Topic: New tutorial
Hi all,
we have published a new tutorial on Pianoteq's site:
Why does a piano sound like a piano?
Enjoy!
Philippe
Hi all,
we have published a new tutorial on Pianoteq's site:
Why does a piano sound like a piano?
Enjoy!
Philippe
Very nice! Enjoyed it a lot. It's in french, no problem for me of course, but I just wondered if that is an adaptation to my french OS or maybe a wrong link. I don't mind of course but the pianoteq site being all english makes me wonder.
Thanks for the link to the thesis. I'll sure try to read it through. There is also a gold mine of other scholar works at that site...great!
Glad you enjoyed it! As I guess your browser is configured in French, you saw it French, and it will be in English for the other. Et voila
Very nice indeed. Introducing some of the math elements with motion and sound is very nice. I hope this will continue to expand and wind up on the home page.
Kudos,
Lanny
Oh pardon . . I see it now under support . . then drop down to Tutorials . . . I will pass this along to some of my music friends.
Lanny
Wonderful presentation.
I especially enjoyed the logical progression of steps taken in the tutorial. Surely the "final product" form of your tutorial belies how difficult it was for you to take a concept and make it look so easy and organized to present!
Cheers,
Joe
P.S. You may wish to revisit the sine wave tone of Middle C (C4) in your first audio example. If you listen through headphones, you may hear a soft third harmonic (G5) creeping in to the audio.
Wonderful presentation.
I especially enjoyed the logical progression of steps taken in the tutorial. Surely the "final product" form of your tutorial belies how difficult it was for you to take a concept and make it look so easy and organized to present!
Cheers,
Joe
P.S. You may wish to revisit the sine wave tone of Middle C (C4) in your first audio example. If you listen through headphones, you may hear a soft third harmonic (G5) creeping in to the audio.
Wow, you are right, it is soft indeed (something like -60dB, you have golden ears ) but it's there, thanks for pointing, we will have to eliminate this intruder.
very interesting
Many Thanks
Very nice...
Don't forget Philippe is also a teacher, and he probably looks for creative ways to teach people about complex themes.
Let me symbolize how difficult it's Philippe's work to create a natural modelled piano sound:
It's difficult as being in the center of the field in a japanese stadium, and figure where is the chinese man in the crowd.
Very interesting and informative and at the same time easy to follow!
Thank you Philippe!
P.S. You may wish to revisit the sine wave tone of Middle C (C4) in your first audio example. If you listen through headphones, you may hear a soft third harmonic (G5) creeping in to the audio.
First example revisited, thanks again Joe.
Great presentation: concise, accurate, inspirational, beautiful - like pianoteq itself :-)
Thanks Philippe !
Very good and clear tutorial. It makes me appreciate the task that Modartt faces from its customers demands trying to create the difference between Steinways, Bosendorers, fazioli, Yamahas, etc. How many of us could identify the sound of a piano blindly listening to its sound? I can't.
Very good tutorial. Only in first chapter "Why does a piano sound like a piano?" , from page "Hammer-string interaction" , I can't hear the sounds samples.
Very good tutorial. Only in first chapter "Why does a piano sound like a piano?" , from page "Hammer-string interaction" , I can't hear the sounds samples.
Strange, the same happened to me, but then I tried again and it worked. Maybe the server was too busy...
With me it take two or more "clicks" in the "speaker image" icon to get sound.