Hey Jesús,
don't fret it as I see it no digital piano by itself with these small speakers can go much above allowing us something like above adequate "suspension of disbelief". They can't fill a room like a real (grand) piano - our brains do some of that work in translating our experience. There's a lot of tech and EQ they put into those dpiano speakers and it sounds great to many (and I loved my old Kawai for years for playing and composing, no complaints!) ... but it's not ever going to be the same as sitting right at a grand piano without headphones or large speakers, the rest is just up to us, whether we choose to put up with our smaller speakers or learn to love them or use them better in our own recordings, or learn some work-arounds over time.
This may sound strange - but I'm putting it here because, we're only on the planet a short time - go to a local venue (play house, pub/club, music hall) - explain what you're doing - ask "May I experience a real piano on a stage" - go to local or distant music stores to play real pianos, different types. It helps perspectives - and sometimes this will answer everything by itself in time
For maximum result of realism, a lot of eyes are on new full sized wood piano bodies fitted with sound board and transducers (coupled with Pianoteq, we have 1 practically real piano, with unlimited piano sounds).. you can buy one of those right now and voila, you have a real piano in your room - but if we're interested in doable D.I.Y. projects at home...
Pianoteq on monitors to me, is 100% better than my Kawai dpiano speakers.
Jesús wrote:Im not looking forward to record videos of a "suppossed to be proper piano"
This ^^^^^
What you say there, is exactly why I nowadays try to speak about "playing real piano" vs. "recording piano for others to listen to".. for a long time, I overlooked how many of these interesting discussions on the forum was full of people speaking about totally and really extremely different things often.
It can't be expressed enough - when someone says "I want a more realistic piano sound" I may hear "Tune your EQ".. others will say "Put bigger speakers in".. but it almost takes a questionairre to be filled in, so we can give each other better answers heh
The sitting and playing piano is 1000% different to recording piano - and while there are historical mic arrays, conventions about player perspective, audience perspective etc.. when we ourselves may begin trying to learn "How do I record this for others to enjoy" - well, to say the least, there's a life-time of things to learn - and best we can do is jump across huge time-sinks by trying to learn some things from those interested in offering genuine perspective (which often may seem weird until we experience "why they say those things".)
Never stop learning and keep on playing - the most important things to enjoy in life.
We're all in a life-long learning process and part of the fun is realising how our needs change also as we travel our timeline.
A strange thing we humans can do, is become attached to a sound, a feeling or association of loose truths we hold regarding our experience of these elements and ideas.. I too could subjectively enjoy my small dpiano speakers but in all honesty it was nothing like a real piano in a room, just a level of realism giving adequate suspension of disbelief - so letting go of some things can free us up for other discoveries, often with greater payoffs.
So, moving to monitors for piano playing may feel different for a time - but eventually it will be better than hoping our inbuilt dpiano speakers can be re-purposed or used for other sounds.. it's possible that you could wire things up with a soldering iron - but that's something I'm OK without doing because I'm OK with monitors and prefer that now to be sure (as replacement for 'real piano' experience).
Youtube videos - that's great and wish you well with it - and might have changed advice first given
In that case, it's probably primarily important to set up a more standard kind of studio rather than cobble together a non-standard space taking project. Like everything, equipment goes a long way towards any result but there are no single perfect choices along that road.. and just a few speakers in front of us while we are at our dpiano might be awesome and nothing more needs doing.
Some good headphones with binaural output might be something to try if you haven't already - that way, you don't need to worry about new large speakers or changing your space for the experience you are after. I would say that is beyond adequate "suspension of disbelief" for me, yet there are trillions of other choices from there, a DAW, plugins, an audio interface, headphone amp etc.. or no extras - whatever works for you is the only truly correct answer - and again spend adequate time on finding your preferences.. time spent at music stores, online looking at equipment, reading reviews, hearing samples/demos etc. - it's not all wasted time as long as you keep some time for your piano too
If you're happy now with your current near-fields (for recording/mixing) but want better 'real piano sound in the room' also, maybe keep an eye out for large pre-loved stereo speakers for sale (sometimes old speakers in a used home stereo decades old = extreme bargain).. maybe if you place those down on the floor your Youtube audience won't even notice your studio has extra speakers unless you want them to know of your decision to apply them.
Jesús wrote:A pity, I was hopping for a sort of "magical solution" but its has not happened despite its Xmas - at least you guys tried to help, thanks very much
Regarding a magical solution - No mistake - Larger speakers can help with the feeling of the extraordinary forces from a real piano, shake your innards and the room of course.
You may not need 15inch Tannoy Gold speakers in solid hardwood cabinets or KEFs.. but hoping you have joy from the journey - That's the best I can wish for us all this Xmas
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors