Topic: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Ignore this video while listening to the Baldwin piano. Not sure how to describe why I like this recording. It's not just the piano.The rawness of the sound? The close mics? The placement of the close mics? Many more variables? EDIT: The piano sounds much better as the song continues.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXZvWJx0RTs

(And you really must ignore the video, which has nothing to do with the recording.)

Last edited by Jake Johnson (03-07-2018 15:27)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

People, a two year mark is approaching since Jake posted the above video, and yet no Baldwin add-on.

I just got to have that American sound!  As an individual, I really relate to it  —even if others are only repulsed by it.

About the video portion of Jake’s post and his assessment, I have to disagree respectfully.  That part is fine too in my view, beautifully.

Also I like a lot of the music and YouTube videos you get of Carole King and Brenda Holloway.

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (15-01-2020 10:05)
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: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

I think I missed this post. Anyway, IMHO, that sound is mostly due to the close mic'ing and the mic positioning - not the piano itself.  I like it a lot too, but it sounds a bit too percussive - maybe a bit of compression would help.
If Pianoteq did model this Baldwin, I don't think that would automatically mean that it would be able to achieve this very high degree of clarity/transparency. If it were capable of that, we'd already have very similar sounds from all the existing models, IMHO.

Greg

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Just noticed a couple of 'Baldwin' fxps (by tmyoung) appearing in the fxp corner...

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

I had forgotten this recording. Thanks so much for bringing it back into play. I sitll love the sound, to which the close mic'ing and the mics, and the room, doubtless contribute. I find it hard to describe. Slightly brittle? Raw? Listening to this, regardless, I feel in the presense of a wooden and metal machine creating sounds. Hard to feel that even with sample libraries, often.

I don't want compression on it--I like its dynamic range and the percussive sounds. And that melodic tenor and middle C area that Baldwins are loved for having. But we can disagree about preferences all day.

What else contributes to the sound? The unisons, perhaps? Are they a little off in nice ways?
The interior of the piano, with the vibrations bouncing off of its various hollows and curves and materials, so difficult to model?


In any event, after hearing and seeing this again, I want to track down the producer and\or engineer to see if I can at least find out what mics were used and other details. But the show this was taken from, PIano Jazz, no longer exists, so I may not have much success.

Last edited by Jake Johnson (17-01-2020 16:16)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

A very little progress:

In this first video of a sound check before her show with Joe Sample, we can see what appear to be AKG C414's for the vocal mics. Don't know if they were kept on for the piano recordings. I suspect so. That would mean that the back of the C414 is picking up most of the piano while the front captures the keyboard.

https://www.knowitall.org/video/marian-...ng-artopia

In this second video, from the actual session, we can see a mic to our left as we look down the piano to Joe Sample. Can't tell what mic is being used, but we can at least see the placement of one of the mics...:

https://www.knowitall.org/video/duet-se...le-artopia

And at 0:20 in the following video, we can see a second mic, and the placement of the two mics, better. The camera angle makes it a little hard to see how near one mic is to the middle of the piano. Seems to point towards the tail, however?

Is that a very small mic inside the piano on the bass? There's something chromish and metallic over there.

https://www.knowitall.org/video/joe-sam...hm-artopia

As I said, a very little progress...

Last edited by Jake Johnson (17-01-2020 22:03)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

I was about to log off earlier but listed to the video - really enjoyed it.

Good luck with those mic clues Jake - and thanks for the vid.

To me, that audio is lovely contemporary piano production harking to earlier piano recordings as much as modern ideals.

When I think "album sound" I'm often thinking of this kind of piano recording. It's characterful in that way - feeling like strings and harmonics are stretching against each other a little swimmingly - just enough but not too old hat tin pan alley style - certainly love it.

Sounds like a certain amount of compression is fundamental to this (bringing up sympathetic resonances with it to a 'floor'). I think it would die of boom and thunking with this close sound, without quite a bit of compression - but tastefully worked, not some kind of brutal thing that harms the headroom - even a couple in series - with a good gloss mastering compression on the end.

There's definitely a melting, shiny richness on it - and overall it does remind me of later Brill building artists practicing the standards - nice video and song - thanks.

In earphones, stereo signal feels real wide but without too much key placement (attack sounds kind of centered - some trebles go far right though esp. in solo section, with its own "room" zone effect inferring a mic specially worked for that couple octaves?? (to my ears anyway), but assuming width is inferred mostly by a wide reverb). Narrowing the piano and widening reverb (in studio console etc. or DAW) can help make a piano feel like it's in front of us. Widening 'the piano' itself, counter-intuitively can result in less realistic stereo - depending on mics - but here, it's certainly a great balance on first few listens.

Bass is 'there' but not booming - helps with wideness in piano I feel. Too much bass on "recorded" piano tracks can make the thing wrong - but it can be better for realism when playing in the room.

First listen, yeah - I do like that piano - and all the very noisy things about it too.

The room sounds lovely - you can almost breath the air and see the dust falling around the piano. It's not loud - but I sense its inferred in the tones.

If this is done well in Pianoteq, I'm glad to say I'd love it. It's certainly "a type" of sound I like to go for - but this does seem very usable for contemporary music.

Probably prefer "historical" "Tin Pan Alley" - vs. "New Baldwyn" - but I guess a new Baldwyn could be aged well in Pianoteq too.

I'm not saying I have the key to this in terms of frequencies in the spectrum editor in mind (that's a project) - but I feel a lot of this sound could be made in Pianoteq - it would be a nice project.

I haven't yet tried forum user tmyoung's Baldwyn FXP (saw dazric mentioned it in aother thread) - but I'm hoping to have some time for it tonight/tomorrow.

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

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Qexl wrote:

I haven't yet tried forum user tmyoung's Baldwyn FXP (saw dazric mentioned it in aother thread) - but I'm hoping to have some time for it tonight/tomorrow.

*gulp*

I hope they sound better than I sometimes feel like they do...

The ones from the other day were done in Standard a couple years ago, but with the renewed interest/mention of Baldwins, I thought I'd pass those along to the community.  I hasten to point out that I haven't been able to spend as much time as I'd really like to nail down the exact sound of the Baldwins that I've encountered.  Much of my time in High School in the US was spent with either an SF-10 or SD-10 (I was never totally sure which it was), and that was the nicest piano I had regular access to until University.  So I am very sentimental (and easily frustrated) with Baldwins.

The new ones I posted today are brand new presets that I did in Pro this evening, so I had more control and are based on yet another set of Baldwins I came across for sale in recent months.

If people are interested, I can positively inundate the community with the presets I've put together over the years: most were done in Standard so I'll probably tweak them before upload now that I've had Pro for over a year, but I've got Stuart and Sons, Pramberger, Weber, Kohler based on the D.  I've got Knabe, Estonia, and Rönisch based on the Petrof.  I've got Schimmel and Mason & Hamelin based on the Steingraeber.  I've got Gaveau, Chickering, Kranich & Bach based on the Grotrian.  I've got Kimball, Weber, Borgato, and Bösendorfer based on the Bluethner.  I've also got Kawai, Shigeru Kawai, Young Chang, and Yamaha CFX based off of the K2.  If there's interest, I can send out a couple of these a week: true confessions, I don't feel like they're as different and distinct as I would ideally like them to be (I always feel like PTQ at the software level has more subtle control inside the engine than Pro offers), but--if nothing else--they're very different flavors of the much more carefully executed Modartt designs...   I don't begin to believe that these are equivalent in quality to the official instrument packs (and yes, I'd love one of each of these as pack), but perhaps these can amuse us until more official packages show up for sale.

Maybe I'll do a Ravenscroft 275 as my next project--probably another K2 derivative.

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

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Is just me or someone else feel some notes in that piano are out tune?

Fos one side I like the Baldwin drop sound efect, like if some notes had a touch sound of drops of water falling on ground (something in the note deay???). In some of the trebble, just some, it feels good, give some different metalic sometimes more organic. But in other notes (maybe due out tune) it sometimes sounds a bite like a metal from a can, soup can.
Or maybe it's just a Baldwing from the not so good days of the company, when quality dropped, and some notes just are quite worse than others.

And some singing lessons could help her too...

Jake Johnson wrote:

Ignore this video while listening to the Baldwin piano. Not sure how to describe why I like this recording. It's not just the piano.The rawness of the sound? The close mics? The placement of the close mics? Many more variables? EDIT: The piano sounds much better as the song continues.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXZvWJx0RTs

(And you really must ignore the video, which has nothing to do with the recording.)

Last edited by Beto-Music (18-01-2020 16:22)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

I imagine several of our forum-mates would find little use for this piano, with its rattles and metal. But for people who listen to both Renee Fleming and Patty Griffin, this piano is perfect for her voice, or her voice is perfect for this piano. About her voice: She comes from the stage tradition and used to sing in small venues. An organic, human voice, perhaps, that appeals in part because we can sense the person behind it in the small inflections and dips and rises in volume and perhaps pitch? And she started by singing in character, as an actress. My impression is that there is still a bit of that going on, even though there is a lot of her in the persona that she presents. In any case, I think of her as being from a completely different, less pure school from say, Ella Fitzgerald or Sarah Vaughan.McKay may be working in more of a vaudeville tradition, with a little more room for quirks. Or maybe jazz should, by definition, be a large tent that includes many voices and approaches. For me, at least, the fragility of her voice, and the way it doesn't at times seem "professional" make her version of this old standard live. (There's a video of her singing "If I Had You" that gives one a sense of her approach. I'll post it in another thread, but she plays a ukulele, so I'll have to find some justification for it. A request for a modelled ukulele?)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

tmyoung wrote:
Qexl wrote:

I haven't yet tried forum user tmyoung's Baldwyn FXP (saw dazric mentioned it in aother thread) - but I'm hoping to have some time for it tonight/tomorrow.


The new ones I posted today are brand new presets that I did in Pro this evening, so I had more control and are based on yet another set of Baldwins I came across for sale in recent months..

Love your Baldwin SF-10 1975 fxp!

tmyoung wrote:

If people are interested, I can positively inundate the community with the presets I've put together over the years: most were done in Standard so I'll probably tweak them before upload now that I've had Pro for over a year, but I've got Stuart and Sons, Pramberger, Weber, Kohler based on the D.  I've got Knabe, Estonia, and Rönisch based on the Petrof.  I've got Schimmel and Mason & Hamelin based on the Steingraeber.  I've got Gaveau, Chickering, Kranich & Bach based on the Grotrian.  I've got Kimball, Weber, Borgato, and Bösendorfer based on the Bluethner.  I've also got Kawai, Shigeru Kawai, Young Chang, and Yamaha CFX based off of the K2.  If there's interest,

Yes please!!! Inundate us!!! :-)

MP11SE, FP30; Pianoteq on Mac, Windows, Linux
Unheard Music Concepts

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Marc Verhoeven wrote:

Love your Baldwin SF-10 1975 fxp!

Thank you very much!

Marc Verhoeven wrote:

Yes please!!! Inundate us!!! :-)

Okay

...

Since I forgot that you can link FXPs directly, I've put them below in case it saves people have to search a lot in the future.
https://forum.modartt.com/file/mfgjkkc
https://forum.modartt.com/file/dxvywwma
https://forum.modartt.com/file/8ue3fsyl

Old PTQ 5 presets ported to 6.6
https://forum.modartt.com/file/arg67z9r
https://forum.modartt.com/file/arg67zei

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

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Jake Johnson wrote:

I imagine several of our forum-mates would find little use for this piano, with its rattles and metal. But for people who listen to both Renee Fleming and Patty Griffin, this piano is perfect for her voice, or her voice is perfect for this piano. About her voice: She comes from the stage tradition and used to sing in small venues. An organic, human voice, perhaps, that appeals in part because we can sense the person behind it in the small inflections and dips and rises in volume and perhaps pitch? And she started by singing in character, as an actress. My impression is that there is still a bit of that going on, even though there is a lot of her in the persona that she presents. In any case, I think of her as being from a completely different, less pure school from say, Ella Fitzgerald or Sarah Vaughan.McKay may be working in more of a vaudeville tradition, with a little more room for quirks. Or maybe jazz should, by definition, be a large tent that includes many voices and approaches. For me, at least, the fragility of her voice, and the way it doesn't at times seem "professional" make her version of this old standard live. (There's a video of her singing "If I Had You" that gives one a sense of her approach. I'll post it in another thread, but she plays a ukulele, so I'll have to find some justification for it. A request for a modelled ukulele?)

wow, awesome post. I really enjoyed reading it.
and I also super enjoyed the video after reading this post.
I agree with what you said.
and compliment your articulateness.

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

tmyoung wrote:
Qexl wrote:

I haven't yet tried forum user tmyoung's Baldwyn FXP (saw dazric mentioned it in aother thread) - but I'm hoping to have some time for it tonight/tomorrow.

*gulp*

I hope they sound better than I sometimes feel like they do...

The ones from the other day were done in Standard a couple years ago, but with the renewed interest/mention of Baldwins, I thought I'd pass those along to the community.  I hasten to point out that I haven't been able to spend as much time as I'd really like to nail down the exact sound of the Baldwins that I've encountered.  Much of my time in High School in the US was spent with either an SF-10 or SD-10 (I was never totally sure which it was), and that was the nicest piano I had regular access to until University.  So I am very sentimental (and easily frustrated) with Baldwins.

The new ones I posted today are brand new presets that I did in Pro this evening, so I had more control and are based on yet another set of Baldwins I came across for sale in recent months.

If people are interested, I can positively inundate the community with the presets I've put together over the years: most were done in Standard so I'll probably tweak them before upload now that I've had Pro for over a year, but I've got Stuart and Sons, Pramberger, Weber, Kohler based on the D.  I've got Knabe, Estonia, and Rönisch based on the Petrof.  I've got Schimmel and Mason & Hamelin based on the Steingraeber.  I've got Gaveau, Chickering, Kranich & Bach based on the Grotrian.  I've got Kimball, Weber, Borgato, and Bösendorfer based on the Bluethner.  I've also got Kawai, Shigeru Kawai, Young Chang, and Yamaha CFX based off of the K2.  If there's interest, I can send out a couple of these a week: true confessions, I don't feel like they're as different and distinct as I would ideally like them to be (I always feel like PTQ at the software level has more subtle control inside the engine than Pro offers), but--if nothing else--they're very different flavors of the much more carefully executed Modartt designs...   I don't begin to believe that these are equivalent in quality to the official instrument packs (and yes, I'd love one of each of these as pack), but perhaps these can amuse us until more official packages show up for sale.

Maybe I'll do a Ravenscroft 275 as my next project--probably another K2 derivative.

I'm upgrading from Stage to Standard so now I can try out some of your FXPs. Any chance you could download the Mason Hamlin, Yamaha CFX, and Shigeru Kawai? I've already downloaded the CFIII, Faziolis, and Chris Maene. Thanks.

Kawai ES110, Pianoteq 7 Standard, Electric pianos, Steinway B and D, Bechstein, Bluethner, K2, U-Phoria UMC204HD, Sony MDR-7506

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Whew! Am just glad this post has nothing to do with Stephen Baldwin.

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

I consider Baldwin's tone to be very similar to C.Bechstein 1896. It is soft and sounds like a long sustain. I also feel the partial release of the mufflers, a "hum" sound that makes the sound elegant, something that happens randomly when playing. Really wonderful!

The Bechstein 1896 has a longer sustain than other pianos of the same generation, it sounds warm and deep. Thus, C. Bechstein would be a good principle for creating a preset close to that Baldwin of the video.

But, obviously, we want an authorized physical model for Pianoteq 7!

Last edited by Professor Leandro Duarte (07-08-2020 03:31)
Respeito, Esforço e Sabedoria

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

DaveL wrote:

I'm upgrading from Stage to Standard so now I can try out some of your FXPs. Any chance you could download the Mason Hamlin, Yamaha CFX, and Shigeru Kawai? I've already downloaded the CFIII, Faziolis, and Chris Maene. Thanks.

I don't know if it's still in time for your needs, but here's the Mason & Hamelin CC2.  The CFX and Shigeru and Mason & Hamelin CC94 will take a little more time.  Sorry for the delay, work is unusually busy at the moment.

https://forum.modartt.com/file/cklnmzy

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

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Curiously, Baldwin owned Bechstein from 1963 to 1986 and it is said that Baldwin's SD-10 concert grand borrows many aspects of the Bechstein concert grand scales. Just a little bit of trivia



Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:

I consider Baldwin's tone to be very similar to C.Bechstein 1896. It is soft and sounds like a long sustain. I also feel the partial release of the mufflers, a "hum" sound that makes the sound elegant, something that happens randomly when playing. Really wonderful!

The Bechstein 1896 has a longer sustain than other pianos of the same generation, it sounds warm and deep. Thus, C. Bechstein would be a good principle for creating a preset close to that Baldwin of the video.

But, obviously, we want an authorized physical model for Pianoteq 7!

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:

But, obviously, we want an authorized physical model for Pianoteq 7!

We can always hope; however, Baldwin is now owned by Gibson Guitar Company.  The "marque" is still used on a small selection of uprights (and grands too supposedly but they only go up to 211cm) made in China.  I don't know how much they really resemble the original quality or not; they claim they're exactly the same designs but I'm don't know that they'll feel like their older cousins.  (My experience with Made in China pianos has been poor, but I don't know how much of that is the regulation on the sales floor to encourage interest in hand-made European pianos for four times the price--much like televisions come with overly blue color temperature to feel brighter in the showroom--less action voicing is poured into the less expensive pianos, or if they're as genuinely worse as I've found them to be when I've tried them.) Gibson closed the only factory that made their Baldwin grands in 2008 in Arkansas.  A skeleton crew remained to continue filling artist orders and custom piano commissions, but it was permanently closed and liquidated in 2018.

While I don't know how exactly Pianoteq's brand licensing works, I doubt that Gibson has any interest in giving license to something that almost doesn't exist anymore.  Steinway and other brands are more interested in digital technology as a gateway to acoustic sales: if a student is using Pianoteq's Steinway D in school, they're more likely to buy an A, B or D later because they're comfortable with the sound and brand because of the third-party digital product.  So it's a win-win for both.  (Pianoteq--having made the technical achievement that Steinway is celebrating and promoting, which increases sales--and Steinway gets future customers without having to make a new product or advertising campaign.)  Gibson doesn't have that advantage because the shared use of the marque would be more likely to promote used sales instead new sales.  This is similar to why I suspect Yamaha hasn't made any public license for their brands through Pianoteq: Yamaha has directly competing products/technologies which is why authorized Boesendorfer of CFX is less likely instead of more likely, which is really sad in my opinion but my opinion doesn't change that. (But believe me, I'm hoping for Yamaha products in the Pianoteq lineup!!!!)  Smaller factories that haven't entered the digital market, like Mason & Hamelin, may be much more interested in the exposure offered by a Pianoteq license agreement, but with the COVID financial crisis in flux globally, we could see a lot more or a lot less appetite among piano companies with hurt margins to forge new licensing agreements or simply just vanish from the market entirely.

To do something close to an authorized model or instrument pack, Pianoteq would need to buy/rent an SD-10 or SF-10 (which is quite a unicorn in Europe) or hire someone in the US (preferably with technician's skills to regulate the piano during the process so additional contracts or hires wouldn't be needed) to take lots and lots of samples and measurements to send back to engineers in France.  There is the option for the BP211 which is made new, but I don't even know where you'd get one anywhere in the world.  Then, while still having access to the piano, build a new addon instrument pack at the code level and keep refining it until the two are indistinguishable.  You wouldn't be able to authorize the use of the marque, but you'd have as good a result as an authorized version and call it "American Grand" or "Midwestern Grand" (in case it upset the Steinway agreement to call another piano brand "American").  The question that Modarrt privately needs to answer among the product owners and developers (and may already have been decided long ago) is whether or not the extensive financial outlay required will result in sufficient market interest and sales to cover the additional logistical cost of adding another American brand unofficially to the lineup of instruments.  There could even be undisclosed non-competition aspects to their prior agreement with Steinway that would prevent them from including other American marques--past or present--in their products at all or at least not without Steinway's permission.  While that idea is purely speculation, it wouldn't be unlike the terms of other licensing agreements Steinway has made about the use of its brand in the past.  Steinway has a strong history in adroit marketing, not just in making pianos.

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

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

IMHO ... The owner of that guitar company has never had any serious interest in Baldwin from the time it was acquired ... and then they literally dropped a Baldwin grand piano from a high crane onto the parking lot in front of their retail store near the Grand Ole Opry Hotel / Nashville,TN. 

Lanny

Last edited by LTECpiano (30-08-2020 12:13)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Let's not make the endeavor of modelling a Baldwin seem too difficult. We do want Modartt to do it. (But we don't seem to be having much luck in even getting a modelled ukulele.)

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

skip wrote:

I think I missed this post. Anyway, IMHO, that sound is mostly due to the close mic'ing and the mic positioning - not the piano itself.  I like it a lot too, but it sounds a bit too percussive - maybe a bit of compression would help.
If Pianoteq did model this Baldwin, I don't think that would automatically mean that it would be able to achieve this very high degree of clarity/transparency. If it were capable of that, we'd already have very similar sounds from all the existing models, IMHO.

Greg

I was rereadiing this thread, and your post led me down a path that I may regret revealing, but: What would happen if Modarrt modelled a piano that was already in this condition? In other words, an older, out of tune piano that probably needs new strings and hammers, as the default? Based on close mics, such as those used in the video\Piano Jazz recording?

Re: More evidence supporting a Baldwin

Jake Johnson wrote:
skip wrote:

I think I missed this post. Anyway, IMHO, that sound is mostly due to the close mic'ing and the mic positioning - not the piano itself.  I like it a lot too, but it sounds a bit too percussive - maybe a bit of compression would help.
If Pianoteq did model this Baldwin, I don't think that would automatically mean that it would be able to achieve this very high degree of clarity/transparency. If it were capable of that, we'd already have very similar sounds from all the existing models, IMHO.

Greg

I was rereadiing this thread, and your post led me down a path that I may regret revealing, but: What would happen if Modarrt modelled a piano that was already in this condition? In other words, an older, out of tune piano that probably needs new strings and hammers, as the default? Based on close mics, such as those used in the video\Piano Jazz recording?

For a spectrum of pianos in various conditions and environments, you may be interested in the Pianobook project started by Christian Henson of Spitfire Audio. At his invitation, a community of enthusiasts has been making and sharing (free) playable sample libraries from pianos (and other sound sources) found in concert halls, family homes, train stations, music schools and other locations, along with information about where and how they were sampled. They range in condition from excellent and in-tune to comically unique. Although the depth of sampling is usually limited, Henson tweaks them to become quite playable and fun. The website for browsing, listening and downloading is quite good.  https://www.pianobook.co.uk