Jope wrote:On the other hand, what timeframe are we talking about? How slow can the attack phase of a piano sound be? I think fiddling with samples is a complex task and many approaches come into question to get a consistent sound and behaviour through the velocity space.
Yeah, that's what lost me, too. On a piano, once the key forces the hammer to lever forward and strike the strings, the note sounds, so on a midi keyboard, triggering Note-on should sound the sample immediately. An increase in velocity shouldn't matter, since the increased key velocity itself will mean that the key triggers the Note-on faster.
Still, here's a description of the feature from the manual for a Roland KF7:
Changing How Rapidly Sounds Are
Expressed According to the Force
Used to Play the Keys
(Hammer Response)
You can adjust the timing with which sounds are produced
according to the force used to play the keys. This function is
called “Hammer Resonance.” (sic)
When a key is pressed on an acoustic piano, it causes a
hammer to move and strike the strings, producing sound.
The hammers move more slowly when the keys are played
gently, meaning that sounds are produced just slightly later
than when you play the keyboard with greater force.
When the Hammer Response function is on, the interval
between the time a key is pressed and the time sound is
produced varies according to the force used to play the key.
The more gently the key is pressed, the more delayed the
timing of the sound.
Touch <ON> to turn the Hammer Response function on.
Touch the screen slider to adjust the time it takes for a key to
sound after it is pressed.
The more the slider is moved to “Slow,” the more delayed
the sound is when the keys are played softly. Conversely,
sounds are produced more quickly when the keys are played
with greater force.
It seems to be controlling what might be called the efficiency of the action in a real piano. The only thing that I can imagine is that the timing increment is changed very, very slightly. Otherwise, there would just be a strange delay on soft notes. (??) But Roland must have felt\heard that it made a difference. At the time, at least. I don't think I've seen this feature listed in more recent digital instruments.
Last edited by Jake Johnson (27-10-2010 03:35)