Topic: Vote Yes or No for Pres

This voters thread has been started for anyone who wants to express a view about preamps  —specifically whether or not modeled preamps are even needed as far as digital piano recordings go.

While some want to see resources go toward improvements of existing piano models, others prefer to have a wider selection of instruments offered.  Still a small outspoken group has a preference in modeled preamps, or at least the sounds preamps can add, not only to piano recordings but in digital recordings overall.

Now knowledgeable code writers and developers are busy, simply because as soon as digital means became popularized, still musicians missed the tones tubes and solid state circuitry had previously given.  They complained, something now is missing from digital recordings!  So, the smart math savvy have started to model manufactured hardware and make it available if the professional musicians truly want it in a virtual space. 

Which of course happens when musicians honestly voice their concerns!

Almost overnight, many have returned to the tones familiar to them, in older more established music industry recordings.  You may say it is only because hardware units were just bound to someday make the appreciable comeback.  Undeniably heavy, bulky, clumsy looking machines of yesterday are anyway made popular once again  —but now virtually!  And essentially replicated, seemingly, as software they’re sometimes affordable inside a home computer especially when they used to cost tens of thousands in label revenues for an artist musician to use at all in a studio recording.

Modeled hardware units such as preamps do make a noticeable difference; one for yourself obviously you can hear and compare against a digital recording of an unmodified Pianoteq preset:

https://soundcloud.com/user-75091580/i-...973-preamp
https://soundcloud.com/user-75091580/i-...973-preamp

Ingeniously PIANOTEQ developers now allow microphone modeling to compliment their successful and unrivaled piano modeling!

Although before in real world scenarios, preamps also largely figured in as necessary world class items, needed inside the famous studio piano recordings, always were seen as a necessary factor to complete the equation, that of the overall tone of the recording project.  Now they’re currently unavailable and conspicuously unlinked inside Pianoteq software.  They appear nowhere within the interface.  It is as though the preamps never really existed at all in any classical piano recordings which had ever been undertaken professionally!

To me it’s a big mistake if PIANOTEQ continually omits preamps from an otherwise basic piano recording chain.  Definitely, one that has already been proven  —successful!

EDIT: I've absolutely no way to present this view of mine any more kindlier, and, how I detest any use of the word "chain."

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (10-03-2020 22:34)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Wow! I love how preams do own work. Sound is really good! Where I can get this one for try? And what configuration you used?

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Preamps are a very important part of the analog and digital workflow--if a different or vintage sound is desired.  Tape delay is also a nice addition to some piano styles.

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xHiPcCsm29R12HX4eXd4J
Pianoteq Studio & Organteq
Casio GP300 & Custom organ console

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

You have me quite confused.  From my take, the volume control in PIanoteq IS a preamp, as the line level output is thus modulated and sent out where it can input to a powered main amp with fixed amplification.  At least from the component audio system, that is the purpose of a preamp (volume modulation PRE-amplification).  This as as compared to a typical home 'integrated amplifier' unit, that has both pre-amp and amp in the same case, where the volume control changes the output of the pre-amplifier that feeds the main amplifier stage of the unit.

- David

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

That's in an ideal world. In the real world, indeed mic preamps often add "something" to the sound - good or bad, this is another question, but there is no "neutral" preamp. This being said, some of them are very "transparent" indeed, and I choose those ones for my (classical) piano recordings, I'm not in the rock scene where you are always searching for a (recognizable if possible) specific type of (colored) sound

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Yes, there is also easy confusion about mic preamps and speaker preamps which are two totally different pieces of hardware for different purposes, and additional confusion could arise for why there's a debate at all.

Microphone preamps (what we're generally discussing here) are the first electronic source in the recording chain.  Preamps provide phantom to microphones that need it and turn the otherwise-weak mic signal into something that can be recorded or mixed and recorded.  Most consumer and prosumer devices today have the recording hardware built into the preamp or the preamp built into the recording hardware, but in larger or older setups, these devices are separate.  Also, vintage microphone preamps operated using only vacuum tubes since solid-state/semiconductor hardware wasn't available yet.  These tubes were the backbone of amplification process taking the weak microphone signal and making it something that could put on recording media, much like the vacuum tube in a CRT monitor or a microwave takes the electronic energy of the wall outlet, mixes it with another weak signal and amplifies either into a visible image or heat source for cooking.

While effective and powerful, vacuum tubes (as Luc correctly says) are not remotely exact or consistent in their ability to accurately capture sound and will "color" the sound by adding a little distortion or noise to the recorded signal.  This fuzziness--caused by quantum properties of electromagnetism and thermodynamic information entropy as the current or signal is amplified--creates a slight warming and unifying effect to sound.  The noise floor rises and a little fuzzy/sizzling/crunchy sound is added to the entire output.  As the volume/amplification increase, the random sound/noise increases significantly and creates an "overdrive" distortion effect.  Without amplification, you have the same technology used in Edison's wax cylinder recordings, which required people to shout into the recording bell for the device to even start to pick up sound.

The vacuum tubes were not limited to use in microphone preamplifiers, but any electrical signal that needed amplification would pass through one or more vacuum tubes (tubes could be found in mic preamps, speaker preamps, stereos, mixing decks, effects devices, etc.).  While some traditions--like the classical music one--favored having minimal interference, rock and other modern genres liked the distortion enough that it was heavily amplified, controlled, and treated as a new instrument in the mixing process.  Tubes can also be used in any portion of the signal chain, and often are stacked--even in some classical applications if the tube doesn't have too much "saturation."  If my memory serves, much of the fuss about Abbey Road Studios (in addition to their Beetles and LSO prestige) is that they continue to have and maintain giant mixing decks that have an individually controllable vacuum tube (or "valves" as Brits call them) for each mixing slider, which creates their signature sound and makes those vintage mixing decks worth hundreds of thousands because of the maintenance and specialty hardware involved.

While microphone preamps are not to be confused with speaker preamps which convert digital or analog signal to power the drive magnets of speakers, both types of hardware were built on the same original vacuum technology and rock musicians liked it enough that electric guitars are connected to speaker cabinets with specially controllable amplifiers built into the cabinets that add rock's signature overdrive sound.

While vacuum tubes have been almost totally replaced by semiconductors for everything except some vacuum florescent displays (e.g. appliance clocks), radar, etc., the primary market for vacuum tubes is the music instrument and recording industry, because technicians and audiences both liked the fuzzy/crackle of the vacuum tube enough that we expect to hear it in most recording genres, even if it's extremely subtle.  You can either add it by using outboard hardware with vacuum tubes in it, or there are a variety of paid and free VSTs that provide a dedicate "vacuum" effect.

PTQ already has a built-in preamp/vacuum-tube emulator under Effects.  Select "Fuzz" and put the mix driver below 15%, the drive slider nearly anywhere (but I keep it below 5), and the level slider between -3db and 0db.  It's quite nice, if it's kept subtle.  The onboard presets are for the rock instruments, like Tines, which is unusable for most classical applications, but the settings above will give a subtly warm & vintage sound to any of the current PTQ presets.  Adjust to taste...   There are prepackaged virtual and physical systems which may work better for mastering--both free and paid, but the built-in solution sounds very nice to my ears and acceptable for experimentation and--perhaps--most production uses.

And dklein is right, the volume slider basically acts as a kind of solid-state transistor amplifier, but for the vintage vacuum tube sound which Amen Ptah Rah is after, the "Fuzz" effect is needed in addition to the volume slider.

Tape delay is a similar effect, but it's minor speed-ups and slow-downs of the tape recording media rather than increasing the noise floor.  Tape delay only really started to be common with multi-track tapes of the 1970s which replaced the cutting or etching of metal record masters for vinyl replication.  Tape delay applies over the top of the vacuum distortion.  It's a nice, mild effect that works extremely well with string ensembles but works nicely for most applications.  The delay is caused by the surface to the tape and minor variations in tape tension, speed, etc. as it's pulled through the recording head.  As tracks are moved from one tape to another during the recording and mixing process, the recorded sound has more and more subtle time artifacts.  This sound is especially desirable in classical music and film scoring settings.  Spitfire Audio, for example, takes care to create all of their string sample libraries on tape machines to add a gentle "crunch" that you expect from strings in film music applications.  I don't believe there's a native Tape Delay emulator in PTQ, but I believe Adobe Audition or Cubase have some options built-in and there are number of purchased and free VSTs, much like the variety of tube emulators in any DAW (though tube emulators outnumber tape emulators at least 5-to-1).

Very thorough overview of how vacuum tubes provide amplification: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_tube
Excellent in-depth review of the history of "tube sound": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tube_sound
Abbey Road's reworked old vacuum amplifiers updated for digital recording flows: https://pjmedia.com/lifestyle/chandler-...47-review/
Example of how complicated and quiet the wax cylinder approach was: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1n2b0NdL6_E
Example of how vinyl records are/were made: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Yy_DHW4SgI
Example of recording to tape: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oI7S5bwxX8w

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xHiPcCsm29R12HX4eXd4J
Pianoteq Studio & Organteq
Casio GP300 & Custom organ console

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Thank you, tmyoung, for another very interesting and informative post. I wasn't even aware of the Fuzz effect in Pianoteq - I'm gonna have to try your 'under 15% mix' tip right now!

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Prince, I’m happy to find you hear a really good sound coming from preamps!  I’ve some more examples if you or anyone else is interested.  They’re in my other post, Compare Pianoteq Recordings with and without Preamps.

Since Arturia has made demos of its preamp plugins available, you can download them of course from any of its webpages.

Have a look at this address: https://www.arturia.com/products/softwa...e/1973-pre.

I used the Arturia company’s Arturia Pre 1973 plugin in the preamp example (above).  Settings used are all default, including those of the PIANOTEQ preset Steinway B Improv.  Which I chose to record the somewhat now famous jazz standard written by George Gershwin and entitled “I Loves You, Porky,” that is from the original American opera Porky and Bess which was created by the Gershwins, by George along with his brother Ira Gershwin.

About Arturia, as a modeling company much like MODARTT, it is certainly no newcomer to modeled hardware —even music instruments— as it once offered modeled brass instruments including a trumpet, trombone and saxophone.  I still have a copy of this BRASS virtual instruments software.  Although it became a legacy item (presumably as interests in it fell).

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (17-03-2020 03:56)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Luc Henrion wrote:

That's in an ideal world. In the real world, indeed mic preamps often add "something" to the sound - good or bad, this is another question, but there is no "neutral" preamp. This being said, some of them are very "transparent" indeed, and I choose those ones for my (classical) piano recordings, I'm not in the rock scene where you are always searching for a (recognizable if possible) specific type of (colored) sound

They are a throwback if you want. In the past it was the better technology they could come up with to achieve certain things. Today they are more of an artistic choice. But honestly there is so much stuff available today for free that I don't find them a bargain at all.

"And live to be the show and gaze o' the time."  (William Shakespeare)

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Please, point me in the direction of some free stuff.

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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

Please, point me in the direction of some free stuff.

BootEQ, SlickEQ, PTeq are the firsts that come to my mind and are years old already. Probably something else worth checking has also come out in recent years but I am not up to date for various reasons.... .__.

Last edited by Chopin87 (06-03-2020 21:43)
"And live to be the show and gaze o' the time."  (William Shakespeare)

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

tmyoung - Excellent post.  Thanks for teaching me (and others). 

I tried your Fuzz settings, and realize that this is not what I am after, since I personally see pianoteq as a way to emulate an acoustic piano in from of me.  But, for coloring of recordings, these techniques add, well, 'patina' to the sound.

- David

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

dklein wrote:

tmyoung - Excellent post.  Thanks for teaching me (and others). 

I tried your Fuzz settings, and realize that this is not what I am after, since I personally see pianoteq as a way to emulate an acoustic piano in from of me.  But, for coloring of recordings, these techniques add, well, 'patina' to the sound.

Thank you, you're very kind!  I absolutely agree that these effects aren't really suitable for live playing applications of PTQ or for making ultra-clean recordings, but it is good for adding a vintage edge to a variety of recording styles.

I've also found that adding a little vacuum tube distortion and tape delay helps to convince skeptics who claim PTQ doesn't "sound realistic."  Typically, it seems that they're responding to the fact that, in my opinion, PTQ sounds extremely clean and realistic which is an ideal sound that's extremely difficult to achieve even in good recording conditions, and by adding some mild vintage sound artifacts, it no longer has the ultra-perfection and therefore sounds a little "wrong" which makes it a more convincing recording.  Again harking back to the "nobody finds a real piano sounds fake because it's real" paradox that unfairly forms the basis of a lot of negative sampling and modelling critiques.

Since I haven't done much with Organteq for production recordings yet or with organ recording in general--for that matter, I'd be curious to see if anyone has experimented with how vacuum tube emulation and tape delay improve or don't improve organ and Organteq recordings.  Miking an organ (much more like miking an orchestra than a piano): https://www.soundonsound.com/sound-advi...pipe-organ

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xHiPcCsm29R12HX4eXd4J
Pianoteq Studio & Organteq
Casio GP300 & Custom organ console

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Now I want to point out, according to Philippe Guillaume himself, U87 mics themselves as well as all the others which have been modeled from real world hardware, undeniably, already add noticeable color to your piano recordings and playing possibly piano (PIANOTEQ) also:

The other mics do not really loose anything in the frequency range, they rather add some particular color to the sound, which may suit or not, and as in painting, it is essentially an artistic/aesthetic choice.

See forum post: https://forum.modartt.com/viewtopic.php...51#p964851.

Personally, I sometimes prefer to use flavor instead of color in my own descriptions of sounds.  But, if I’m going to describe any as color that befits a U87 mic, specifically, I right now want to see the spectrum of it ostensibly increased by preamps becoming additions welcomed well within PIANOTEQ, definitely!  Clearly they could become convenient customizations to the PIANOTEQ end user to affect any software preset Spectrum profile, and by significantly larger interface graphics, once included among the count of software EFFECTS parameters.

Preamps could further broaden, admittedly, the color gamut available presently in PIANOTEQ!

dklein wrote:

tmyoung - Excellent post.  Thanks for teaching me (and others). 

I tried your Fuzz settings, and realize that this is not what I am after, since I personally see pianoteq as a way to emulate an acoustic piano in from of me.  But, for coloring of recordings, these techniques add, well, 'patina' to the sound.

I take it, your vote is probably for preamps and very much in favor of them because you’re a man who —when it is in front of you— likes some occasional ‘patina.’

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (15-03-2020 03:37)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Yes, flavor is better than color - color is tone.  Flavor is character.

- David

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Well said.

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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

This voters thread has been started for anyone who wants to express a view about preamps  —specifically whether or not modeled preamps are even needed as far as digital piano recordings go.

Hello Mr. Ra,

I congratulate you on furnishing examples of various PTQ piano models with- and without the pre-amp application. 

I tried something slightly different:  Before listening to any audio files, I had my wife select with- or without preamp without my knowledge as to which example she selected.  I listened through AKG 702 headphones, and did not vary the volume, in the event that "louder sounds better".  I believe I can hear a difference, but I cannot categorically state that the preamped versions make PTQ instruments sound anything more like acoustic pianos recorded with professional equipment in commercial recordings.  Restated, when not told which version is which, I cannot tell which version is which.

I personally learned from this exercise that people's opinions are able to be "steered" when they are made aware of what sonic qualities they are supposed to be listening for. When that knowledge has been removed or suppressed, then I feel that opinions vary no more than statistical chance.

A personal example of being able to be steered in a given direction:  In 1990, I purchased a hardware piano module called the Emu ProFormance1 piano module.  By today's standards, the hardware module sounds horrible; yet from repeated listening to this module, and playing back recordings of my performances using ordinary audio cassettes, I swore I could NOT tell the difference between the sound of this little hardware piano module, and a recording of a real acoustic piano.  Mind you, the ProFormance1 boasted 1MB (yes, megabyte) of hardwired RAM.  I recall there were 32 such "pianos" in the module.  Knowing that just one minute of CD-quality (16-bit sampled at 44.1kbps) takes 10MB, this meant that the entire 1MB piano module had used about 6 seconds worth (one-tenth of a minute's worth) of sampled sound to reconstruct a piano.  The amazing experience was that I had persuaded myself that this hardware piano module was indistinguishable from a commercially recorded piano!

As a result of this experience, I have learned that some amount of time might be required to "re-calibrate" our minds' concept of what constitutes a good piano sound, whether the source is a 1MB piano module, a fully sampled piano, a physically modeled piano, or a real acoustic piano.

An analogy that pertains to Pianoteq involved demos I made in the Pianoteq Version 3 days.  Back then, although I knew Pianoteq was in its relative infancy some ten or twelve years ago, I had fooled myself into believing my recordings were indistinguishable from commercial recordings of real acoustic instruments.

Beware of being "steered" into false beliefs.

Cheers,

Joe

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

A nearly identical word-for-word entry, to the one just above, has already been posted under another forum topic.  To which entry I've twice already responded.  (Two responses to it from me appear under the topic heading Compare Pianoteq Recordings with and without Preamps at the MODARTT forum, Recordings featuring Pianoteq and Organteq.)

Now I got about the same word-for-word personal note entry addressed to me again long after I posted a couple of previous responses. 

Joe, I got it the first time  —when first I read it!

To me it is elaborate.  This topic I created has been intended for anybody wanting to determine, er find out whether preamps are necessary or unnecessary. 

People, I have to speak frankly.  (Sure always anybody is free to express his view one way or another.)

jcfelice88keys wrote:

I tried something slightly different:

Indeed by that other topic, you did as you essentially tried to guess which or at whichever was playing  —when supposedly you were to compare one (recording) to another!  It just seems a setup to fail!

Chopin87 wrote:
Luc Henrion wrote:

That's in an ideal world. In the real world, indeed mic preamps often add "something" to the sound - good or bad, this is another question, but there is no "neutral" preamp. This being said, some of them are very "transparent" indeed, and I choose those ones for my (classical) piano recordings, I'm not in the rock scene where you are always searching for a (recognizable if possible) specific type of (colored) sound

They are a throwback if you want. In the past it was the better technology they could come up with to achieve certain things. Today they are more of an artistic choice. But honestly there is so much stuff available today for free that I don't find them a bargain at all.

I would argue, if I may, preamps are continually in broad usage today when —more often than not— they are employed in the thousands of studios that contribute to modern record collections  —including classical, jazz, and others.  So, maybe the past you mentioned was just yesterday, or even less than twenty-four (24) hours ago. 

Today they are more of an artistic choice.

Contrarily, in my view the music recorded by VSTs without preamps is surely that which represents more of an artistic choice, if not purely an economical one (that is) as it so happens in a minority opposite more conventional or better received instrument recordings made otherwise with preamps.  Which the latter are the overwhelmingly greater majority, popularly, in music since the preamps became absolute necessities within the studios.  They just are standard studio equipment!

This point is the one I'm attempting to make clear right now.  Pianoteq users like you and I have become increasingly encapsulated as zealots about it.  Some definitely are wearing blinders.  As artsy as I am or totally enthused about piano modeling, I too now have to look at things realistically.

But honestly there is so much stuff available today for free that I don't find them a bargain at all.

The bottom line here is; PIANOTEQ PRO users may become especially interested to learn, millions of familiar music listeners as buyers of the music are very appreciative just as sells and purchases of this music already made possible from the preamps that are now in debate do matter-of-factly demonstrate  —and they willingly will pay in towering amounts to get any of it!

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (15-03-2020 22:01)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

A nearly identical word-for-word entry, to the one just above, has been posted under another forum topic.

Hello Mr. Ra,

You are absolutely correct:  I DID respond to this topic twice, because I thought my original reply was somehow lost, perhaps because I took too long a time to post my reply.  My apologies if this form of double posting has troubled anyone. I for one have utmost respect for your opinions and views on a number of threads posted in the Pianoteq Forums.  What I am about to say next is not intended to lecture anyone.

* * * * * * *

If I may state a few ideas on this subject:  It's rare that my opinion changes, just as it's rare that other people's opinions change on any subject.  Most of us are not looking to have our opinions changed; rather, it's human nature that we are looking to have our opinions verified.

As I get older, the more I want to present facts and ideas as I perceive them, the more I hope that the few number of people in the middle (i.e., the ones that are questioning to see if something is right) who are at the proverbial cusp of an idea, my thoughts might have some kind of an impact.   If on the other hand, another person's set of facts  suggest a different way of believing, then no amount of convincing will sway that person.  This hearkens back to an old quote by Dale Carnegie in his 1930's landmark book "How To Win Friends and Influence People":  "A man convinced against his will is of his own opinion still."

Cheers,
Joe

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Anyone, before you cast your final vote either for or against preamps, you may want to consider all your sample libraries are of instruments sampled through preamps.  At one point or another they might now necessitate preamp readjustments, if you’re thinking to compensate for any embedded or original recorded tone, color, or character that has subsequently been stamped into the initial recordings.

Needless to say, I would think now PIANOTEQ presets, which also utilize microphones however modeled from a manufacturer’s microphone selection, require some preamp adjustments too, if the original selection of microphones as offered by the manufacturer were designed particularly in conjunction with preamp usage in mind.

Seriously, you would want to amplify any tone, color, or character which a manufacturer might have intended or built into a specialty microphone advertised by an highly publicized market brochure sparsely showing the true specs belonging to the audio equipment (that is) if you’re really serious about your own special piano recordings  —enough to capture closer character conceptualizations out of any such performances.

Have to say; anyway whatever makes a matched microphone pair ain’t always gonna show up in the specs sheets!

Special preamp equipment has been primarily designed by engineers to meet their expert needs in very sophisticated applications of microphone signal amplification  —as it pertains to anyone well trained miking an instrument.

I shall attempt to show this kind of equipment when modeled will meet also your needs and specifically many of those belonging to the PIANOTEQ PRO users.

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (07-05-2020 07:30)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

"You're right.  You're right.  You're both right!"

In an age where we have invisible pixels, Mindcraft succeeds with blocky graphics.  In an Age where digital cameras have beautiful images, artificial Tri-X and Kodachrome emulations are widely available via Instagram and other sources.  In an age with seamless sound, guitar noise and Fender amps are simulated. 

As the saying goes, "everything old is new again!"  Excuse me as I have to blow out my candles for dinner and switch on my Edison-style LED bulbs.

;-D

- David

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

i listened to both recordings several times.  i can't be sure that i'm hearing a significant difference between them, but on the other hand that could reflect my poor equipment.  what i can definitely say is that (as a jazz pianist) i really enjoyed your performance of this tune.  great job.

Last edited by budo (10-03-2020 18:25)

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

I just edited my original post and found votes deleted after I hit: Submit reply.

Well this voting was at 50% for and 50% against preamps.

If you voted already, please just allow others to cast their votes now, unless of course you’re wanting to change yours.

Man, sincerest apologies.

About the song rendition, it’s of a MIDI file I got somewhere.  At the other thread (Compare Pianoteq Recordings with and without Preamps) found are examples of other preamps and their default settings.  None of these exhibits my playing.

However, intended at this thread is definitely one more example at least that might demonstrate custom preamp settings and other plugin possibilities.  Soon I will post that.

In regards to your really getting the most possible out your listening to any of the already furnished audio examples, I’m recommending you now listen to them through some very high quality studio monitors or home stereo equipment loudspeakers.  That which might help you better appreciate truly the benefits of preamp usage in recordings.  Cheap gear along with headphones are possibly going to require additional audio recordings from a PIANOTEQ preset fully mastered beforehand or binaural mode examples.

Whether or not such gear is going to be useful on any test you conduct with the examples now provided, it is highly debatable since no binaural mode preset was chosen and poor speakers lack a flat frequency response and are therefore incapable of any accuracy necessary in frequency reproduction: of the specific frequencies given by the modeled preamps themselves.

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (14-03-2020 23:17)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

ok sorry about the confusion with the performer. whoever it is is doing a great job.

anyway, i always appreciate these threads that discuss audio processing and present different options to help me get the holy grail sound in my own recordings.  i always learn a lot.  they're a great resource.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

I posted recently about using the "Amp" inside Pianoteq for this.

If I want something other than that, I'll use other existing tools. Just like the world of drums and perc audio tools, there's no shortage of tools and choices in the wild going back decades.

The idea seems the result of a blush of discovery - I'd recommend just enjoying the learning curve and keep discovering things - but to me there's no requirement or desire for a selection of pre-amps in Pianoteq.

BTW - the mics do have color/flavor/patina.. just not too strong.. any DAW and FX can add more if wanted.. and like Luc needs, Pianoteq also has already "perfect" or un-flavored mics too, in case new users don't yet know.

Always like to read Luc's posts since his type of clean classical piano recording is not in my experience - but I too like working from clean piano recordings, often applying production values as required. I have good understanding of how difficult it is to get a good real piano recorded.. which is why Pianoteq is so good for my purposes.

Therefore the idea is redundant or retrograde in essence, there's no need for specific pre-amp modelling in this context IMO.

Like the plugins in the samples, we can already levy any number of production tools for the effect (and more), yet I really like Pianoteq's Amp for this (just use low drive, low 1 or 2% mix then radically alter the amp's 3 tone sliders to decide on the color/flavor/patina you want.

My award for nifty-est idea in this thread goes to David for the word 'patina', it's pretty perfect

Probably should be said, that virtualization or hardware emulation in software is really not new - and Modartt's work has also been long in the works.. it makes sense maybe if Modartt eventually makes a business decision to enter the hardware emulation field maybe (entirely up to their business decision of course and I have no business telling them they're missing out.. they may be very happy to work on more pianos.. wouldn't be surprised if they were also just happy to happily retire too and would wish them the best and thank them for the brilliant piano tool we have right now - in all reality, it's as finished as I need).

I don't see much advantage to users in some pre-defined pre-amps for the mics.. let alone the fact that not many users get too deep into the mics as it is. If opening the mic panel is rare, then pre-amps is also a rare requirement, if not rarer.

I believe most users of Pianoteq use it for playing, and don't want normally an 'effected' post production type sound.. and those who do will have their own workflows for accomplishing this.

And again, do just try the "Amp" in the effects for this.

It may surprise even the crustiest of old audio geeks. I now have a few pre-saved "effects" racks in Pianoteq (in the effects panel, choose "save as" and all the effects you've altered are saved.. load this for any preset you change to.. and they translate very well across pianos and presets for my purposes (similarly nice to the way the samples show a subtle yet 'something' kind of way - and of course you can push it beyond and into experimental territory like many other Pianoteq tools).

And also again, if I want more, the DAW and a million plugins already exist for much more than just this.

That's in a nutshell how I see it.

Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments)  - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Thanks for posting this. My "real" recording experience indeed is much more about as "clean" as possible instead of "flavored", but in the end, most of the time it's the pianist herself/himself that has the last word ! Let me tell you a very recent experience: in february, I had to record Liszt "années de pèlerinage" (1st year)  and the following week "Goldberg variations".
The pianist who recorded Liszt (on his Steinway D) refused my AKG 414 pair in favor of... KM184's ! He wanted a "brilliant" sound, and sure, he got it !
The pianist who recorded the Goldberg variations (on her Steinway B) asked for the AKG's and asked if I could have even a softer sound... So what ? ;-)

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Oh wow, interesting choices and challenges.  It really goes to show, with classical pianists' own preferences for mics - "what is a piano?" is still such a very fluid concept

All fun - cheers to you, Luc.

Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments)  - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Oof!  How did I totally miss the Amp feature/setting under the FX selector!?  Between Amp and Fuzz, you can get excellent on-board results!  I recommend starting with the "Grand Piano Stage" setting, but perhaps lowering the mix if it's too "present."

Thanks for the pointer towards that part of the optional FX chain inside PTQ.

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xHiPcCsm29R12HX4eXd4J
Pianoteq Studio & Organteq
Casio GP300 & Custom organ console

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

You take the position Amp and Fuzz can excel whereas preamps cannot?  Possibly they excel over preamps!

Which are under appreciated.

I too went to a Utah campus; let me know your thoughts.  (Smile.)

Luc Henrion, a lot I’ve to digest.  You suggest possibly the mics were used without pres?  I note no mention at all of any, specifically.  You see I need to get all the dirt on the recordings, specifically on the equipments used to make them.

dklein wrote:

You have me quite confused.  From my take, the volume control in PIanoteq IS a preamp, as the line level output is thus modulated and sent out where it can input to a powered main amp with fixed amplification.  At least from the component audio system, that is the purpose of a preamp (volume modulation PRE-amplification).  This as as compared to a typical home 'integrated amplifier' unit, that has both pre-amp and amp in the same case, where the volume control changes the output of the pre-amplifier that feeds the main amplifier stage of the unit.

I have to disagree, dklein.  I am declining to take you up on your offer.  About which Volume presently serves as some sort of a preamp.  If anything comes remotely close to some resemblance in a preamp stage, it would be only the combination of Level, Reversed polarity, and Proximity effect compensation, in PIANOTEQ.  That might for each individual microphone act as a preamp (lack lustered) ahead of OUTPUT.

Certainly, users have been discouraged against any uses of sarcasm, so now I’m very serious!  Next is laughter.  Don’t resist.  Resistance is futile.

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (16-03-2020 02:36)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

As of this posting votes show a majority 83.33% over 16.67%, disfavors preamps.

But, I truly wonder if PIANOTEQ users are really making informed decisions or just going with what's in their guts.  Few if any have stated the rationales behind their now voting against the preamps.  Which honestly to me is telling in itself.  I’m getting the impression software users view preamps as just unclean and too dirty and filthy to sustain classical idioms to them probably best preserved by purely digital sounds.  No surprise now nobody wants any coloration applied to the music of Beethoven!

It appears no self respecting musician nor new user could ever have wanted even any wine with his dinner music, and really only prefers fast food served in a styrofoam tray next to a paper bag in which is a diet coke labeled sugar free.

When today’s music can go from chamber, to jazz, and to rock, and hip hop, I have myself to wonder if the young new breed of piano players, that often post to this digital forum, is one only wanting to place its selfish desire before music listeners, who could someday constitute its general audience.  Those which definitely like to hear music but are far from being the creative and talented artist you are still deserve to hear the best an industry has to offer!   Long before this digital age began, people listened to a large variety of famous piano pieces on the records they had collected.  Which they enjoyed immensely.  Which were recorded with microphone preamps. 

Only now the burgeoning artistic pianists who are also techno-savvy software end-users seemingly prefer playability over listenability.  (That’s seldom a forum topic.)

When I began to use PIANOTEQ v2.1 more than ten (10) years ago, it had no modeled mics, no perfect mics, no U87s, no C414s, and no single microphone clearly of any kind!  Currently PIANOTEQ v6.7 has no preamps (no perfect preamps and no modeled versions either).  Obviously, it has no preamps at all as of yet; it has none of any identifiable model per se.  Just as early versions had no mic, v6.7 has too no single preamp clearly of any kind!  Certainly, none is available right now within the software to make it sound somehow indistinguishable truly amongst familiar sounding piano recordings, those that are of the widely recorded wood bodied types. 

Although the sounds of which were recorded by physical microphones that connected to physical preamp hardware.  Which inside professional recording sessions in turn connected to desks.  Whether you like it or not, a preamp imparted a lot in those older recordings still enjoyed by listeners.  Matter-of-factly these recordings are the ones bought in droves by the many!

Since as PIANOTEQ admirably demonstrates, specific microphone brands and models can add various richly expressive colors to an otherwise bland piano digital recording —even an uncompressed format— to me preamps now also add something very special indeed.  You call it what you will; to me it is a listenable clue into a performer's own character.  A selection of preamps allows that when even the newest user as protégée piano performer can choose freely from among them.  That’s precisely because they like a blank canvas to which a painter applies his tapered brush might more than adequately convey the most colorful impression.  (Per any recording media a hardware preamp was no less than an extension of the music and instrument played and recorded by professionals.)

My initial comparisons posted previously include default settings only, because listeners were to hear very subtle differences from a preamp.  I have now provided an example of custom settings.  Which might allow you to get a better idea and lifelike representation (that is) of the actual character and personality of the live performer as likely (to my understanding) communicated even through the electronic impulses of a software or hardware transformer modeled inside the preamp:

https://soundcloud.com/user-75091580/i-...973-preamp
https://soundcloud.com/user-75091580/i-...973-preamp

One completely overlooked advantage of preamp uses that is before postproduction —as the name preamp implies— is by them you get to tone shape left, right, mid, and side microphone input separately.

Recently I've read several posts of users using elaborate loudspeaker schemes.  Configurable inputs which you can tone shape independently to your liking, might alleviate anything previous you had gotten with probably obtuse space consuming speaker arrangements and comfortably give greater individual control now by just two (2) speakers that are independent, especially, when they are truly tone and volume adjusted independent of each other.  Therefore within any possible space —regardless of its size and dimensions furnishing accoutrements— you're likely to get an highly customizable stereo image of this piano (that is) thereby in front of you via the two (speakers) tweaked apart from each other er equalized separately.

An example, perhaps two (2) is forthcoming!

Edit: well a lot changed including “imported” to “imparted” as I was maybe subconsciously thinking too much of the wine analogy, though California is my location.

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (08-06-2020 18:18)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

I don't know if I voted or not but I don't see them as a necessity for a pristine piano sound. Different story for the EP where the noisy counterparts where part of the feel of certain vintage keyboards and the reason why the sound of a stage Rhodes is vastly different than a suitcase. There is no preamp specific for steinway D but there is one for the aforementioned EPs.

"And live to be the show and gaze o' the time."  (William Shakespeare)

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Man, thoughts versus feelings, you really have something there!

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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

I've done this kind of thing with my DAW. More often though I'm layering multiple Pianoteq Pianos.... or a Pianoteq Piano with a Keyscape Electric etc...

Kawai MP11SE / Pianoteq Pro Studio Bundle v7.5.2 (includes every Pianoteq instrument - 21 currently)

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

You have examples, how whatever multiples you’ve done sound like preamp recordings?

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (07-05-2020 05:12)
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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

I just spotted a couple of informative YouTube videos about preamps:

Incidentally, the recently released PSP InfiniStrip plugin comes with a total of five (5) different preamps which you can demo from the PSP website, http://www.pspaudioware.com/plugins/dyn...finistrip/.

http://www.pspaudioware.com/upload_dir/125/obrazki/galeria/tools_and_meters/PSP_InfiniStrip/PSP_InfiniStrip_1to1.png

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.

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

Thanks.  As in my life 'preamp' has been a home audio reproduction phrase, I appreciated the educational yet entertaining "What is a Microphone Preamp?" video.

- David

Re: Vote Yes or No for Pres

The racer's edge?  I couldn't tell the difference.  Either the world's gone mad, or I really am from another planet . . . .

I'm playing all the right notes but not necessarily in the right order