Topic: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Hello all.
I am a music composer, and I'm working on a project that is exclusively piano based.
No other instruments, no lyrics, just a single upright piano.
I tried a live recording, and I must say I got a very close sound to what I had in mind. The problem is that I had to travel,(I did enjoy it though), and it got very pricey to record a full length album, apart from the travel expenses. But it was worth the try, and if I get enough support/sponsors/money, I wouldn't mind do it as a live recording album.
But for now, I am looking for an alternative, or at least, a simulation of what I did in the studio in order to get, worst case scenario, a demo.

I discovered Pianoteq4 some weeks ago now.
I got the demo version, started tweaking the U4 piano provided with the demo version.
Then went to the "sound recording" section: routed 5 microphones (2-stereos, 3- mono), tried several mic placement. Until I discovered that the microphones in this software are Omnis.
Recorded a sample on Logic ProX.
Tried to recreate the "live recording" I had, with no avail.
I ended up with a 'muddy' sound, compared to the reference track. Honestly it feels very weak.

I don't consider myself as a pro sound engineer, but I do know that I can't also add much processing on a natural percussive solo instrument, if I want to retain the natural sound of a piano, especially in a solo piano pieces.
There's something going wrong and I can't really pinpoint it.

So I'm reaching out for all Pianoteq users, hoping someone with an extensive experience with the software could maybe share a preset, or maybe advise on some settings I could have in order to recreate the reference sound in the link below

http://picosong.com/YWTV

and here's another sample, from the same piano:
http://picosong.com/YWTt


Thanks a lot,

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Hi edmond red

Just want to say i really love your two short piano pieces.
I really hope you will get a full album finished.
I will gladly buy it ;-)

Keep it up, and please use a real piano for your album if you can.
Even that i really like Pianoteq, i still think a real instrument is best if it has to stand alone as a solo instrument.

All the best
Ole

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

olepro wrote:

Hi edmond red

Just want to say i really love your two short piano pieces.
I really hope you will get a full album finished.
I will gladly buy it ;-)

Keep it up, and please use a real piano for your album if you can.
Even that i really like Pianoteq, i still think a real instrument is best if it has to stand alone as a solo instrument.

All the best
Ole

Hello Ole,
These are references tracks, and in no case are my own music composition.
It is the piano sound that I am after, with the same timbre and coloration.
I agree that a real piano will never be surpassed by any library or samples, but still I am looking for something that would be close.

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

edmond redd wrote:
olepro wrote:

Hi edmond red

Just want to say i really love your two short piano pieces.
I really hope you will get a full album finished.
I will gladly buy it ;-)

Keep it up, and please use a real piano for your album if you can.
Even that i really like Pianoteq, i still think a real instrument is best if it has to stand alone as a solo instrument.

All the best
Ole

Hello Ole,
These are references tracks, and in no case are my own music composition.
It is the piano sound that I am after, with the same timbre and coloration.
I agree that a real piano will never be surpassed by any library or samples, but still I am looking for something that would be close.

Ahh, ok but who wrote these pieces then ?

Last edited by olepro (06-03-2014 12:18)

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

edmond redd wrote:

So I'm reaching out for all Pianoteq users, hoping someone with an extensive experience with the software could maybe share a preset, or maybe advise on some settings I could have...

At one time, Pianoteq ran a pretty wide-ranging set of examples as Tutorials in sound-matching from recorded piano sound to imitation via Pianoteq. They seem to have been dropped nowadays. However surely they still exist, so if you ask Modartt, maybe a copy can be resurrected for you.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

custral wrote:
edmond redd wrote:

So I'm reaching out for all Pianoteq users, hoping someone with an extensive experience with the software could maybe share a preset, or maybe advise on some settings I could have...

At one time, Pianoteq ran a pretty wide-ranging set of examples as Tutorials in sound-matching from recorded piano sound to imitation via Pianoteq. They seem to have been dropped nowadays. However surely they still exist, so if you ask Modartt, maybe a copy can be resurrected for you.

Thank custral for your answer, any ideas on the year of these tutorials? Or any more details? and when you say "ask Modartt" is there any specific user on the forum or the company itself?

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Hi Edmond.  If you end up using Pianoteq, I think you will be able to get pretty close to the sound you want. Just after a quick listen, I would soften the hammer hardness of piano and mezzo and maybe raise it a bit for forte.  The examples you gave sound pretty dark / warm at most velocities, while still being able to have a note stand out pretty sharply at high velocities.
  I'm in a noisey (construction) environment this morning but I took a quick test with the U4 Upright in Pro. I just played in the same note range as your examples.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/2l0c55y8y5osn...0Piano.mp3

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Memory-impression's a little spongy, probably within past 2 years, or maybe better, last seen during the late Pianoteq 3 era. The Upright model is recent Pianoteq 4, BTW, but some of the matched source-recordings could have been due to uprights.

Maybe best to try Contact Support, available in the Menu visible on Home Page. Last topic mentioned in the Comtact Support dropdown is non-specific, which I guess this matter is. Good luck.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Studiocat wrote:

Hi Edmond.  If you end up using Pianoteq, I think you will be able to get pretty close to the sound you want. Just after a quick listen, I would soften the hammer hardness of piano and mezzo and maybe raise it a bit for forte.  The examples you gave sound pretty dark / warm at most velocities, while still being able to have a note stand out pretty sharply at high velocities.
  I'm in a noisey (construction) environment this morning but I took a quick test with the U4 Upright in Pro. I just played in the same note range as your examples.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/2l0c55y8y5osn...0Piano.mp3

Studiocat, that is actually not bad at all, but I guess it lacks a bit this kind of 'over-used' piano.
Thanks a lot for the quick turnaround, and you actually described it best: pretty warm sound, but I'd correct and say being able to have a note stand out pretty sharply too.
One more thing, did you use any microphone setup?
Since I'm trying to recreate the live recording, I was also trying to mic the piano stereo front, 2x times mono from the back and 1 room, and route them to different output, so I could apply independent treatment.

and last but not least, is it possible to have a screen-grab of the settings or maybe a preset?
Thanks a bunch,

Last edited by edmond redd (06-03-2014 14:33)
it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

custral wrote:

Memory-impression's a little spongy, probably within past 2 years, or maybe better, last seen during the late Pianoteq 3 era. The Upright model is recent Pianoteq 4, BTW, but some of the matched source-recordings could have been due to uprights.

Maybe best to try Contact Support, available in the Menu visible on Home Page. Last topic mentioned in the Comtact Support dropdown is non-specific, which I guess this matter is. Good luck.

Thanks a lot custral, will give this a try..

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

custral wrote:
edmond redd wrote:

So I'm reaching out for all Pianoteq users, hoping someone with an extensive experience with the software could maybe share a preset, or maybe advise on some settings I could have...

At one time, Pianoteq ran a pretty wide-ranging set of examples as Tutorials in sound-matching from recorded piano sound to imitation via Pianoteq. They seem to have been dropped nowadays. However surely they still exist, so if you ask Modartt, maybe a copy can be resurrected for you.

Custral, maybe you are referring to these workshops:
https://www.pianoteq.com/d4_in_action?s=d4_workshop ?
One important thing in those workshops is the order in which the parameters are adjusted.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

"I guess it lacks a bit this kind of 'over-used' piano."

   The 'condition' slider beneath the pedals on the GUI is a quick way to add some wear to the piano model. I only modified the hammer hardness of the U4 Midnight preset.  The EQ in Pianoteq is very flexible as well.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

olepro wrote:

Ahh, ok but who wrote these pieces then ?

Jason Beck aka Chilly Gonzales or simply Gonzales. The albums Solo Piano and Solo Piano II contain some of the best modern solo piano music you're likely to ever find. Bonus.

Perhaps it's worth noting that he seems to play with the front of the piano taken off, which probably affects the sound.

Last edited by archikeys (06-03-2014 15:59)

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
custral wrote:
edmond redd wrote:

So I'm reaching out for all Pianoteq users, hoping someone with an extensive experience with the software could maybe share a preset, or maybe advise on some settings I could have...

At one time, Pianoteq ran a pretty wide-ranging set of examples as Tutorials in sound-matching from recorded piano sound to imitation via Pianoteq. They seem to have been dropped nowadays. However surely they still exist, so if you ask Modartt, maybe a copy can be resurrected for you.

Custral, maybe you are referring to these workshops:
https://www.pianoteq.com/d4_in_action?s=d4_workshop ?
One important thing in those workshops is the order in which the parameters are adjusted.

That's a very interesting read Philippe. And I'm not sure if this is what custral referred to earlier, will wait for his answer (hopefully he will).
I guess it's a similar applicable process for any other piano, including the upright, I should follow in order to re-create the sound I'm looking for, right?
Do you think anyone can help in that, since it requires some trained ear AND piano modelling experience to get the right combination setting/sound quality

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Studiocat wrote:

"I guess it lacks a bit this kind of 'over-used' piano."

   The 'condition' slider beneath the pedals on the GUI is a quick way to add some wear to the piano model. I only modified the hammer hardness of the U4 Midnight preset.  The EQ in Pianoteq is very flexible as well.

Thank you Studicat for that!
I'll give that (modifying the hammer hardness) a try.
I already added some wear to the piano, but what I meant is like to hear more of the key noises, not only the release sound, but the sound of the actual keys.

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

edmond redd wrote:

Thank you Studicat for that!
I'll give that (modifying the hammer hardness) a try.
I already added some wear to the piano, but what I meant is like to hear more of the key noises, not only the release sound, but the sound of the actual keys.

I find those noises quite exaggerated on "Solo Piano", they are much toned down on the follow-up, makes it more pleasant to listen to in headphones I think. So I would advice against adding too much Not sure if Pianoteq simulates the noises you're after however.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Key and pedal noise volume is adjusted in Action section.

Last edited by EvilDragon (06-03-2014 16:09)
Hard work and guts!

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

EvilDragon wrote:

Key and pedal noise volume is adjusted in Action section.

That's the key release you're talking about EvilDragon

@archikeys: True that they're exaggerated, but I'm looking for a very cozy ambiance, and would love to have the listener as if he/she was sitting just right to the piano or the pianist. this kind of a very 'homey' piano playing.

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Thank you, Philippe, that's them.

And edmond, notice Philippe's tip about order-of-ops, examining how that's borne out with the examples (each amplifying in its own way the 'bundle' of ops it needs at a particular stage); while if you have Pro, the FXP given for a stage will numerically spell out the detail summarised verbally, plus hinted at in pictures. Useful, those numbers, coming alive as they will, if you read the manual where it concerns the current parameter you've focused-down on.

Philippe comes from piano-tuning way back, which makes his use of hearing challenging, but don't let that put you off using your own for matching. May even wind up with better than a match, it's a possible.

I had an idea about synthetising directional mikes - line up 2 omnis of your 5 on your target, see how that goes. All it can do, bar succeed, is fail!

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

edmond redd wrote:
Philippe Guillaume wrote:
custral wrote:

At one time, Pianoteq ran a pretty wide-ranging set of examples as Tutorials in sound-matching from recorded piano sound to imitation via Pianoteq. They seem to have been dropped nowadays. However surely they still exist, so if you ask Modartt, maybe a copy can be resurrected for you.

Custral, maybe you are referring to these workshops:
https://www.pianoteq.com/d4_in_action?s=d4_workshop ?
One important thing in those workshops is the order in which the parameters are adjusted.

That's a very interesting read Philippe. And I'm not sure if this is what custral referred to earlier, will wait for his answer (hopefully he will).
I guess it's a similar applicable process for any other piano, including the upright, I should follow in order to re-create the sound I'm looking for, right?
Do you think anyone can help in that, since it requires some trained ear AND piano modelling experience to get the right combination setting/sound quality

Yes, the process can basically be applied to any piano. Piano modelling experience may of course help, and even more sound engineering knowledge, but I think the most important is listening. For example, the mic placement is crucial (as it is in the real world), and it is the first thing to do because it has a huge influence on the sound, and for finding the best sound for you, there is nothing better than your own ears.

Here are a few suggestions of parameters to experiment with (modify and listen, modify and listen... use the AB button).
1) in the mics section:
- levels in the mix table: each output has typically a mic set to 0 dB, but listen to what happens when you raise the volume of the secondary mic (e.g. mic #2 in output 1 and mic #1 in output 2),
- delays in the mix table: in particular, assuming DELAY compensation is ON, experiment with the delay of the secondary mic for each output (out put 1 and ouput 2), from 0 ms to 60 ms,
- stereo width.

2) in the effects section:
- DELAY effect: play with the mix and delay values (delay from 1 to 60 ms),
- REVERB: play with mix, duration and pre-delay.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

I've been spending a couple of hours on microphones placement, trying to recreate a live session: 2 mics in front, 2 mics behind and 1 somewhere in the room.
The  microphones behind the 'wall' are not getting the low end, but I guess it's because they're omni. They sound muffled behind the wall, and when I 'move' the wall, they're getting very close to the sound of the front mics. So I assume, I'd rather stick with 3 microphones, 2 front and one room.
Tried Studiocat's tip to lower the hardness of the hammers, got some decent sound, or at least this is what I thought, and then played along the velocity level.
Recorded a few bars, and when compared the sound is still 'muffled'.
I am surely missing some point, and would gladly have few more tips regarding this thing,
your thoughts?

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

archikeys wrote:
olepro wrote:

Ahh, ok but who wrote these pieces then ?

Jason Beck aka Chilly Gonzales or simply Gonzales. The albums Solo Piano and Solo Piano II contain some of the best modern solo piano music you're likely to ever find. Bonus.

Perhaps it's worth noting that he seems to play with the front of the piano taken off, which probably affects the sound.

Thank you very much archikeys, will definitely check this out...

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

edmond redd wrote:

Recorded a few bars, and when compared the sound is still 'muffled'.
I am surely missing some point, and would gladly have few more tips regarding this thing,
your thoughts?

No hope of matching the sound you want from where I sit. But having the Upright, while never having looked at it, hauled it out now, with aim : get it sounding handsome.

I used Elmar Gasanov's MIDIs from the Disklavier 2009 Competition running through a MIDI jukebox to Pianoteq as my test-pattern, because he's a touch-master (handsome is as does). Plus since 'muffled' is the foe chose the Open Upright, as likeliest place to beat it from.

"Recorded a few bars" sounds like your project aims to do just that, you are finally to Play your compositions. My jukebox/testpattern setup differs from that, and I'll come to fixing that later (easy, even if you don't have Pro). Bear the difference for now. I'll post a couple of FXPs to show stages.

You'll see immediately from the first FXP I've used a very obvious stereo miking setup, just 2 mikes - less confusion (= muffle). Less obvious are Stereo Width now 3.0, Level Compensation now Off (let the mikes tell their own distance-story). Lid starts completely Open, and left it that way (no muffling, see what the graphic does as you play with Lid, excellent facilitation if it does what it depicts). That ends the miking stage.

Looking around the GUI, turned these Off : Limiter Switch, Delay, Reverb.

At this point, listening showed very top octave had right timbre for an Upright but badly exaggerated Volume, completely out of whack at F..FF. Shouldn't have been happening on the simple miking, so, a puzzle.

Floundering for any obvious identifiable cause, first chose Equaliser's Medium preset for no big change, then diving into Pro's Note Edit facility, first added a severe rolloff for the top octave of Hammer Hardness Forte, then added a less-severe rolloff for Hammer Hardness Mezzo. That was an improvement, so I next added a rolloff in Volume, without any clear idea if this was a reality for an Acoustic piano, but since it helped, left it in.

End of changes for the first FXP.

Now still wondering what acoustically-real factor could show up as *Volume", it occurred to me the Disklavier Elmar was working on might have had lighter hammers than Elmar was used to in the problem range, causing him to overhit there. That would show up to my ears directly as a Volume-problem, if the hammers in that range for the Upright model Modartt worked from didn't match Disklavier's, were heavier. So yes, there can be a real difference between the pianos that record versus the pianos that replay, just on account of hammer weight differences... which are exactly what's to be expected of pianos everywhere (including those the Disklavier contestants practise on).

So, I expanded the Volume range rolled off by twice as much for the second FXP.

Listening around to other Disklavier contestants tells me I've now got some sort of handsome result, might have overdone/underdone it, according as this contestant and that fights thru from his own piano into Disklavier, and on into Modartt's Upright.

So, that's my jukebox aim and problem dealt with. While you can simply forget about any rolloffs needing
Pro, your own playing will naturally come to terms with your keyboard, just stick with the miking and GUI switchoffs shown, about as vanilla as possible (BIG plus), and an un-muffled and very articulate product from Modartt could  result for you.

That's all supposing the idea about hammer-weights showing up as Volume effects is good. Can't see why not for now.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

@Custral, thank you for that comprehensive explanation.
Would love to hear the result you got! Maybe if you can post the fxp you created.
I guess hammers are the most important thing in my case.

@archikeys : indeed, when you open the upright's lid on pianoteq it shows the front panel uncovered, and the resonating box too.

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Excuse my ignorance on this topic, but he uses the soft pedal a lot in most songs, and from what I've seen he plays a Bechstein with an unsual mechanism for softening the sound. It's a sort of leathery blanket that drops down inbetween hammer and string, or possibly just lands on the strings, when the pedal is pressed. Perhaps this can explain some of the characteristics of the sound? I don't know what this is called, never seen one in real life.

Btw, I didn't think Pianoteq actually took the front cover off the box when you opened up the top, I thought it was just an illustration in the front view of light coming in from above, since it fades the way it does... Covers are either on or off, not halfway dematerialised. Any word on this?

Last edited by archikeys (09-03-2014 14:14)

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

archikeys wrote:

Excuse my ignorance on this topic, but he uses the soft pedal a lot in most songs, and from what I've seen he plays a Bechstein with an unsual mechanism for softening the sound. It's a sort of leathery blanket that drops down inbetween hammer and string, or possibly just lands on the strings, when the pedal is pressed. Perhaps this can explain some of the characteristics of the sound? I don't know what this is called, never seen one in real life.

That is correct @Archikeys, it's a C. Bechstein upright, with a 'sourdine' (that's french, I am not sure how this would translate into english) pedal on. This pedal is found on some of the uprights (mine has it) and it is the kind of pedal, when pressed (and sometimes locked), put a linen cloth in between the hammers and the strings and would give this un-even sound.

archikeys wrote:

Btw, I didn't think Pianoteq actually took the front cover off the box when you opened up the top, I thought it was just an illustration in the front view of light coming in from above, since it fades the way it does... Covers are either on or off, not halfway dematerialised. Any word on this?

I can't really tell if it is only an illustration or an actual 'removal', I guess @philippe would be able to tell

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

@edmond, if you quit this thread, you'll see in the Menu a forum called FXP Corner, because that's where to post FXPs, and my 2 are there as U4_Player_Open_0+ and _1+, the second with an MP3 to show it in action.

But those are for my jukebox aims with Disklavier. If the idea hammer-weights makes for Volume diffs is right, your own playing will converse sensibly with your keyboard to make the rolloffs to correct the Disklavier Volume diffs unnecessary, so only the miking and GUI switchoffs should be needed, for your playing to match the sound-result.

And if so, it'll go a long way to proving the idea, so that'll be interesting!

(But also, this exercise may show that investing in Pro, with its wonderful Note-by-Note sound-editing capabilities, is a most useful investment. I'd not have developed that idea without the facility being available, and that's even if it should be quite wrong. Having Pro helps.)

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

edmond redd wrote:

That is correct @Archikeys, it's a C. Bechstein upright, with a 'sourdine' (that's french, I am not sure how this would translate into english) pedal on. This pedal is found on some of the uprights (mine has it) and it is the kind of pedal, when pressed (and sometimes locked), put a linen cloth in between the hammers and the strings and would give this un-even sound.

Ah, I see! I've been wondering about that. When I get an acoustic upright, it'll be one of those! If I can manage to win the lottery first. You have to admit, he's got taste. I probably wouldn't be on this forum if I hadn't heard Solo Piano back in 2004, I find Gonzales very inspiring. The reason I'm following this thread is that I'd like to imitate that sound myself! I own all the sheet music he's put out.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

custral wrote:

@edmond, if you quit this thread, you'll see in the Menu a forum called FXP Corner, because that's where to post FXPs, and my 2 are there as U4_Player_Open_0+ and _1+, the second with an MP3 to show it in action.

Will give these a try once I'm back home.. thank you @Custral for your input (no pun intended)

archikeys wrote:

Ah, I see! I've been wondering about that. When I get an acoustic upright, it'll be one of those! If I can manage to win the lottery first. You have to admit, he's got taste. I probably wouldn't be on this forum if I hadn't heard Solo Piano back in 2004, I find Gonzales very inspiring. The reason I'm following this thread is that I'd like to imitate that sound myself! I own all the sheet music he's put out.

good luck with the lottery, but joke apart, yes Gonzo is somehow unique. Hopefully soon, you'll be able to play his compositions, with a recreation of his sound

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Here is an fxp created for edmond redd who provided the music excerpt to which the preset has been especially targeted: http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?id=1845

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Philippe Guillaume wrote:

Here is an fxp created for edmond redd who provided the music excerpt to which the preset has been especially targeted: http://www.forum-pianoteq.com/uploads.php?id=1845

Thank you Philippe, awesome fxp.

it will cost you nothing to dream, and everything not to..

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

HI,

When I play the Midnight Mood fxp, using Stage I hear a slight harpsichord tinniness to each and every note. I wonder if this is because the FXP contains parameters that can only be set in Standard or Pro. Would anyone care to record an mp3 file using Standard or Pro so we can compare? Perhaps I'll upgrade if this is the cause.

Here's a midi file of the Gonzales song Gogol:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nyG_Pm...sp=sharing

Here's are sound files using Stage
Wave format
https://drive.google.com/file/d/12TYBWN...sp=sharing
MP3 Format
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WmH8HQ...sp=sharing


Thank you.

Last edited by dvvilkins (06-08-2020 20:59)

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

This file is per your request:

Chilly Gonzales.mp3

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: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

This file is per your request:

Chilly Gonzales.mp3

Thanks Amen!

According to my ear, the Standard/Pro rendition is indeed more musical. Though it is still present, the tone's "tinny" element of the notes' attack in Stage has moderated substantially. It sounds more natural and intentional.

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

This file is per your request:

Chilly Gonzales.mp3


I love this piece!!! This is a simple sounding tune but clever, brilliant, chord structure. Magical. Maybe some people don’t realize it, but to me, so nice harmony, masterfully made - a beautiful piece. It inspire me to make music. Thanks for uploading, Amen Ptah Ra

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

Clever ... rather, Satie-like ... except up tempo.

Lanny

Re: Recreating a specific upright piano sound

LTECpiano wrote:

Clever ... rather, Satie-like ... except up tempo.

Lanny

And that mp3 is based on a crappy midi file! Chilly's actual performance is amazing. In fact, the entire album Piano Solos is wonderful.