Topic: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Hello folks.  I'm new to this forum. Please excuse me if I break any rules. I'm curious if there are others here with similar experience/outlooks/decisions. And I'd really appreciate any evaluation, good, bad, or ugly of what I've got in mind.

Background:
I've been a hobbyist, home music producer for a couple of years.  I've come to a realization that I really need to advance my skills with piano technique. I'd peg myself at the late beginner/early intermediate level. Not a complete musical newbie as I've been playing classical guitar for half a century!  Whoa!, I'm old!  (70)

My current setup:
Desktop computer with pretty beefy specs/speed
Windows 11
Reaper DAW
Yorkville 6" studio monitors
Arturia KeyLab61 mkII midi controller
Steinberg UR-22 mkII audio interface
Piano VST in Arturia's Analog Lab
Piano V VST by Arturia

A consumer research nerd, I've been combing many, many threads at Piano World's forum, at first with the intention of getting the dope on entry/mid-level digital pianos.  My budget is $1500-$2500, which as I've learned situates me in the "entry-level" marketplace. What brings me to the market is my objective requires a full 88 keybed and graded hammer action in order support the quest of improving my piano technique.

The "game-changer" in my title to this post, I'll get to the bottom line, first.  I've changed my mind and decided to forget about a DP and go with midi controller which meets the 88-key/GHA criteria. Given the number of satisfied pianists who own one of Roland's FP-X series of DPs, it seems I could do well to buy Roland's A-88 mkII midi controller, which has the same GHA-4 hammer action as these FPX digital pianos. Here's what I've believe I've learned by following discussions in Piano World:

1) Amplification and speaker quality in the slabs and small boxes of entry-level DPs and even Roland's FP-90x give rise to common source of disappointing audio output
2) DP piano sounds and really, all its sounds are fixed and limited to what's packaged in DP's internal library
3) Quality, versatility, options of DP internal sounds, although many are touted to be very good, are no match for a good VST
4)There is much ado in Piano World, almost all of it positive, about leading piano VST's especially Pianoteq
5) Pianoteq is not a memory hog, nor demand's a super-duper CPU, and permits 3 separate installations (FAQ)

Number 5 is a pivot point for me.  It means I can install Pianoteq on my desktop, but if I'm ambitious I can build my own separate DP setup by also installing Pianoteq on my fair-to-middling laptop and using it in standalone mode in conjunction with another set of small monitors. The price of the Roland controller is at the low end of my budget, leaving room for half-decent external speakers, and a Pianoteq license.

Pianoteq's sterling reputation, along with it's meager computer demands, I think, has put me over the top, decision-wise, a game-changer.  I think I can abandon the whole DP consumer research project and actually come out way better by staying the realm of midi controllers.

A bonus, although I'm somewhat dubious about it, is that the Roland A-88 mkII is also MIDI 2.0 ready, so apparently I'd get some future-proofing. I'd love to know if Modartt is strategizing an entry into MIDI 2.0 territory!

To wrap up, I'm wondering about a couple things, which, with gratitude seeks input from the more experienced, savvy participants here.  This could be anything, be comments, suggestions, criticism, warnings, pointers. Maybe I've blundered somewhere here. Second, are there any forum participants who have already traveled a route somewhat or even remotely similar to what I've got in mind?

Input very much appreciated!

bashley (bob)

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Sounds like a great plan! I see FP10/30/60s pop up pretty regularly on the used market for $350-500ish, and they come with decent internal sounds that are great backups if your laptop has issues. The A88 does have some nice transport controls and encoders that would be helpful for controlling Pianoteq and other VSTs. Of course you can also get inexpensive midi control surfaces (Korg nanoKONTROL2 or similar) and velctro it onto an FP series, for similar functionality, aside from the pitch/mod wheel.

That PHA4 keybed is really great though. Possibly the best under $1k, unless you happen to come across a used P515 or FP90(x). Kawai also makes some really nice action, but those don't seem to be as common on the used market in my area.

Last edited by miiindbullets (10-06-2022 03:48)

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Hi and welcome to you Bob!

I'm a bit over a decade younger, also with guitar since my pup years Nice to meet you.

To me it seems you're on a good path. If budget is fine, the water is fine!

I'm so glad to hear the other forum people are favorable to Pianoteq BTW.


Some specifics from your questions (some good advice there BTW @miiindbullets!)..

Firstly, that list of 5 things resonates well.

The point 5.. you def. could install the demo on your lesser PC first to try that before registering it as one of your 3 allotted install slots - just to be safe. Main reason, while it will run, no doubt on pretty low spec machines, I feel it a charm on a high spec system because, you can turn up all settings pretty high! Things like NOT having to worry about overruns with too much polyphony. On an older machine I had it was an understandable balancing act to turn some things down, some up.. to get the best performance, like a big brake on CPU. The better of 2 systems is likely to be where you enjoy it most - but why not both?

Next I'd suggest, if you can play and test the controller in a store, compare with a few.. one person's perfect key action is another's big regret - I like mine but it may be not your choice. If you have some time with real pianos, you probably already know what you prefer.. but it still pays I think, to test for enough time to be sure you'll be happy with the action (don't allow the sales folks to breath down your neck to decide.. maybe begin by saying you'll be back a few times before choosing the winning deck.)

Probably similar to monitors or any speakers, always good to hear them if you can (or some studio kit is just trusted as a default thing any reasonable studio might have.. so.. go gett'r!). But.. if you're already into music production, you're likely way ahead than most in knowing what you want in that regard.

About MIDI 2.0 - yes, Pianoteq already handles extended MIDI files. I absolutely would, from experience, expect the Pianoteq team to be ready for anything, with a long-term good engineering principle underpinning their approaches to it.

Hope I haven't missed something as I post this, but keep asking Bob, the people here are fantastic in assisting with lots of ideas and solid advice.

Happy Pianoteq-ing!

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

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

miiindbullets wrote:

Sounds like a great plan! I see FP10/30/60s pop up pretty regularly on the used market for $350-500ish, and they come with decent internal sounds that are great backups if your laptop has issues. The A88 does have some nice transport controls and encoders that would be helpful for controlling Pianoteq and other VSTs. Of course you can also get inexpensive midi control surfaces (Korg nanoKONTROL2 or similar) and velctro it onto an FP series, for similar functionality, aside from the pitch/mod wheel.

That PHA4 keybed is really great though. Possibly the best under $1k, unless you happen to come across a used P515 or FP90(x). Kawai also makes some really nice action, but those don't seem to be as common on the used market in my area.

Thanks for weighing in on my scenario, @miindbullets, and for the reassurance that I my plan isn't lame, like viable only in galaxy far, far away! 

I follow your suggested logic covering the used market of Roland FP DPs, but sadly, at least in this instance, I live in on a remote island with teensy market for anything, new or used.  Prince Edward Island, Canda.  I like your creative suggestion, though, of "velcro-ing" a midi control surface onto an FP series DP. Although it sounds totally doable, for all my reading of umpteen threads at Piano World, this simple, but elegant workaround never surfaced.

Appreciate the input!

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Qexl wrote:

Hi and welcome to you Bob!

I'm a bit over a decade younger, also with guitar since my pup years Nice to meet you.

To me it seems you're on a good path. If budget is fine, the water is fine!

I'm so glad to hear the other forum people are favorable to Pianoteq BTW.


Some specifics from your questions (some good advice there BTW @miiindbullets!)..

Firstly, that list of 5 things resonates well.

The point 5.. you def. could install the demo on your lesser PC first to try that before registering it as one of your 3 allotted install slots - just to be safe. Main reason, while it will run, no doubt on pretty low spec machines, I feel it a charm on a high spec system because, you can turn up all settings pretty high! Things like NOT having to worry about overruns with too much polyphony. On an older machine I had it was an understandable balancing act to turn some things down, some up.. to get the best performance, like a big brake on CPU. The better of 2 systems is likely to be where you enjoy it most - but why not both?

Next I'd suggest, if you can play and test the controller in a store, compare with a few.. one person's perfect key action is another's big regret - I like mine but it may be not your choice. If you have some time with real pianos, you probably already know what you prefer.. but it still pays I think, to test for enough time to be sure you'll be happy with the action (don't allow the sales folks to breath down your neck to decide.. maybe begin by saying you'll be back a few times before choosing the winning deck.)

Probably similar to monitors or any speakers, always good to hear them if you can (or some studio kit is just trusted as a default thing any reasonable studio might have.. so.. go gett'r!). But.. if you're already into music production, you're likely way ahead than most in knowing what you want in that regard.

About MIDI 2.0 - yes, Pianoteq already handles extended MIDI files. I absolutely would, from experience, expect the Pianoteq team to be ready for anything, with a long-term good engineering principle underpinning their approaches to it.

Hope I haven't missed something as I post this, but keep asking Bob, the people here are fantastic in assisting with lots of ideas and solid advice.

Happy Pianoteq-ing!

Thanks @Qexi for the kind welcome to the forum. And a guitarist to boot, great. And I will take some time to chew on your cautions and advice. Great input, very instructive.

While I'm confident my desktop computer can easily handle whatever demands Pianoteq can dish out, your point about the lower tier laptop is well taken. For that, mine is a 64Bit Windows 11 machine with 8 gigs of RAM and clock at 2.6 Mhz, which I think will still give me some headroom with a Pianoteq installation.

On key action, I will be delaying any purchase until I can do just what you advise, i.e. do live trials in the store. I'll be traveling to Toronto in August, so I should be able to do some tryouts in that metropolis. I can say that I've briefly noodled on a Yamaha P125 and their DGX670, and I think I could appreciate some of GHA superiority right away over the spongey feel on my Arturia midi controller. As I understand it, the action of these DPs in the spectrum of its competitors is on the heavier side, and that it's a vintage technology, some even say "outdated"?  Obviously, though, longevity also points to successful staying power. I'm gathering from others that the PHA-4 of Roland is a little lighter.

Also good to hear you say that Pianoteq has MIDI 2.0 in its crosshairs. Curious, though, are you able to recall anything specific of the "extended MIDI files" you mention? Do any of these poke into MIDI 2.0.?  As I understand it, MIDI 2.0 can be utilized incrementally, in steps, or chunks, that it's not an all-or-nothing proposition. But your observation seems based on some optimism about Pianoteq's entry in MIDI 2.0. All is relative, however, and optimism could cover the gamut from 5 years out to 5 days, next week, most especially given that MIDI 1.0 has been the de facto tool for as long as you and I have been playing guitar!  hehe

It's important to me that you've concluded your message with an encouraging vote of confidence in the people participating in this forum. You couldn't have known it, but I put great stock in quality of online community forums. Like this one, they can
be resource gems. They've been a part of my life since the early 80s, remember the days of screeching modems and old BBS's? (Bulletin Board Services). As you know, too many forums are prone to descend into destructive discourse, along the lines of a  toxic cesspool of vitriol.

So, sincere thanks for giving time, thought, and energy in your response to my scenario. It's been instructive AND inspiring!

And a final special note to you which really only an experienced guitarist can appreciate about the A-to-Zs of  "action". I'd venture that when it comes to standards, pianists enjoy a much, no, a MUCH more stable reality for piano-centric keyboards. Compare it to our topsy turvy world of diverse standards in the guitar universe, be it in nut widths, saddles, scale lengths, fret board radii, string numbers, string compositions and string gauges, fret types, neck shapes, body shapes. Sheesh, it even extends to the care, feeding and shaping of fingernails for we classical players. Guitar action is nothing less than encyclopedic.  It spins heads! The sunny side of this dizzying diversity is that there's something to fit the special needs of anyone and everyone! But to a beginner guitarist, well, I have empathy for them.

Last edited by bashley (10-06-2022 05:35)

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

You're real welcome Bob!

You'll prob find just the item in August - sounds like a plan.

Yes your second fiddle lappy will prob be just fine - no harm in installing on both.

I don't think anyone on here would know for sure Modartt plans for any specific MIDI 2.0 items (my confidence is certainly not based on knowing for sure what they're planning) - I'm actually really happy with this current setup.. I know some will be really humming with new ideas for what to do with the new spec, but for good piano playability I think Pianoteq is better than anything else I've encountered recently or in the past. If they added anything via a MIDI 2 spec pathway, well would just honestly be like icing on the cake really - but that's mainly speaking about using the piano.. as a piano. For sure, there could be real opportunities for extreme instrument designing. I do some of that still (like with morphing and layering with secondary layers tweaked like reverb, panned L/R and some stranger things.). Those who love programming MIDI on a sophisticated level might get some new ways to work I'd expect. But you'd have to maybe write Modartt's support to ask about it to know for sure I guess.

BBBs and that dial up noise yes, loved those early days before web took hold.. a mostly text-only kind of world was excellent to navigate.. before the big jumbotron services took root. Crazy fun finding communities and chatting for the first time with people from kind of everywhere all at once.

Yeah, big grin.. my guitar finger nails were the bane of life at times .. just when they're spot-on, a chip.. now, they're always shorter (or piano crunches them down) but like you say, we guitar tragics deal with a wide lot of variance, your so right.. more than one guitar.. different styles, capos, sliders, picks/fingers (flamenco today or some pick action)... and in a good way, I really appreciate how 'at home' you can feel once you just have the one nice dpiano you love

To begin again.. yeah! I'd get into piano earlier next time if it were possible - but I think guitar would likely still be the first instrument to give me a sense of 'freedom' to create.

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

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Qexl wrote:

You're real welcome Bob!

You'll prob find just the item in August - sounds like a plan.

Yes your second fiddle lappy will prob be just fine - no harm in installing on both.

I don't think anyone on here would know for sure Modartt plans for any specific MIDI 2.0 items (my confidence is certainly not based on knowing for sure what they're planning) - I'm actually really happy with this current setup.. I know some will be really humming with new ideas for what to do with the new spec, but for good piano playability I think Pianoteq is better than anything else I've encountered recently or in the past. If they added anything via a MIDI 2 spec pathway, well would just honestly be like icing on the cake really - but that's mainly speaking about using the piano.. as a piano. For sure, there could be real opportunities for extreme instrument designing. I do some of that still (like with morphing and layering with secondary layers tweaked like reverb, panned L/R and some stranger things.). Those who love programming MIDI on a sophisticated level might get some new ways to work I'd expect. But you'd have to maybe write Modartt's support to ask about it to know for sure I guess.

BBBs and that dial up noise yes, loved those early days before web took hold.. a mostly text-only kind of world was excellent to navigate.. before the big jumbotron services took root. Crazy fun finding communities and chatting for the first time with people from kind of everywhere all at once.

Yeah, big grin.. my guitar finger nails were the bane of life at times .. just when they're spot-on, a chip.. now, they're always shorter (or piano crunches them down) but like you say, we guitar tragics deal with a wide lot of variance, your so right.. more than one guitar.. different styles, capos, sliders, picks/fingers (flamenco today or some pick action)... and in a good way, I really appreciate how 'at home' you can feel once you just have the one nice dpiano you love

To begin again.. yeah! I'd get into piano earlier next time if it were possible - but I think guitar would likely still be the first instrument to give me a sense of 'freedom' to create.

Appreciate the follow-up here, @Qexi (sounds like the model # of German sports car! hehe). It's helping me gather more confidence about which fork in the road to take (DP or Controller). Of course, Yogi Berra would say, 'If you come to a fork in the road, take it."  And that's kinda where I've been at, split, divided, on a fence.

I'm looking forward to growing towards experiencing what you describe as that "at home" feel for a keyboard action. I hope it happens. I dunno, with all the mechanicals separating musician from actual sound production in a piano -hammers, keys, levers, pivots +x,y,z--it all seems quite detached and remote compared to the immediacy, the direct interaction of flesh and nail upon string as in classical guitar. But, I'm coming to learn and appreciate that "feel" on a piano, while perhaps more abstract, is just as interpenetrating and certainly demands or cultivates a sophisticated intimacy with action nuances. Guitars and pianos are merely different galaxies, but occupying the same musical universe.

It's funny, but deeply satisfying for me that even studying piano for the short time I have, it's helped to elevate my appreciation and love of the guitar. Familiarity with both is an enriching experience. Spiritual even. Both instruments share a very closely matched genetic musical code, even if they sing the songs of very different species.

So, where did I put that darn saxophone?!

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

You definitely have some similar thoughts/experiences as me Bob, I really appreciate you zooming into the minutia and then zooming out.

When I chose my dpiano, it was mostly about that direct interaction, a kind of moment of "yes.. this one fosters musicality in me" as I played. I think everyone will find that moment with various dpianos, which is def why it's great to go try as many as poss.

If you enjoy a pretty wide ranging physical touch with some richness, you may enjoy the MP11. I feel it 'speaks back' to me well, no matter how I play it. I guess I also used lots of synths since the late 70s and all those 80s-90s dpianos, and hated how plastic they all felt (for anything other than modern music making).

I love mine also for its long keys. I think they felt so much better to me than other dpianos I tried out.. reactive in a way much like a Shigeru Kawai real grand I was lucky to visit for some time and play on.

I know, many musicians playing mostly real pianos can have a piano action made lighter (or altering hammers/felt etc.) might make them seem so.. but for me MP11 felt at my limits, in a good way.. I hate hitting a floppy plastic feeling keybed when trying to 'feel like' I'm channelling Rachmaninov hehe. You can play with great force but the dynamic is not just one way.. playing lightly with fingers deep into keys near the pivot point is really delicious.. a lot of range to enjoy.. many dpianos with shorter keys compensate with various spring/release systems.. to me the Kawai MP11 and its' newer sibling the 'SE' just seems to me to 'have it all' (still). To me, a nice way the keys float under fingers, esp. for 'retriggering notes' which Pianoteq does so well.

But, as I mentioned, some feel it as too firm.. but to me, maybe because as a guitarist I love force.. it's what we work with too - has to be a sense of using some physical momentum, esp. rhythmic music, helps muscles get into a flow when there's reasonable resistance from the keybed. I'm not always feeling like holding back so as not to break the instrument, and if that instrument works well across the full range of a musician's physical interactions, to me it's worthwhile. I thought "I spent up on guitars over my life, why not the dpiano.. why skimp on that?".

But.. I haven't tried everything released in recent years - and my above para might now be out of date.. and everyone's body will want to feel a different fit with the machine.

Great to discuss some finer details and about the feelings we have as musicians, leading to these kinds of choices.

When you find your dpiano, I'm looking forward to following your journey with it Bob


Little things are big. - Yogi Berra


PS> Love that you made a Yogi quote - coincidentally some friends here had a little Yogi quote-athon with me a few short weeks back!

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

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Qexl wrote:

You definitely have some similar thoughts/experiences as me Bob, I really appreciate you zooming into the minutia and then zooming out.

When I chose my dpiano, it was mostly about that direct interaction, a kind of moment of "yes.. this one fosters musicality in me" as I played. I think everyone will find that moment with various dpianos, which is def why it's great to go try as many as poss.

If you enjoy a pretty wide ranging physical touch with some richness, you may enjoy the MP11. I feel it 'speaks back' to me well, no matter how I play it. I guess I also used lots of synths since the late 70s and all those 80s-90s dpianos, and hated how plastic they all felt (for anything other than modern music making).

I love mine also for its long keys. I think they felt so much better to me than other dpianos I tried out.. reactive in a way much like a Shigeru Kawai real grand I was lucky to visit for some time and play on.

I know, many musicians playing mostly real pianos can have a piano action made lighter (or altering hammers/felt etc.) might make them seem so.. but for me MP11 felt at my limits, in a good way.. I hate hitting a floppy plastic feeling keybed when trying to 'feel like' I'm channelling Rachmaninov hehe. You can play with great force but the dynamic is not just one way.. playing lightly with fingers deep into keys near the pivot point is really delicious.. a lot of range to enjoy.. many dpianos with shorter keys compensate with various spring/release systems.. to me the Kawai MP11 and its' newer sibling the 'SE' just seems to me to 'have it all' (still). To me, a nice way the keys float under fingers, esp. for 'retriggering notes' which Pianoteq does so well.

But, as I mentioned, some feel it as too firm.. but to me, maybe because as a guitarist I love force.. it's what we work with too - has to be a sense of using some physical momentum, esp. rhythmic music, helps muscles get into a flow when there's reasonable resistance from the keybed. I'm not always feeling like holding back so as not to break the instrument, and if that instrument works well across the full range of a musician's physical interactions, to me it's worthwhile. I thought "I spent up on guitars over my life, why not the dpiano.. why skimp on that?".

But.. I haven't tried everything released in recent years - and my above para might now be out of date.. and everyone's body will want to feel a different fit with the machine.

Great to discuss some finer details and about the feelings we have as musicians, leading to these kinds of choices.

When you find your dpiano, I'm looking forward to following your journey with it Bob


Little things are big. - Yogi Berra


PS> Love that you made a Yogi quote - coincidentally some friends here had a little Yogi quote-athon with me a few short weeks back!

I thoroughly enjoyed and learned cool stuff from this your most recent post. It exemplifies my hunch that over the river and across the meadow and down the lane of my naivete concerning piano action, there's a little cabin housing the secrets and nuances of piano action. Thanks for cracking open the door to let me peer inside!  Capturing some of this essence is suddenly something you've made me want to be more atuned to watch and feel for.

Redemption of a kind. After all, all these technological minutiae we fuss and fidget with DPs,  all this plastic and pivots and wires and LEDs should be swallowed, swallowed whole by what ought to be the ruling context of music as one of the fine arts.

And thus it feels restorative to look my own obsessive preoccupation with technicalities and to see it for how ridiculous it really in the larger scheme of things. It makes wonder if I might be cured, or if it's a tumor just to massive to remove.  hehe

Your eloquence in these matters is inspiring!

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Hi Bob,

there is nothing better than this MIDI controller:
http://www.flkeys.at/Produkte.html,
especially when working in HI-resolution MIDI.

I've been playing this instrument along with Pianoteq for years
and I am more and more enthusiastic about the sensitivity of this construction.

Best regards,

Robert

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Jayter wrote:

Hi Bob,

there is nothing better than this MIDI controller:
http://www.flkeys.at/Produkte.html,
especially when working in HI-resolution MIDI.

I've been playing this instrument along with Pianoteq for years
and I am more and more enthusiastic about the sensitivity of this construction.

Best regards,

Robert

Thanks for weighing in with such a hearty endorsement!  Now, first off, the link you provided didn't work, just gave me the dreaded '404' page. 

But I deduced that you must be referring to one of Novation's LaunchKey controllers. Which model?  To make my list of possibles it would need to be the 88-key model.

What I find interesting and refreshing about your post here is that the Novation midi controllers don't have graded hammer action, but semi-weighted keys.  It's interesting because as I've discovered, the emphasis on graded hammer action varies in intensity and conviction depending on which forum, YouTuber, or other online venue one visits. Here for example, as piano-centre as it is, and should be, one finds a large segment of players loyal, committed, and rational in double-underlining the central importance of action in general, graded hammer action in particular. In other forums more into synths and midi music production the participation is more agnostic or even ambivalent about key action.

What you say is refreshing to the extent that I'd venture it represents a distinct minority in such a piano-centric majority. Not for a minute do I dare question the critical importance of graded hammer action if one is pursuing the classical repertoire or advanced playing in any genre. At the same time, there's a huge market slice of keyboard players amateur and pro alike, who practice, compose, perform on "synth-action" devices.

No expert in these matters, I'm not qualified to make any informed critical evaluation of either keyboard technology...But I can venture that like anything else, different musical visions and objectives will dictate the varietal sorts of designs and technologies to support those goals. Clearly, some musicians can't do without the expressive virtues and utility of graded hammer action; but equally clear, these characteristics are not a priority for others.

Me, I want to improve my piano technique, yes, but I have no pretentions about ever sitting down at an acoustic instrument, nor am I interested in pursuing the classical canon (I reserve my classical guitar for those of journey). And right now, I'm using an Arturia KeyLab 61 MkII midi-controller and I think I've picked up some level of late elementary/early intermediate piano music. The bummer has been running into piano studies, technical exercises that my range outside my 61 keys. I'm not about to make a desperate stab at my Octave +/- button! And as naive as I am, I have had a recent opportunity to try a Roland FP-30X and a Yamaha P125, and I get this intuitive, gut feeling of expressive potential which I just don't get from the midi controller. Granted I have not fiddled with velocity curves or whatever tweakables might be available to me. Maybe you've got an opinion on this you'd share?

Perhaps, you'll follow up your initial response with a little more detail on which device you're using from Novation. I'm quite persuaded by all these pianists, much more advanced than me, talking up the virtues of VSTs, especially Pianoteq.

Appreciate your input!

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Hi bashley, I think the keyboard Jayter is referring to is the Lachnit master keyboard? If so, then these are high end keyboards with optical sensors. I believe the action can be made to suit the player/purchaser if either a light or heavy action is required.

Nick

Last edited by MeDorian (13-06-2022 23:59)

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

MeDorian wrote:

Hi bashley, I think the keyboard Jayter is referring to is the Lachnit master keyboard? If so, then these are high end keyboards with optical sensors. I believe the action can be made to suit the player/purchaser if either a light or heavy action is required.

Nick

Thanks Nick for correcting what looks like a blunder of a wrong assumption on my part!  Hopefully, Jayter will come back and confirm your hunch.

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

bashley wrote:
MeDorian wrote:

Hi bashley, I think the keyboard Jayter is referring to is the Lachnit master keyboard? If so, then these are high end keyboards with optical sensors. I believe the action can be made to suit the player/purchaser if either a light or heavy action is required.

Nick

Thanks Nick for correcting what looks like a blunder of a wrong assumption on my part!  Hopefully, Jayter will come back and confirm your hunch.

Yes, it's a link to the Lachnit keyboard.  I'm sure it's nice, but it's also over 4,000 Euros. . . .

Just delete the extraneous comma (',') at the end of the previous link.  Or go here:  http://www.flkeys.at/Produkte.html

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

hesitz wrote:
bashley wrote:
MeDorian wrote:

Hi bashley, I think the keyboard Jayter is referring to is the Lachnit master keyboard? If so, then these are high end keyboards with optical sensors. I believe the action can be made to suit the player/purchaser if either a light or heavy action is required.

Nick

Thanks Nick for correcting what looks like a blunder of a wrong assumption on my part!  Hopefully, Jayter will come back and confirm your hunch.

Yes, it's a link to the Lachnit keyboard.  I'm sure it's nice, but it's also over 4,000 Euros. . . .

Just delete the extraneous comma (',') at the end of the previous link.  Or go here:  http://www.flkeys.at/Produkte.html

Thanks for the tips!  Lachnit, that's a new one to me. Expensive.

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

I'd only buy the Lachnit MK23. I have one and it made a big difference to how PianoTeq creates the frequencies, the pianos are more full because of more variance from the velocity measurements. The keyboard feel itself is amazing, very solid and comparable to real concert grand actions. You can practice on this and go to a real concert grand and still play the same.

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

I would like to see a sociologic research (based on family relations) about people with powerfull sound monitors to emulate grand piano sounds. It's just because I wonder how many people have peace to play & practice without be anoyed by people who may feel disturbed by the loud grand-like piano sounds.

   So, I have some questions to any of you who have invested in powerfull sound monitors and VST piano softwares:


-Do you live alone?

-Are you the only who play piano at your home?

-Do you have support or critics from family members?

-Did you used to have and play any real piano (even one in terrible shape) in home before move to digital piano?

-Do you feel free to play without concern about people around became a problem?

-Did you ever needed to move to headphones, after invested in good sound monitors, due problems with people around?

-If you have considerable limitations, like limited time/schedule or days you are alowed to play without concern, please number it.

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Beto-Music wrote:

I would like to see a sociologic research (based on family relations) about people with powerfull sound monitors to emulate grand piano sounds. It's just because I wonder how many people have peace to play & practice without be anoyed by people who may feel disturbed by the loud grand-like piano sounds.

   So, I have some questions to any of you who have invested in powerfull sound monitors and VST piano softwares:


-Do you live alone?
No

-Are you the only who play piano at your home?
Yes

-Do you have support or critics from family members?
Support

-Did you used to have and play any real piano (even one in terrible shape) in home before move to digital piano?
Yes
-Do you feel free to play without concern about people around became a problem?
Yes
-Did you ever needed to move to headphones, after invested in good sound monitors, due problems with people around?
No
-If you have considerable limitations, like limited time/schedule or days you are alowed to play without concern, please number it.
0

Hope this helps,

Warmest regards,

Chris

Re: Pianoteq a Game-Changer for New DP/Controler Consumer??

Hi Bob,

enclosed some Links for more information about this awesome Keyboard.

Additional supports Pianoteq the Hi-res C#88 Mode
from Lachnit (FL Keys) MK23 Studio-Hi-Res Midi Controller.

https://flkeys.at/ReviewsEng.html
https://pianoclack.com/forum/d/198-flkeys-lachnit-mk23
https://pianoclack.com/forum/d/198-flke...it-mk23/41
https://all-guidesbox.com/model/flkeys/...io-88.html
https://www.delamar.de/keyboards/flkeys...k22-24028/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIkSVkfQU5k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzjGfjB4fyc

Best Regards,

Robert

bashley wrote:
Jayter wrote:

Hi Bob,

there is nothing better than this MIDI controller:
http://www.flkeys.at/Produkte.html,
especially when working in HI-resolution MIDI.

I've been playing this instrument along with Pianoteq for years
and I am more and more enthusiastic about the sensitivity of this construction.

Best regards,

Robert

Thanks for weighing in with such a hearty endorsement!  Now, first off, the link you provided didn't work, just gave me the dreaded '404' page. 

But I deduced that you must be referring to one of Novation's LaunchKey controllers. Which model?  To make my list of possibles it would need to be the 88-key model.

What I find interesting and refreshing about your post here is that the Novation midi controllers don't have graded hammer action, but semi-weighted keys.  It's interesting because as I've discovered, the emphasis on graded hammer action varies in intensity and conviction depending on which forum, YouTuber, or other online venue one visits. Here for example, as piano-centre as it is, and should be, one finds a large segment of players loyal, committed, and rational in double-underlining the central importance of action in general, graded hammer action in particular. In other forums more into synths and midi music production the participation is more agnostic or even ambivalent about key action.

What you say is refreshing to the extent that I'd venture it represents a distinct minority in such a piano-centric majority. Not for a minute do I dare question the critical importance of graded hammer action if one is pursuing the classical repertoire or advanced playing in any genre. At the same time, there's a huge market slice of keyboard players amateur and pro alike, who practice, compose, perform on "synth-action" devices.

No expert in these matters, I'm not qualified to make any informed critical evaluation of either keyboard technology...But I can venture that like anything else, different musical visions and objectives will dictate the varietal sorts of designs and technologies to support those goals. Clearly, some musicians can't do without the expressive virtues and utility of graded hammer action; but equally clear, these characteristics are not a priority for others.

Me, I want to improve my piano technique, yes, but I have no pretentions about ever sitting down at an acoustic instrument, nor am I interested in pursuing the classical canon (I reserve my classical guitar for those of journey). And right now, I'm using an Arturia KeyLab 61 MkII midi-controller and I think I've picked up some level of late elementary/early intermediate piano music. The bummer has been running into piano studies, technical exercises that my range outside my 61 keys. I'm not about to make a desperate stab at my Octave +/- button! And as naive as I am, I have had a recent opportunity to try a Roland FP-30X and a Yamaha P125, and I get this intuitive, gut feeling of expressive potential which I just don't get from the midi controller. Granted I have not fiddled with velocity curves or whatever tweakables might be available to me. Maybe you've got an opinion on this you'd share?

Perhaps, you'll follow up your initial response with a little more detail on which device you're using from Novation. I'm quite persuaded by all these pianists, much more advanced than me, talking up the virtues of VSTs, especially Pianoteq.

Appreciate your input!