Dromeus wrote:I can't see how I could use this parameter for my problem. I need two channels that can be routed to different Harpsichord patches.
Ah, I see, you need to use two completely different "instruments", correct?
In such a case, I am not sure if the resonances would be shared among them. I mean, in real life they do (e.g. when my daughter plays clarinet, my acoustic piano resonates quite noticeably if I have the pedal down), but I am not sure how pianoteq would behave in such a situation.
Dromeus wrote:BTW I'm using Pianoteq Stage. I noticed that Pianoteq Standard supports "instrument morphing an layering". Will this do the job for me?
Perhaps layering would do it. The good news is that Pianoteq is really king of user friendliness: you can install as many versions as you please, side by side, licensed or demo. Take advantage of that: download the Pianoteq Standard Demo, give it a try and see how it behaves. Besides the missing keys (and time limitation) is fully functional and its installation will not change anything on your Pianoteq Stage licensed one.
The first test I would do is to simply do a layered split of a single keyboard: lower part using one instrument and upper part using another. See if the resonances are shared from one to the other. If not, everything else is a moot point. If so, you'd have to figure out how to route the midi from the two manuals to the two separate instruments. I'm sure you can do it, and there may be more than one way to accomplish that.
Best of luck!
Where do I find a list of all posts I upvoted? :(