Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Ben Crosland wrote:

There are three main areas that I would really love to see Modartt address:

1) Felting. The current suggestions for using the existing parameters get nowhere even close to the sound of a felted upright. If it takes a whole separate instrument pack I'd be fine with that, but ideally I'd like to be able to choose material/thickness for all models.

2) Una Corda pianos. I'm surprised it isn't already possible to select between 1 and 3 (or even more?) strings per key, but a separate model of the Klavins type instruments would also be cool.

3) The sympathetic resonance of the low strings. If you silently hold a handful of the lowest notes on even a modest grand piano, the sympathetic reverberation you get is another world from the existing effect in PTQ6.

+1 absolutely my vote! As much as I like Pianoteq but since we have a sampled Una Corda and similar pianos I tend to use them more than Pianoteq (for their character and imperfection). But on the technical side of things I’m still a great fan of Pianoteqs physical modelling. Una Corda in Pianoteq would be a dream come true.

Last edited by jacou (15-02-2020 16:07)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Ben Crosland wrote:

There are three main areas that I would really love to see Modartt address:

1) Felting. The current suggestions for using the existing parameters get nowhere even close to the sound of a felted upright. If it takes a whole separate instrument pack I'd be fine with that, but ideally I'd like to be able to choose material/thickness for all models.

2) Una Corda pianos. I'm surprised it isn't already possible to select between 1 and 3 (or even more?) strings per key, but a separate model of the Klavins type instruments would also be cool.

3) The sympathetic resonance of the low strings. If you silently hold a handful of the lowest notes on even a modest grand piano, the sympathetic reverberation you get is another world from the existing effect in PTQ6.

Completely agree on all three.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Felting. The current suggestions for using the existing parameters get nowhere even close to the sound of a felted upright. If it takes a whole separate instrument pack I'd be fine with that, but ideally I'd like to be able to choose material/thickness for all models.

I absolutely wait for a model of a felt piano too. I have detected a multitude of musicians who have been using felt pianos in the more recent years, like german Nils Frahm, Olafur Arnalds, or Chad Lawson. Mostly not "real classical music", but I like much of that stuff.

The felt piano is not only very nicely soft, but has also imperfections like chord noises  and  resonances. If Moddart made such a model, and it sounded like the real thing, I'd buy on day one! I bought the sampled Native Instruments "Felt Piano" soundset, but to my ear it doesn't sound particulary good.

Last edited by alba63 (07-03-2020 01:07)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

alba63 wrote:

I bought the sampled Native Instruments "Felt Piano" soundset, but to my ear it doesn't sound particulary good.

Which one do you mean? As far as I know there are two Native Instruments "Felt Piano" libraries: Una Corda and Noire, both instigated by Nils Frahm.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Bösendorfer Imperial

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

wmhobach wrote:

Bösendorfer Imperial

indeed, would be awesome.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Indeed it would - I appreciate modern, conventional, concert class instruments - CFX, Bosendorfer, Fazioli, etc.

Hmmm... Wonder if Modartt is listening to us in the background, but saving some of these regularly requested, epic instruments for the next costed release, presumably 7.0?

budo wrote:
wmhobach wrote:

Bösendorfer Imperial

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Borgato Grand Prix 333 but with an extended range option and a variant with keys 5 through 8 switched to bichords, to sound more like the Rubenstein R-371

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

lowendtheory wrote:

Borgato Grand Prix 333 but with an extended range option and a variant with keys 5 through 8 switched to bichords, to sound more like the Rubenstein R-371

^^^This

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Minx Miniature Piano, I have one of these, built 1937.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

I’m still wanting to see an American grand.  Suppose I have to specify something modern: contemporaneous to modern times, music and people who are individuals that have finally been recognized er acknowledged as being human beings fully and living now.

Now a baby grand will do very nicely!  (Smile.)

However, I have to admit the NY Steinway from the antebellum American period and in the Karsten collection does seem to suggest a woody tone.  I got it!  Have to say even, though it ain’t anything Woody Herman would’ve played in Herman’s Herd!

American jazz era musicians maybe saw anybody seated at a square piano as square.

Man, is Count Basie ever rolling over!

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: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

I’m still wanting to see an American grand.  Suppose I have to specify something modern: contemporaneous to modern times, music and people who are individuals that have finally been recognized er acknowledged as being human beings fully and living now.

Now a baby grand will do very nicely!  (Smile.)

However, I have to admit the NY Steinway from the antebellum American period and in the Karsten collection does seem to suggest a woody tone.  I got it!  Have to say even, though it ain’t anything Woody Herman would’ve played in Herman’s Herd!

American jazz era musicians maybe saw anybody seated at a square piano as square.

Man, is Count Basie ever rolling over!

The piano player in Herman's Herd was one of my teachers, Tony Aless. He was also Musical Director at CBS. He had a great relationship with Baldwin and actually preferred them. He had a fabulous Baldwin upright grand. Its a 6' harp mounted diagonally inside the case. He took me to their cavernous factory in NYC (I believe it was on 57th Street) where I must have tried a hundred pianos until I found mine! An upright grand I own for almost 50 years. It needs a bit of TLC now and then but it still sounds great and I love to play it.

Last edited by soundassets (01-10-2020 04:32)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

I second felt pianos. There is already a great selection of grands in Pianoteq. But look at Instagram, Spotify etc. Percentage of artists who record their pieces with felted piano is growing every day. It sounds amazing and it's different and actual. It would be great, if Pianoteq have it. It is the only thing, that's missing for me.
My 2 cents, Regards, Filip

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

There's a lot of acoustic pianos that I enjoy playing, and like the variation in character and tone between manufacturers and models. I can't see an awful lot of value in Pianoteq replicating a modelled version of many of the sampled pianos around - such as the CFX & Ravenscroft - would there be a reasonable market, especially with he amount of sampled CFXs around?

One thing I would LOVE is a Shigeru Kawai, and for me, the sweet spot would be the SK-5. The concert grands are lovely, but smaller grands have unique qualities, especially for intimate recordings.

Here's a video of a SK-3 being played: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkW1jxI2Tq0

It has a huge tonal contrast, while maintaining a lovely rounded tone - I can hear Steinway in there but also a clarity and warmness that reminds me of Bechstein instruments.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

I do like its sound.

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: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Another Bechstein model.
By far my most favorite piano on PTQ.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Hello,

Has someone already proposed the following ones ?

    - Seiler
    - Sauter
    - (old) Feurich
    - Ibach
    - Estonia
    - or modern times (last France manufactured series of) Pleyel ?

Best.

Last edited by VincentS (28-10-2020 21:35)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Filip wrote:

I second felt pianos. There is already a great selection of grands in Pianoteq. But look at Instagram, Spotify etc. Percentage of artists who record their pieces with felted piano is growing every day. It sounds amazing and it's different and actual. It would be great, if Pianoteq have it. It is the only thing, that's missing for me.
My 2 cents, Regards, Filip

A collab between Pianoteq and Nils Frahm would be pretty interesting.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

VincentS wrote:

Hello,

Has someone already proposed the following ones ?

    - Seiler
    - Sauter
    - (old) Feurich
    - Ibach
    - Estonia
    - or modern times (last France manufactured series of) Pleyel ?

Best.

Would be nice !

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Then there is the Bernese "Schmidt-Flohr" piano. Little known worldwide. But it has a very nice sound.

Pianoteq 7 Pro with all pianos

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Why not a YC7?

Last edited by stamkorg (29-10-2020 20:26)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

stamkorg wrote:

Why not a YC7?

Modartt have now gone in the direction of licensed models.
I guess as the CFX is the ultimate statement Yamaha concert grand that would be the one to have in its own pack, but then would Yamaha want a physically modelled  version from what is essentially a rival?
Then again maybe they would do a crossover product, who knows. 

If you have Standard or Pro you can lengthen the strings and tune the model to make a close approximation of the bigger models C7 and even the CFX from YC5 or one of the other pianos. Obviously not the same as having a properly developed version from Modartt.

I think a YC7 would be a nice addition to the YC pack. It's not officially a Concert 7 anyway so they wouldn't have to spend weeks or months with the real thing. They would certainly do a better job of any close approximation than I could.

Maybe it's just me but when it comes to the best pianos the tone is purer than the more characterful low costs pianos, and therefore somewhat ironically perhaps it becomes more difficult to sonically differentiate them from the existing high end piano models? The temptation maybe becomes to exaggerate the differences between models through microphone positions and Eq settings?
Robbed of the physical presence of the real instruments and robbed of the mechanical feel of the real keys they are left with only the sound to model, and a GUI logo.
If you've got a pristine sounding CFX model is it a world away from a pristine Fazoli, once you take into account room microphone positioning, playing style, recording Eq and so on?
Sure they sound different but how many pristine piano models do we need?
I say that but I would almost certainly buy both, and that's mostly what I want from Pianoteq

I'm guessing that as the pianos that are being modelled get closer to a form of tonal perfection (moving away from imperfect character flaws) it becomes harder and harder to reproduce the nuances of each individual model without major upgrades in the engine. On top of that Modartt would have to consider the size of the customer base that would appreciate the difference enough to keep buying the latest pristine grand piano pack..

Last edited by Key Fumbler (31-10-2020 11:23)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

The Mrs Mills and Challen pianos at Abbey Road were sampled by Cinesamples but they withdrew it from the market. I would love to get PianoTeq versions of those.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

mrkwhlbrk wrote:

Mrs Mills and Challen pianos at Abbey Road were sampled by Cinesamples but they withdrew it from the market

Woah! I'd love to imagine it possible for Modartt to show the work on the recent Bechstein DG (based on delivered sample set from Bechstein) to gain permissions to revive those pianos! Excellent.

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

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

C. Bechstein Concert 8 Upright

"Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes."

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

I want a K3.

Respeito, Esforço e Sabedoria

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:

I want a K3.

Me too. To clarify I would want to hear the absolute best idealised grand piano sound that they can muster from their engine, freed from the restraints of being accurate to a specific real world piano model. Simply the best idealised virtual grand piano sound as they see it.

They needn't say it was the best they can create from the engine as that could possibly offend those companies with licensed models, but those models would remain just as attractive anyway due to their desirable tonal character.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Key Fumbler wrote:
Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:

I want a K3.

Me too. To clarify I would want to hear the absolute best idealised grand piano sound that they can muster from their engine, freed from the restraints of being accurate to a specific real world piano model. Simply the best idealised virtual grand piano sound as they see it.

They needn't say it was the best they can create from the engine as that could possibly offend those companies with licensed models, but those models would remain just as attractive anyway due to their desirable tonal character.

Yes this could be a good approach. Being a linux user, I like the idea to be free towards brands. But the use of brand names makes probably more sales. This commercial strategy is also to consider.

Last edited by stamkorg (06-11-2020 13:50)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

soundassets wrote:
Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

I’m still wanting to see an American grand.  Suppose I have to specify something modern: contemporaneous to modern times, music and people who are individuals that have finally been recognized er acknowledged as being human beings fully and living now.

Now a baby grand will do very nicely!  (Smile.)

However, I have to admit the NY Steinway from the antebellum American period and in the Karsten collection does seem to suggest a woody tone.  I got it!  Have to say even, though it ain’t anything Woody Herman would’ve played in Herman’s Herd!

American jazz era musicians maybe saw anybody seated at a square piano as square.

Man, is Count Basie ever rolling over!

The piano player in Herman's Herd was one of my teachers, Tony Aless. He was also Musical Director at CBS. He had a great relationship with Baldwin and actually preferred them. He had a fabulous Baldwin upright grand. Its a 6' harp mounted diagonally inside the case. He took me to their cavernous factory in NYC (I believe it was on 57th Street) where I must have tried a hundred pianos until I found mine! An upright grand I own for almost 50 years. It needs a bit of TLC now and then but it still sounds great and I love to play it.

Let me give a very belated welcome to you, soundassets.  Indeed, you and I both have been pupils of a former Herman's Herd band member.  The late jazz trombonist Frank Rehak who too played in the band, was as well a teacher, also a mentor and a role model to me, personally, as I was a young drummer that played regularly with him in groups which he had directed.  They were during my young adulthood.  (I like to think they and he greatly affected my character somehow.)

At Wikipedia an extremely long discography has been attributed to him, although as a sideman only who had played extensively with Carmen McRae, Miles Davis (Miles Ahead {Fontana, 1958}, Porgy and Bess {Columbia, 1959}, Sketches of Spain {Columbia, 1961}, Gil Evans, and Jimmy Dorsey, among of course many others with whom additionally he in fact had played.

When I look at such a really long discography that includes primarily jazz works, I imagine some of them had to had included Baldwins rather, extensively.  Although, whenever I played with him, it was a time when another American piano, a Fender Rhodes, was used.

Incidentally, during this period he was voted as America’s number one (1) jazz trombonist, by DownBeat Magazine!

You may catch a glimpse of the image of the man, courtesy a YouTube video as his appears somewhat sparingly in it that seems mainly about Mr. Miles and others:

Miles Davis—So What (Official Video)

I have to add; Frank Rehak of the trombonists in the video, he is the one of them who appears the most throughout it.  You see him, mainly grinning ear to ear!

Last edited by Amen Ptah Ra (07-11-2020 22:04)
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: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Perhaps I'd join the fray here... if the "fray" just meant more Christmas wishes for Pianoteq to do after now releasing v7.0(.3, as of this writing).

So, one Shigeru Kawai SK-EX, or a Schimmel K 280, or a Steingraeber 132 upright for rebuilding into a PTQ instrument, please!

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Qexl wrote:
mrkwhlbrk wrote:

Mrs Mills and Challen pianos at Abbey Road were sampled by Cinesamples but they withdrew it from the market

Woah! I'd love to imagine it possible for Modartt to show the work on the recent Bechstein DG (based on delivered sample set from Bechstein) to gain permissions to revive those pianos! Excellent.

Indeed. That would be simply wonderful.
Would have been great to do the same with Cinesamples' Piano in Blue (of Glenn Gould and Miles Davis fame) but that grand has gone, IIRC.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Basically anything absurdly expensive...

Shigeru Kawai SK-EX. Feels weird using a VPC 1 and being unable to play a VST of their pianos that isn't a synth. Playing with smaller SKs in a store felt as good as the Bechstein they had at around half the price.

Fazioli Brunei. I'm not familiar with the model names but I remember hearing them clearly in the Aberdeen Mall in Vancouver. Not many overtones so it'd be a good one to layer with.

Bosendorfer Grand 290 Imperial. Because I like big. Plus the extra low keys could be fun to use.

Steinway Model Z: because Imagine was composed on it.

Some crystal piano. Heintzman & Co did one for the Beijing games. Something off the wall.

Related videos:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xd2TL88...e=youtu.be (glad Pianoteq got the B/D and Bechstein)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwVZP2xTQuY

Last edited by VPC1Player (15-11-2020 08:09)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

It's also expected that SK-EX and SK-5 will appear in the instruments library in the future.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

VPC1Player wrote:

...
Bosendorfer Grand 290 Imperial. Because I like big. Plus the extra low keys could be fun to use.
...

Maybe you already know this but it might help someone:

Owing to the Pianoteq legacy of the (now official) Steinway D and Modartt K models both of these packs actually allow the user to play or transpose to an octave below the lowest octave of an 88 key keyboard, and also partly above the highest octave too FWIW.

So those two models already give you more than you get with the real thing (in the case of the D) and almost all real pianos in general (K not being modelled on any specific real piano according to Modartt, so that one isnt strictly being unfaithful).
This even applies to the latest New York Steinway D model.

So add those 25-37 key additional Midi keyboard/s to get extra octaves.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

A Malmsjö Grand  would be great.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

The Fazioli F308 .. because everyone is modelling the Steinway, Bosendorfer, Yamaha etc ..

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Someone talked about pricey and cheap pianos.

Well, look that:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0neZjC9Lnmw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Taa1BEGlgOM

Notice how the cleaning was fast (and free).

Last edited by Beto-Music (18-11-2020 21:10)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Beto-Music wrote:

Someone talked about pricey and cheap pianos.

Well, look that:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0neZjC9Lnmw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Taa1BEGlgOM

Notice how the cleaning was fast (and free).

On a side note, James mah boiiii did wonders when he bought that console piano. Cleaning it with a leaf blower while wearing a ThePianoGuys shirt made it all the better.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

It's so impressive, the fact it sounds fine after just blow dust away, that some people may wonder if this is made up. Why someone would sell a piano in fine shape for just 100 dollars?

studiosnch wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

Someone talked about pricey and cheap pianos.

Well, look that:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0neZjC9Lnmw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Taa1BEGlgOM

Notice how the cleaning was fast (and free).

On a side note, James mah boiiii did wonders when he bought that console piano. Cleaning it with a leaf blower while wearing a ThePianoGuys shirt made it all the better.

Last edited by Beto-Music (19-11-2020 16:42)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

My individualistic thoughts are:

There are quite enough "normal" concert grands to my taste, for some time I knew them each quite well, but about after Petrof they all became kind of slightly different flavor of the same one to me. Which is not something bad, no complains. BTW K2 is very good in v7, my opinion. Lately I found myself unexpectedly enjoying playing the old ones, historical pianos, pianofortes, etc. After sticking to one "normal grand" preset for literally years, now my recent habit is constantly switching through all the pianos I got plus the demos.

My imaginary and most likely unrealistic request is to make something unusual and specific but at the same time not too exotic so it could be used on a regular everyday basis. I'm a big fan of quite unusual piano VSTs like NI Una Corda or Imperfect Samples Fazioli, so something of that kind is what I really want.

But please not a harp, EP, organ, guitar, timbales, etc., please stick to pianos.

Last edited by AKM (20-11-2020 09:57)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

AKM wrote:

...
My imaginary and most likely unrealistic request is to make something unusual and specific but at the same time not too exotic so it could be used on a regular everyday basis. I'm a big fan of quite unusual piano VSTs like NI Una Corda or Imperfect Samples Fazioli, so something of that kind is what I really want.
But please not a harp, EP, organ, guitar, timbales, etc., please stick to pianos.

I second your suggestion for a Nils Frahm style piano (like a Klavins Una Corda https://www.klavins-pianos.com/products/una-corda/) but I most certainly would not like Modartt to turn away from harps, EPs or harpsichords and the like. Definitely would love to see them model an acoustic guitar, as no other developer has properly done that, not even Applied Acoustic Systems with their Strum GS-2. There's an interesting market there and it may lure new customers to the Modartt brand. Also, guitar predecessors like the lute may prove quite interesting, development-wise, for other string based models.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

I would also like to suggest that adding more sustained sounds could be interesting for morphing and layering duties. We could start with morphing between Pianoteq and Organteq.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Man, just want to say thanks (since I can finally play American standards on an authentic American grand)!

Now indeed this truly has been a long time coming...

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: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Knight K10???

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Let's not neglect the electric piano category - Pianoteq's simulations are excellent.  I'd love to see a Baldwin Electric Harpsichord added to the collection.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Korky wrote:

Let's not neglect the electric piano category - Pianoteq's simulations are excellent.  I'd love to see a Baldwin Electric Harpsichord added to the collection.

and an acoustic Baldwin Grand Piano too.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

This is interesting:

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


I'm not crazy. Please don't laugh.

This shows how a single piece of vibrating material can make different music notes with "lenght" (area free for vibration) fast variations. What if :

-Ok, now let's imagine a instrument like a xylophone/vibraphone with a single bar. It would have limitations, of course, but it's interesting to imagine how the tone would change or produce interesting things with the area free to vibrate changing somehow in some degree.
-Now let's imagine a vibraphone with complete notes range, but with option to alter a bit the vibrating area of each plate, while we play. How this could be explored to produce new sounds, new kinds of ressonance???

Something to think about. Maybe a interesting feature for future, and not just to vibraphone.

Last edited by Beto-Music (24-11-2020 23:41)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Beto-Music wrote:

This is interesting:

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


I'm not crazy. Please don't laugh.

This shows how a single piece of vibrating material can make different music notes with "lenght" (area free for vibration) fast variations. What if :

-Ok, now let's imagine a instrument like a xylophone/vibraphone with a single bar. It would have limitations, of course, but it's interesting to imagine how the tone would change or produce interesting things with the area free to vibrate changing somehow in some degree.
-Now let's imagine a vibraphone with complete notes range, but with option to alter a bit the vibrating area of each plate, while we play. How this could be explored to produce new sounds, new kinds of ressonance???

Something to think about. Maybe a interesting feature for future, and not just to vibraphone.

Sounds a lot like what Chromaphone is doing.

Pianoteq 6 Std, Bluthner, Model B, Grotian, YC5, Hohner, Kremsegg #1, Electric Pianos. Roland FP-90, Windows 10 quad core, Xenyx Q802USB, Yamaha HS8 monitors, Audio Technica
ATH-M50x headphones.

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Pianos Modartt don't need to model :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGXFcu1V5ek


Why they created this thing, the stylophone??? I never heard about it before...
I found it today by accident, since I typed styrofoam wrong and Google suggested Stylophone, and  a video link appeared on top.

Last edited by Beto-Music (28-11-2020 00:18)

Re: Pianos you want Modartt to model?

Beto-Music wrote:

Pianos Modartt don't need to model :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGXFcu1V5ek


Why they created this thing, the stylophone??? I never heard about it before...
I found it today by accident, since I typed styrofoam wrong and Google suggested Stylophone, and  a video link appeared on top.

Got it as a freebie when ordering from a German online store. Still puzzled.

Pianoteq Pro Studio with Bösendorfer, Shigeru Kawai and Organteq