Topic: How long can a piano sound?

Hello friends.
Out of simple curiosity, I decided to measure the duration of the notes in the different piano models in Pianoteq. For this, I took as base the lowest note (A), for having the longest string, struck at speed 127. The result was the following:

NY Steinway Model D - 57 seconds;
HB Steinway Model D - 117 seconds;
Steinway B - 83 seconds;
Bechstein DG D 282 - 61 seconds;
Ant. Petrof 275 - 109 seconds;
Steingraeber E 272 - 53 seconds;
Grotrian Concert Royal - 74 seconds;
Bluethner Model One - 66 seconds;
YC5 - 94 seconds;
K2 - 114 seconds;

Last edited by Professor Leandro Duarte (28-01-2021 21:30)
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Re: How long can a piano sound?

Did you turn off the reverb and delay and match the microphone positions for every piano model?
Going by your figures it seems the original model D and K packages have more sustain than all the add on pianos you have tested.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

NY Steinway-D only lasted 57 sec at 10 meter of string lenght...  Uhhnn...
Unles the test had a mistake, there is something wrong.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

NY Steinway-D only lasted 57 sec at 10 meter of string lenght...  Uhhnn...
Unles the test had a mistake, there is something wrong.

This is why I asked about microphone positions and if the reverbs were turned off.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Yes, it's a good idea to remamber about such details.

About reverb, changing subject a little bit, and maybe I'm saying some foolish, but: Would be possible a advanced reverb software allow to listen from the perspective of the audience, like in a given seat of a large piano auditorium or hall?

Key Fumbler wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

NY Steinway-D only lasted 57 sec at 10 meter of string lenght...  Uhhnn...
Unles the test had a mistake, there is something wrong.

This is why I asked about microphone positions and if the reverbs were turned off.

Last edited by Beto-Music (29-01-2021 21:33)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Key Fumbler wrote:

Did you turn off the reverb and delay and match the microphone positions for every piano model?
Going by your figures it seems the original model D and K packages have more sustain than all the add on pianos you have tested.


Yes, everyone had a high volume / gain. I did the tests again with the reverb off and there was no significant difference in the duration of the sound. Reverb is reverb; duration is duration.

With regard to miking, I say that I used the preset that bears the name of the model itself, so I believe that this is the most appropriate miking for comparative purposes, since this preset defines it as being "the closest to the real".

Respeito, Esforço e Sabedoria

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

NY Steinway-D only lasted 57 sec at 10 meter of string lenght...  Uhhnn...
Unles the test had a mistake, there is something wrong.

That's exactly it. I repeated the test several times using identical miking for both.
I also did not understand the reason for this disparity. Please, if possible, I recommend that you do the tests yourself and confirm the result.

Respeito, Esforço e Sabedoria

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

About reverb, changing subject a little bit, and maybe I'm saying some foolish, but: Would be possible a advanced reverb software allow to listen from the perspective of the audience, like in a given seat of a large piano auditorium or hall?

See post: Free New Impulse Response (IR) Files and Software.

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: How long can a piano sound?

Philippe did a test two weaks ago or so, from a request, and found NY to have longer duration than Hamburg, despite less louder. But I don't think it was tested in maximum string lenght adjust.

Did you used headphones adjusted for loud sound?

Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

NY Steinway-D only lasted 57 sec at 10 meter of string lenght...  Uhhnn...
Unles the test had a mistake, there is something wrong.

That's exactly it. I repeated the test several times using identical miking for both.
I also did not understand the reason for this disparity. Please, if possible, I recommend that you do the tests yourself and confirm the result.

Last edited by Beto-Music (30-01-2021 02:06)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Philippe did a test two weaks ago or so, from a request, and found NY to have longer duration than Hamburg, despite less louder. But I don't think it was tested in maximum string lenght adjust.

Did you used headphones adjusted for loud sound?

Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

NY Steinway-D only lasted 57 sec at 10 meter of string lenght...  Uhhnn...
Unles the test had a mistake, there is something wrong.

That's exactly it. I repeated the test several times using identical miking for both.
I also did not understand the reason for this disparity. Please, if possible, I recommend that you do the tests yourself and confirm the result.

Yes, I used headphones. Obviously, I turned the volume down on the audio interface so as not to suffer from deafness! Then, I gradually increased the volume to understand the duration.

In addition, I took care to follow the audio meter on the Pianoteq interface itself.

NOTE: I kept the strings in their original lengths. I did not test using 10 meter ropes.

If I changed the length of the Steingraeber E-272, for example, it would stop being the Steingraeber E-272 and become another unlikely model. The same, I say for the other models, including the NY Steinway D. So I kept it original, as that was the purpose of the test.

Last edited by Professor Leandro Duarte (30-01-2021 21:51)
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Re: How long can a piano sound?

Each piano model have different original lengths for strings.
It would be wise to set all to the same lenght before perform the tests.

Last edited by Beto-Music (31-01-2021 00:30)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Each piano model have different original lengths for strings.
It would be wise to set all to the same lenght before perform the tests.


There are many factors that delimit the different models and make them authentic and, therefore, distinct from each other. One is the length of the strings.

Based on this principle that you suggested, we could match all the other adjustments available in the Pianoteq Standard. In this way, we would have as a distinguishing factor only the parameters defined by Modartt in the source code of each model. Even so, I believe that the duration of "NY Steinway Model D" would be less than that of "HB Steinway Model D".

Anyway, I was also able to discover that no model exceeds 120 seconds, abruptly canceling the sound as soon as it reaches 120 seconds.

Respeito, Esforço e Sabedoria

Re: How long can a piano sound?

The lowest note (A-1) is rarely the one that provides the longest duration. The notes providing the longest sustain are usually the bass notes with double or triple strings (on the Steinway D, double strings start from F0 (MIDI #29) and triple strings from Bb0). Providing a longer duration is one of the main goals of having multiple strings. If there was enough room, manufactures would equip pianos with double strings down to the lowest notes, the problem being that they are too thick for that. Historical pianos often do have double strings down to the lowest notes, which is made possible by their smaller diameter. The drawback is that they have less power.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Well... Philippe was a skilled piano tunner, and spent months analyzing the real pianos used to create these pianoteq models.
I think he well knows what he is talking about  :-)

With two bass string, the energy one one get absorbed by the other, it reinforces each other, making the vibration last longer, when compared to a single string.

If I reamber well, he did some "metaphysiscs trick" to allow the honky tonk presets get a extra strong honky tonk sound, by adding two or three strings even for the lowest bass notes. Space it's not a limitation to pianoteq, by the example of 10 meter string lenght adjust, so the same apply to string diameter in pianoteq.

Philippe, if you allow me, just for curiosity :

What about the copper wrap over the strings, which in the bass can de bouble wrapped for some notes. Have it some effect about sound duration compared to single wrapped strings?
Can double wrapped distribution for bass vary from a modern grand piano to another modern grand of very similar size?

Last edited by Beto-Music (31-01-2021 14:19)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Philippe, if you allow me, just for curiosity :

What about the copper wrap over the strings, which in the bass can de bouble wrapped for some notes. Have it some effect about sound duration compared to single wrapped strings?
Can double wrapped distribution for bass vary from a modern grand piano to another modern grand of very similar size?

Unfortunately I haven't a precise answer to that good question. I have the feeling that double wound strings have less sustain than single wound strings because of a possible increase of frictional energy loss in the superposed copper coils, but that needs to be checked. Double wound string are used mostly in upright pianos and baby grands.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Yes, it's a good idea to remamber about such details.

About reverb, changing subject a little bit, and maybe I'm saying some foolish, but: Would be possible a advanced reverb software allow to listen from the perspective of the audience, like in a given seat of a large piano auditorium or hall?

That notion is why I remain interested in binaural impulse responses. The binaural head could be set in the player's position or in a specific seat in the audience. But I don't think that the program could then easily calculate the changes in the sound, if one wanted to hear the piano from another seat.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Just my 2 cents: if I had to measure something, I would not trust my ears (ageing, I admit !), even with headphones, I would use a waveform, magnified to the maximum...

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:

The lowest note (A-1) is rarely the one that provides the longest duration. The notes providing the longest sustain are usually the bass notes with double or triple strings (on the Steinway D, double strings start from F0 (MIDI #29) and triple strings from Bb0). Providing a longer duration is one of the main goals of having multiple strings. If there was enough room, manufactures would equip pianos with double strings down to the lowest notes, the problem being that they are too thick for that. Historical pianos often do have double strings down to the lowest notes, which is made possible by their smaller diameter. The drawback is that they have less power.


Thank you, Philippe Guillaume!
I did the tests again taking Bb 0 as a reference and got surprising new results:


NY Steinway Model D - 115 seconds;

HB Steinway Model D - 93 seconds;

Steinway Model B - 91 seconds;

C. Bechstein DG D 282 - 105 seconds;

Ant. Petrof 275 - 103 seconds;

Steingraeber E 272 - 68 seconds;

Grotrian Concert Royal - 105 seconds;

Bluethner Model One - 75 seconds;

YC5 Basic - 115 seconds;

Basic K2 - 103 seconds;

Last edited by Professor Leandro Duarte (31-01-2021 21:10)
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Re: How long can a piano sound?

These original measurements, relatively speaking, are not too far off from what I noted in that recent thread about the difference in sustaining power of the NY vs. Hamburg Steinways. I briefly checked the other pianos back then and noted similar relative sustain as recorded here. The reason why I brought it up originally was to point out the great improvements in longer, more realistic sustain, but also that I felt the NY Steinway overall could use a good bit more.

The measurable sustain of the NY vs. Hamburg Steinway does vary note to note, and as was mentioned, can flip in certain cases. However the perceived sustain power of the Hamburg Steinway is fairly consistently much longer than the NY Steinway's, which loses energy and power much quicker. That's not only my subjective perception, but can be measured noting how soon the sustain has a significant dB drop. You can see that other thread for reference, but basically even compared to my smaller NY Steinway M grand, the sustain of the Pianoteq NY is much less, and loses power much quicker (the Hamburg is about on par with my actual piano in terms of sustain length and power, when volume matched).

For authenticity, I think the total sustain time is important, but even more important is the perceived sustain time, or the "sustaining power" as mentioned above with how soon a significant dB drop occurs. This all actually has a profound effect on how the sustain pedal is used, when the ear tells the player it's time to repedal (reverb influences this too when playing in a lively hall vs. a dry studio). That's one of the reasons students learning on keyboards are guaranteed to have issues when they play on a real piano... though Modartt seems to be well on their way to eliminating that problem. The first as far as I know.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

NathanShirley wrote:

For authenticity, I think the total sustain time is important, but even more important is the perceived sustain time, or the "sustaining power" as mentioned above with how soon a significant dB drop occurs. This all actually has a profound effect on how the sustain pedal is used, when the ear tells the player it's time to repedal (reverb influences this too when playing in a lively hall vs. a dry studio). That's one of the reasons students learning on keyboards are guaranteed to have issues when they play on a real piano... though Modartt seems to be well on their way to eliminating that problem. The first as far as I know.

You are right Nathan, the total duration is less important than the evolution of the sound in say the first five seconds. This also can vary significantly, and the current adjustments were following the recordings of the original instruments.

In that regard, I think the most interesting parameter you could adjust to gain power in the initial part of the sound is to reduce the Direct Sound Duration in the Tuning panel. This won't alter the nature of the soundboard (impedance is not modified), but only makes the slow modes enter sooner. Please have a try and let me know what you think.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

NathanShirley wrote:

These original measurements, relatively speaking, are not too far off from what I noted in that recent thread about the difference in sustaining power of the NY vs. Hamburg Steinways. I briefly checked the other pianos back then and noted similar relative sustain as recorded here. The reason why I brought it up originally was to point out the great improvements in longer, more realistic sustain, but also that I felt the NY Steinway overall could use a good bit more.

The measurable sustain of the NY vs. Hamburg Steinway does vary note to note, and as was mentioned, can flip in certain cases. However the perceived sustain power of the Hamburg Steinway is fairly consistently much longer than the NY Steinway's, which loses energy and power much quicker. That's not only my subjective perception, but can be measured noting how soon the sustain has a significant dB drop. You can see that other thread for reference, but basically even compared to my smaller NY Steinway M grand, the sustain of the Pianoteq NY is much less, and loses power much quicker (the Hamburg is about on par with my actual piano in terms of sustain length and power, when volume matched).

For authenticity, I think the total sustain time is important, but even more important is the perceived sustain time, or the "sustaining power" as mentioned above with how soon a significant dB drop occurs. This all actually has a profound effect on how the sustain pedal is used, when the ear tells the player it's time to repedal (reverb influences this too when playing in a lively hall vs. a dry studio). That's one of the reasons students learning on keyboards are guaranteed to have issues when they play on a real piano... though Modartt seems to be well on their way to eliminating that problem. The first as far as I know.



You're right. Although I did these tests, out of curiosity, I am convinced that a smoother decay curve is more important for playability purposes than the total sustention time.

Still, the Pianoteq is way ahead, as sample-based digital pianos don't last more than 30 seconds.

Last edited by Professor Leandro Duarte (01-02-2021 16:31)
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Re: How long can a piano sound?

Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:

...For authenticity, I think the total sustain time is important, but even more important is the perceived sustain time, or the "sustaining power" as mentioned above with how soon a significant dB drop occurs...

Equally important for me is the wonderfully believable quality of the shifting sound as the sustained notes decay, something that no sampled piano comes close to. I love listening to the decay on the final chord or notes at the end of a piece.

Out of interest, I had the fortune and privilege to play a 1932 (I think) Bosendorfer in Paris a decade ago. I sat listening to the dying notes at the end of my little session, foot on the sustain pedal, wondering how long it would go on. In fact, it seemed like it would never end. I only stopped when some friends arrived, minutes later. I have a recording somewhere. If I ever find it, I'll see how long it was until I stopped, but even then, it was still audible up to that point!

Last edited by ImproMan (02-02-2021 10:08)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:

In that regard, I think the most interesting parameter you could adjust to gain power in the initial part of the sound is to reduce the Direct Sound Duration in the Tuning panel. This won't alter the nature of the soundboard (impedance is not modified), but only makes the slow modes enter sooner. Please have a try and let me know what you think.

Yes I've played around with this before, and tried it out again just now. Reducing only the Direct Sound Duration does have a strong initial influence on the sustain's power, but after time the difference seems to be less pronounced. In other words, the first 5 seconds or so are effected much stronger than about 20 seconds in, at least to my ears without sliding it too far. That does have some benefit, but it's more the drop in amplitude around 10 seconds in, and even more around 20 seconds in that feels off to me. Also reducing the Direct Sound Duration too far quickly gives an unnatural sound to the first few seconds of sustain (too much initial higher overtone sustain). Tricky to balance! I've actually found that increasing the Direct Sound Duration a bit, but also increasing the Soundboard Impedance a bit seems to balance things a little bit closer to what seems natural to me. But this too is easy to go overboard with, ending up with a less authentic piano sound.

I recorded a little MIDI example which I think shows the bass sustain differences of the various pianos in a musical context. On a good grand piano you'll typically hear a strong pedal tone like this sustain with decent power for a significant time. I think the modeled Hamburg matches what I expect pretty nicely. Again, I do think total sustain time is also very important, just that "sustain power" is more noticeable in most musical contexts. Here's the MIDI file:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/11mmmyC...sp=sharing

Re: How long can a piano sound?

ImproMan wrote:

Equally important for me is the wonderfully believable quality of the shifting sound as the sustained notes decay, something that no sampled piano comes close to. I love listening to the decay on the final chord or notes at the end of a piece.

Out of interest, I had the fortune and privilege to play a 1932 (I think) Bosendorfer in Paris a decade ago. I sat listening to the dying notes at the end of my little session, foot on the sustain pedal, wondering how long it would go on. In fact, it seemed like it would never end. I only stopped when some friends arrived, minutes later. I have a recording somewhere. If I ever find it, I'll see how long it was until I stopped, but even then, it was still audible up to that point!

Yes, Pianoteq has done very well in this area, and it keeps getting better.

On a side note, I recorded on a rebuilt Knabe concert grand from the late 1800's which used steel wound bass strings. I didn't time its sustain length (I'm sure it's significant), but its sustaining power was amazing. Bosendorfers have unique soundboards which tie directly into the frame of the instrument. I'm sure that plays a role in their rich/full sustain. One day it might be interesting to be able to change strings in Pianoteq, from steel, to iron, to gut, to silver and gold wound, etc., and perhaps soundboard materials/types too...

Last edited by NathanShirley (02-02-2021 10:42)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

NathanShirley wrote:

...One day it might be interesting to be able to change strings in Pianoteq, from steel, to iron, to gut, to silver and gold wound, etc., and perhaps soundboard materials/types too...

That would indeed be interesting. Sympathetic resonance of the strings to external/ambient sounds would be interesting too, but probably not high on anyone's wish list... except maybe some experimental/avant-guarde composers?

Re: How long can a piano sound?

NathanShirley wrote:

I recorded a little MIDI example which I think shows the bass sustain differences of the various pianos in a musical context. On a good grand piano you'll typically hear a strong pedal tone like this sustain with decent power for a significant time. I think the modeled Hamburg matches what I expect pretty nicely. Again, I do think total sustain time is also very important, just that "sustain power" is more noticeable in most musical contexts. Here's the MIDI file:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/11mmmyC...sp=sharing

Nice example and interesting test case, thank you Nathan, we'll have a close look.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

We have just released version 7.2: https://www.modartt.com/pianoteq#pane_changes, we hope you will enjoy it!

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Perhaps a button for extra long sustein, or some few separated prests for longer sustein, would be better, as someone can get in here and conplain the original NY Steinway have different sustein than the modelled emulation.

It's difficult to please greeks and trojans at same time.

Philippe Guillaume wrote:

We have just released version 7.2: https://www.modartt.com/pianoteq#pane_changes, we hope you will enjoy it!

Last edited by Beto-Music (12-02-2021 17:57)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Perhaps a button for extra long sustein

Don't forget you can increase the Soundboard Impedance in the Design section, which allows very long sustain.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Philippe, sorry, I expressed myself wrong.

I mean about the new "longer perceived sustein" be added as new feature or as new presets, but only in case the V7.1 version be closer to the true NY Steinway than the new updated 7.2.

For example, if some characteristic or quality is enhanced beyond the original piano, it could be added like a feature, or like special presets or adjusts like On/Off sellection, to keep the modelled version as close as possible to the original.

So, I'm curious: Is the NY Steinway in V7.2 now closer to the real NY Steinway, or is it even better than the real one in this aspect of sustein perceivable duration?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

Perhaps a button for extra long sustein

Don't forget you can increase the Soundboard Impedance in the Design section, which allows very long sustain.

Last edited by Beto-Music (13-02-2021 03:36)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Philippe, sorry, I expressed myself wrong.

I mean about the new "longer perceived sustein" be added as new feature or as new presets, but only in case the V7.1 version be closer to the true NY Steinway than the new updated 7.2.

For example, if some characteristic or quality is enhanced beyond the original piano, it could be added like a feature, or like special presets or adjusts like On/Off sellection, to keep the modelled version as close as possible to the original.

So, I'm curious: Is the NY Steinway in V7.2 now closer to the real NY Steinway, or is it even better than the real one in this aspect of sustein perceivable duration?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

Perhaps a button for extra long sustein

Don't forget you can increase the Soundboard Impedance in the Design section, which allows very long sustain.

Hi Beto-Music,
Im' not sure the new "longer perceived sustein" should be added as a new feature, I see it more as a small correction brought to the NY Steinway D Pianoteq model during its youth. As intensive the beta tests were, there always remain some little details that deserve adjustments (and sometimes even later, when mature, because some new modelling feature has been added, as recently done when releasing version 7). The process is always something like: "there seems to be some weakness here, well, let's see what the reference instrument tells... Oh yes, that is something that can be improved, let's try", and so on.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

I very much appreciate Modartt's policy of continuous improvement!

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Thanks once again. So this makes sense, this was a improvement (get closer to the real one) and not a enhancement (beyond the real one).

Philippe Guillaume wrote:

The process is always something like: "there seems to be some weakness here, well, let's see what the reference instrument tells... Oh yes, that is something that can be improved, let's try", and so on.

Yeah, a nice improvement policy. For a example of enhancement, like I said above, it's the extended keyboard range, specially for historic instruments and some short key range instruments. Today we have option for original or extended range to choose, preserving originality.

dazric wrote:

I very much appreciate Modartt's policy of continuous improvement!

Last edited by Beto-Music (13-02-2021 17:12)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:
Beto-Music wrote:

Philippe, sorry, I expressed myself wrong.

I mean about the new "longer perceived sustein" be added as new feature or as new presets, but only in case the V7.1 version be closer to the true NY Steinway than the new updated 7.2.

For example, if some characteristic or quality is enhanced beyond the original piano, it could be added like a feature, or like special presets or adjusts like On/Off sellection, to keep the modelled version as close as possible to the original.

So, I'm curious: Is the NY Steinway in V7.2 now closer to the real NY Steinway, or is it even better than the real one in this aspect of sustein perceivable duration?

Philippe Guillaume wrote:

Don't forget you can increase the Soundboard Impedance in the Design section, which allows very long sustain.

Hi Beto-Music,
Im' not sure the new "longer perceived sustein" should be added as a new feature, I see it more as a small correction brought to the NY Steinway D Pianoteq model during its youth. As intensive the beta tests were, there always remain some little details that deserve adjustments (and sometimes even later, when mature, because some new modelling feature has been added, as recently done when releasing version 7). The process is always something like: "there seems to be some weakness here, well, let's see what the reference instrument tells... Oh yes, that is something that can be improved, let's try", and so on.

Philippe Guillaume, I am truly thrilled!

I have to say that Pianoteq (Modartt company) is a blessing from God for my life.

You are a person blessed by God to create this program called Pianoteq. His professionalism, talent and humility are amazing!

Thank you. I say this with sincerity and with my heart!

Respeito, Esforço e Sabedoria

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Professor Leandro Duarte wrote:

Philippe Guillaume, I am truly thrilled!

I have to say that Pianoteq (Modartt company) is a blessing from God for my life.

You are a person blessed by God to create this program called Pianoteq. His professionalism, talent and humility are amazing!

Thank you. I say this with sincerity and with my heart!

I think this sums up (more or less) what dedicated users tend to think about Pianoteq. There's lots of software that could be described as 'useful' or 'enjoyable' - but Pianoteq is so much more than just software!

Re: How long can a piano sound?

This new update really exceeded my expectations, not only does the sustain sound much more natural and alive, but there's also a new clarity to the overall sound. Great work as usual.

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Had Philippe pulled a rabbit out of the hat again?

PunBB bbcode test

Nathan, please record a nice example comparing 7.1 to 7.2
:-)

NathanShirley wrote:

This new update really exceeded my expectations, not only does the sustain sound much more natural and alive, but there's also a new clarity to the overall sound. Great work as usual.

Last edited by Beto-Music (14-02-2021 02:31)

Re: How long can a piano sound?

Beto-Music wrote:

Nathan, please record a nice example comparing 7.1 to 7.2
:-)

Hmm... I just might have to do that...