The files have different 'bit rate' numbers which can effect 'headroom/dynamic range'. (agree also with Luc above, different in/out sys level stuff all unaccounted for.)
My first/main takeaway might be, perhaps Pianoteq which uses 'lame mp3 encoder' could be improved to output at 320 bit rate? (have currently no idea if that's possible?) I use my DAW because I can choose 320 but I can't get Pianoteq to output high-settings files above 161kbps in stand-alone mode. Just a thought/feature request. Piantoeq may not theoretically require a higher number - but I constantly have encountered ways in which digital domain has had 'normal' limits which end up being superseded.
Before diving in a bit, if anyone wants the best audio in real time stand-alone playing, it may help to get audio equipment capable of higher "sample rate" above 48kHz, esp. with speakers capable of reproducing beyond basic range - it can sound better than a DAW outputting a file at 320kbps "Bit rate" at 48kHz "sample rate". In the past, I'd been less able to hear these diffs - but they do stick out a little now. I still am happy with 48kHz audio for mixdown (it can imbue a sort of 'mix-glue') - and feel that above that 48 number is good for processing, and real-time playing. But everyone is different - and these files are too...
"Bit Rate" measure of files provided:
Pianoteq file is at 153kbps
Pro Tools file is at 320kbps
The others..
Cubase file is at 128kbps
Logic Pro file is at 320kbps
Ableton file is also at 320kbps
Also observed the 2 files (Pianoteq and Pro Tools ones) visually in a DAW. There are obvious diffs (so a null test is moot. I performed a null test on some other files from dulistan in a different thread some time back). These files are different at least in this one way - and for sure someone might prefer one over the other.
For example, at certain zoom resolutions, in the Pro Tools file, the 'waves' seem a little longer, go a little lower/higher.. inferring headroom and perhaps other things, maybe some hint of saturation or other processing.
There are still other factors like all the above mentioned things others described - and some DAWs have differed enough, to me, to avoid them or use them (going back to the 1st post video linked... what you hear inside the DAW when mixing, can sound as good, like with Pro Tools and Studio One, whereas, often other DAWs have failed me outputting a genuinely 'lesser sounding' mix in the final exported file.
@dulistan - whatever you believe sounds better to you, is OK. There's certainly a possibility that Pro Tools and some other DAWs may handle audio in an all-round good way, compared to many others. But - we cannot hear what you hear as you play in real time. But, I'd say yes, a good DAW is often going to be valuable to any musical project, real-time or produced.
Stand-alone Pianoteq does a good job outputting MP3 - but who knows, the 'lame mp3 encoder' it uses may not do as good a job as some DAWs. (I get 161kbps when outputting high settings from Piantoeq, whereas I can choose 320kbps from within my DAW).
Also, @dulistan, on choice of DAW - the producer in your linked video, Bolo had said he wished 'the industry' would switch to Studio One, that is sounds as good as Pro Tools (and I agree, it's the DAW I use, not for 'fanboi' reasons, but the fact that at least for my workflows, it suits and gives top-end results) - it is easier to do most things - and it may cost less than Pro Tools - worth a look since you may take Bolo's word for that as well as mine.
BTW - the only downside Bolo mentioned about Studio One, was the 'sampler' within it. He prefers a sample based workflow from samplers he knows/uses.. but in Studio One, I've found, there's no need for a 'sampler' interface at all. Studio One indeed is able to 'beat find' and do all kinds of sampler related things, automatic and manual alike, without the bottleneck of a, well IMHO dinky old sampler interface (usually these are emulating old ways of working, and maybe some, like Bolo actually want to work in those specific ways as it may inform their aesthetic - not judging anyone's musical direction or anything.. but for sure, if avoiding Studio One because its sampler is not exactly like some existing others going back decades.. to people who are not into old school or Rap or Electronica based loop producers, that may be no good reason to avoid Studio One.)
Interesting stuff - but I guess I'll add a data point inre 'real time' diffs. A DAW I used in the past did seem to have a very clean audible range (good for digital only music) but when additives (extra tracks, acoustic instruments, even vocals, FX like just good acoustic reverb types, then into mixing where compressions and any saturation got involved).. it could sound terrible. That seemed a mystery - and I blamed something in my own audio kit.. upgraded an audio device and some other things.
Some time later, after the same annoyances kept ruining certain complex bounces/mixes, I stumbled on a person's Youtube measuring "upper frequency noise" in various DAWs. With digital-only sources, exact tinky-tonky beats and syn wave kinds of sounds, it was clean and clear but whenever the complexity went beyond a fairly low threshold, that otherwise inaudible upper noise ended up 'processing' into audible lower frequency noise.. like bad harmonics.. just scratchy/vague/jarring and barely audible at all.. just present and a complete waste of everyone's time. Posted about some of that in the past - and it's kind of a side-issue here so won't call it by its name or expand - it's a confusing issue of its own.
Luckily though, that problem was solved - it's now stable and not doing that.. but I don't use it anymore (that time where I dropped the DAW meant I focussed on others) and maybe I would still use it now, if I hadn't have spent so much on fixing the unknown issue myself and hadn't found Studio One improving so rapidly back then.
Anyway - just not sure what each DAW does differently - but there can be differences. I would absolutely believe Pro Tools will sound at least near the best if not the best. But - again for dulistan check out Bolos other recommendation, Studio One. I tend to only use other DAWs for some now fairly rare things they do.
BYW - Studio One has excellent 'console emulation' built in - and some 'Mix Tools' or 'Mix FX'.. one click insert on master bus and it will effect each audio track individually and sum (like a real world mixing desk/console). I do find myself using that regularly - without pushing anything hard, it can instantly give a good boost to how audio sounds through your speakers.. a little diff but it's just one of many reasons for Studio One imho.
[Edited some mis-labelled 'bit rate' to correct 'sample rate]
Last edited by Qexl (01-09-2023 05:36)
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors