Topic: Need improvement for Pianoteq 6.5 for release sound of sustain pedal ?
Mastering the sustain pedal allows a professional pianist on a grand piano to generate little pedal release sound.
Unfortunately for an amateur pianist, it currently seems difficult to learn to master this technique with the V6.5 version, even with a keyboard supporting the half-pedaling, because the sound of release of the pedal and its interaction with the pedal are not currently not (yet) realistic and can not (yet?) be set.
See real sustain release noise: https://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads....elease.mp3
Releasing (without control): noise 22 db louder than when the sustain pedal is pressed: (Sustain verified yesterday by our tuner) https://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads....elease.mp3
Pianoteq (Bluthner) with the same action: Releasing: noise with the same level (and not wooden enough) than when the susain pedal is pressed: (Release noise closer to what I get with my upright piano: the dampers sink more sluggishly) https://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads....54Fast.mp3
In appearance, only the sound of depression of the pedal and its interaction with the strings at this time seems to be taken into account and adjustable (in level), not its release.
Mastering the release noise of the sustain pedal is much more critical on a grand piano than on a upright piano because of the sudden drop of all dampers on the strings under the effect of gravity (if not not well accompanied by the pianist).
Assuming ? or pianoteq does not do a physical modeling of the noise of the fallout dampers, this noise could perhaps? be recorded specifically, and ideally customizable with a .wav file in pianoteq pro as is already possible for reverb. The trigger and the level of this noise should (ideally) also be able to be adjusted according to the calibration curve of the sustain pedal (and of course, depending on its speed, the end of decay of the midi values of the sustain controller ), to more accurately reproduce the behavior of an acoustic piano pedalboard ...
The contribution of such a feature could make Pianoteq even more relevant for learning to master a grand piano.
Bruno