either in the manual or on the site. Does anyone have a link to this list?

I'm not sure to understand what you mean by official Ptq cc list... You can find the standard MIDI CC controllers list on the net, see for example https://www.midi.org/specifications-old...ta-bytes-2, and you can assign whatever you want in Pianoteq -> Options -> MIDI.

I meant a list of cc controllers that Pianoteq respond to by default. Like 64, 67, 88... (I believe it is a rather short list.)
This cc16 and cc81 is Yamaha thing (Schubert's midi is recorded on their piano so there are events on those lanes), and I was wondering if Pianoteq responds to them. I manually tested and doubted myself whether I'm doing something wrong. Now, you confirmed it doesn't. It could've saved you some time if we had this list.

Re: Why is it so hard to EQ Pianoteq?

construer wrote:
Philippe Guillaume wrote:
construer wrote:

I would like to know, too. I couldn't find the official Ptq cc list either in the manual or on the site. Does anyone have a link to this list?

I'm not sure to understand what you mean by official Ptq cc list... You can find the standard MIDI CC controllers list on the net, see for example https://www.midi.org/specifications-old...ta-bytes-2, and you can assign whatever you want in Pianoteq -> Options -> MIDI.

I meant a list of cc controllers that Pianoteq respond to by default. Like 64, 67, 88... (I believe it is a rather short list.)
This cc16 and cc81 is Yamaha thing (Schubert's midi is recorded on their piano so there are events on those lanes), and I was wondering if Pianoteq responds to them. I manually tested and doubted myself whether I'm doing something wrong. Now, you confirmed it doesn't. It could've saved you some time if we had this list.

Yes, there is a short list by default in Pianoteq, you can see it if you open Options -> MIDI.