Ah, that's a great question - sorry if it seems an odd idea and hoping to make it more clear. I can definitely understand how readers can miss what I'm trying to express - so at risk of too many words, I'm writing without too much editing out repetitive descriptions, leaving in as much as possible in hopes that some of the descriptions make sense.
Firstly to make this aspect more clear, it's definitely not about reducing noise per se - my suggestion is not about a noise issue - no noise issues exist in Pianoteq to be sure, in case others might have that impression.
Also, the mics in question are the virtual ones in the Pianoteq mic interface BTW - in case that's also a point of confusion, again apologies if that's the case.
Instead this is a sound design idea / production technique which, if achievable within Pianoteq would save time and simplify recording with this mic technique - as well as adding a bow to Pianoteq's existing mic tools.
An example based on something I'm attempting to achieve in DAW:
For a 5 mic model I'm really enjoying working on, there's an array of 4 close mics and 1 distant mic.
The existing tools and convolution reverb is brilliant. No complaint or noise here. In this mic model, because the close mics don't pick up too much of the room over the pure signal from the piano model a suitable balance and intimate sound at low velo is the desired baseline.
Next consideration, the distant mic as expected is much more reverb rich, picking up more of the virtual room of course (which is a wonderful thing in itself). Enabled, it however is a little more prominent at low-mid velocities than I'd like.
This is where the gate setting would be most opportune for that mic in this situation at the source, in Pianoteq's interface.
Instead of a gate for the mic in Pianoteq, the final step means creating a DAW project, split the mics across tracks (let's say 4 close mics on track 1, the distant mic on track 2) and then add a desired gate on track 2 used for the output of the distant mic.
Doable - gating input is not a unique production technique but can introduce complexity when splitting Pianoteq across tracks (phasing etc. and the model outputting slight difference across instances etc.) - maybe not a big problem for basic recording but I'd like to cut out these variables to produce the result.
It would be so much more "sit down and play" however, if gating a mic in Pianoteq was a matter of dragging a slider to say how sensitive (no sound produced by mic until a certain level) and how fast (immediately kicks in at a certain level or gradually fades in as velo/sound levels increase) then sliding another control from bass or treble bias or leaving it 'as is'.
Going through this for each session with this requirement in a DAW is OK but cumbersome also because if I'm designing a mic model in Pianoteq, I don't wish for that to be so dependent upon any particular DAW or it's inputs/outputs - esp. if traveling and using another maybe Linux laptop without my main kit which might have some starting point environments saved for ease of use.
Too many words as usual but I know I'm trying to describe a useful, yet odd production specific thing which won't maybe impact a majority of users but could be very useful to some of us. If I could gate the mic(s) in Pianoteq itself, I could apply these as a saved setting for any piano model onboard - no need to overuse the DAW for what's quite a fuss by comparison otherwise.
Some more wording in case that's still all put poorly
Any mic seems to bring the sound of the convolution reverb's virtual space along beautifully in Pianoteq. I feel the reality would be further enhanced by allowing the gating of a distant mic, so it's not pulling in the room so much until the piano is filling the hall more in heavier sections played at higher velocities. I understand it does this linearly but can be sculptured more with gating.
It seems the obvious answer is to just turn down that mic - but it's not quite the desired result - too linear might describe the result I would like to hear that mic less at low velo, and hear it more at higher velocity.
It would be esp. useful if the E.Q. of the mics can be individually biased toward bass or treble at that stage also, to darken or brighten the reverb triggered by the distant mic.
As it stands these mics can be altered with:
- left/right vol
- delay between left/right in milliseconds (brilliant)
- level compensation (which is a relative of this idea)
- delay compensation
- stereo width
- sound speed (interesting and excellent tool, relating mostly to delay above I assume to understand).
These are all excellent tools and go 99% of the way to mimicking things I'd like to do with a piano in a real location.
The one thing I can't achieve in Pianoteq presently, is a mic technique whereby one (or more) mics are gated and EQ'd, so that their signal is only introduced when the sound produced reaches a certain selected level.
That being implemented within Pianoteq would vastly simplify sound stage recreation and would mean not having to rely on a DAW for this.
Hope there's not too much repetition but the idea can be better understood, Cheers to all.
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors