Specifically, I want to see new features added to the Pianoteq interface.
The Pianoteq interface, let's face it; because in my view, it in its present state (in which it has been for a duration now) is lacking, definitely. It lacks numerous things I and presumably others would like to see on it, if possible. Since personally I got about every upgrade or update that was released after version 2.1 and am now a Pianoteq Pro user, I've noticed features are absent in its interface design. Some I suggest appear below:
1.) Loop Feature
At your desktop when you load a midi file and adjust or fine tune Pianoteq parameters to it, if you want to continue adjustments pass the length of the file, you have to restart or relocate the interface play head to a point in the file timeline, intermittently. However, if were added a possible loop feature (that is) a clickable area of the file you highlight, you could just select (midi loop start and stop) positions and afterwards (as you listen to your midi file) make the necessary Pianoteq parameter adjustments to your overall piano sound, uninterruptedly, and without your physically er annoyingly having constantly to restart the file only because you want to hear just a section of it, continuously, repeated.
2.) Playlist Feature with Individual File Renders
If a file playlist feature were added to Pianoteq and capable of batch renders from within the software, you could take several of your Pianoteq software recorded performances, save them to individual MIDI files, load and play them within a playlist, while they play, tweak all the Pianoteq (playlist) parameters to your heart's content, including playlist reverb, compression, delay, and equalization changes, and, hear that playlist whatever number of times needed for the latest parameter changes to eventually suit your liking, or, your rendering this playlist either partially or in its entirety into your very next piano project. Additionally, if you want to listen to automatically saved recordings of the past performances, you should have an opt for you to hear and review, continuously, all or just a selection of those which have been recorded by the Pianoteq software.
3.) Mini Presets Text Entry Feature
If text description windows were saved within Mini Presets, they could allow your having readily available and fully detailed descriptions of all your presets, but, mic presets specifically, since each of these might require your making a note referenced to specific piano parts or sections, relevant measurements, and any other data which can distinguish one microphone preset from several others. To me, detailed text information such as exact microphone placements including measurements and their relation to identifiable parts on a piano, is too obtrusive and lengthy to fit narrowly in the very small confinement space intended merely for a preset name.
4.) Opt for United States Customary Units
American Pianoteq users like me are likely to use and view customary units (by which we are more familiar than we are to metric measurements). Might an options window, or User Interface section of it, which allows language choices and interface magnification, allow also a pro United States Customary Units option.
5.) Last Opened Windows Positions Remembered Feature
Pianoteq launches relatively quickly. However, if you always opt for customized windows whenever you launch, as I do, your having to manually rearrange or reposition those after each launch appears slow and unnecessarily tedious. That is counterproductive and counterintuitive to me as it seems to negate fast launch times altogether, or readily available and viewable areas overall at each software start.
6.) Reverb Export
Exportable reverbs might permit an entire Pianoteq saved performance to have instrumental or vocal parts added to it easily if the performance's impulse response (file) were available to you to import into your DAW. Via an impulse response ready software and Pianoteq impulse responses, if they were exportable, when Pianoteq records your remarkable performance, it should permit you to fit in any number of accompaniments and place those convincingly inside whatever recording features your chosen Pianoteq reverb. Consequently, this is whenever you take a Pianoteq file to your DAW and share the file's recorded ambience with the DAW instruments that are to appear recorded in the same space, though it's virtual.
7.) Recording Parameters Recall
Pianoteq makes a list of your last performances. And, you have each of them time stamped, showing when you played each. Though the software records your performances, you got no way to recall what Pianoteq parameter settings were for any given recording, after it was made. If you were able to reproduce settings from any point in time, they might bring you close to the emotions, or the way, you felt while you played your passage —more so than arbitrary or random settings and a bare midi file recreate an instant recall with all the esthetics of your original performance intact.
8.) Detachable Piano Lid Feature
If a recording from virtual piano software is ever to become audibly indistinguishable, truly from any acoustic piano recording, the software itself must simulate virtually all the aspects of a real piano recording taken from a physical piano. This goes for piano lid positions, whenever the piano’s lid was used to record the piano. Contrarily, when the piano was recorded with its lid detached, piano software as such certainly might simulate this piano condition too, that is, if it were accurately to replicate virtually all the audible particulars of that one discernible piano recording, specifically.
9.) Mic for Closed Lid Pianos
In real world scenarios closed lid pianos have microphones placed underneath their lids and deep inside them to stop bleed from other instruments. Manufacturers build microphones or microphone systems specifically suited to these situations in which a piano's closed lid is an absolute necessity. Will Pianoteq believably allow you to simulate the situations with virtual versions of those well suited microphones and complete microphone systems ideally intended for closed lid piano recording!
10.) Select Microphone Additions and Preamps
New microphone models introduce technological innovations from audio equipment manufacturers, backed by teams of dedicated researchers. Hopefully, Modartt will start to periodically update its modeled microphone selection in Pianoteq. Personally, l'd like to see the addition of the Earthworks PM-40 Piano Mic system and the Neumann TLM 102 added, if Pianoteq were to include simulated versions of both these and some models of microphone preamps. For one I feel preamps are as much needed as Pianoteq's current microphone offerings, and just as many, if the piano software will ever precisely and definitively match contemporary piano sounds that emanate from the recorded media available today —popular, classical, jazz, country, rock, blues, ragtime, hip hop and others. The addition of preamps may permit a musician, a keyboardist, from piano software, to match or dial in some close proximity to what he heard made by broadcasts, downloads, CDs, records and the like. That which preamps permitted: the effectiveness of quality microphones run from quality preamps.
11.) Note Volume per Mic Output
Individual note volumes are adjustable already. However in Pianoteq PRO, if they were made adjustable for each output separately, you’d have a convenient way to avoid unpleasant phase cancellations and even possibly pan chordal comping differently from fancy runs in a jazz piano solo —via DAW automation of course.
12.) Morph Piano Model A to B Window Incrementally and visa versa Pianoteq Pro Feature
If Pianoteq PRO offered a way for you to create a model morphed from another, you'd have maybe representations from the low frequencies of piano A, the mid of piano B, and the highs of C to customize, increasingly, your very own new and unique piano model!
Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (19-04-2019 08:47)
Pianoteq 8 Studio Bundle, Pearl malletSTATION EM1, Roland (DRUM SOUND MODULE TD-30, HandSonic 10, AX-1), Akai EWI USB, Yamaha DIGITAL PIANO P-95, M-Audio STUDIOPHILE BX5, Focusrite Saffire PRO 24 DSP.