Key Fumbler picked it
Opus32 wrote:IF it's possible that a program is *possibly unsafe* based on the presence of overtones, then a *safety spectrum analysis should absolutely be performed,* and in fact, this forum post (which I've tracked) would also serve as evidence in a court of law of *willful negligence* if it was LATER found that such frequencies did exist.
I thought this a thing Opus32 was clinging to LOL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWpacxJa3eo
Do you think they haven't quality processes already.. for anything being kind of bonkers.
No.. if anything, in a court of even Judge Judy, you'd be SLAPPED back hard LOL.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFmVwSRZcZE
I'm here to tell you your #1 on the first list you made above, is not new - and probably already well worked through by Modartt for the next update.. there's been a lot of talk about hammers, attack - the overtone used in the attack.. (I like to soften with a fast FET compressor.. yah, nothing I do or say is relevant right?).
Your #2 applies to every instrument/audio product and millions of products.. Anything can sound low to you, whereas in someone else's system, it can sound huge!!
That's the missing part. I'd like to believe you're stuck on the Dunning Kruger thing.. and that you are not as .. numpty.. as you think we are
But the rest - do please stop with those. It's awesome junk for some people to feel special for 'thinking they know it'.. seriously. Please not more of that.
This alone - industrial strength wrong..
Opus32 wrote:Under conditions that have never caused me sudden hearing damage
YOU don't get to decide what conditions, past or present caused damage.
WE do get to judge you VERY harshly here, because YOU did post about one extreme session over 14 hours, too loud, which left your ears ringing.
THE - END SRSLY@@@::!!O(I : "?!")
LOL, really..
Stop it.. stop attempting to "Re-frame" the impossible.
That's not a quantum event, Opus.. you can't pretend.. "OH.. btw no other sounds ever did this to me".
But we showed you saying: "Ouch my ears". You could have accumulated various un-felt damage way prior to Piantoeq's mysterious overtones (whooweeeiwwoooo spooky music there).
In plain sight, you leave so much to those kinds of considerations.. far from the Wiley Coyote.. Suuuper Geeenius vibe that you want to give off
OMG wrote:Because I suffered that hearing damage under circumstances that wouldn't have caused hearing damage in the past
Hey.. as above for this one too. OK!
Opus32 wrote:Therefore, it's a *reasonable possibility that Pianoteq may be producing overtones that are outside of a "normal and safe" level
Not in a bazillion month of Teeeyoousedays.
Can we all acknowledge that I've already covered that? - every sound product in history can harm anyone's ears. But there's nothing about Pianoteq or millions of other products which would indicate danger to the public passed on by overtones, or perceptions of volume levels.
Every preset is different.. different mics, different stereo widths, you do the math, math boy Millions of differences - you learned yourself, it's endless when you want to take it all in.
That process of learning how the engine theoretically works can be cathartic as you discovered but only the amazingly modest people in Modartt can know the finest details.. but please, let's not trouble them any further with this guff please, OK Opus?
Well for some of the rest, quickly.. (I'm not hating on you - just terribly flummoxed by your ability to be both intelligent and so strangely stuck too - but I see, it's only that one item you may consider lawsuit-worthy .. just note, some care about that kind of thing, esp. in the E.U., earnest, and honest companies like Modartt have some fabulous protections from unwarranted junk lawsuits - and the kind of anti-SLAP processes will stop any scammer before they get to court.)
Opus32 wrote:Nitpicking at wording mistakes
No - you posted your words, I posted them so you could re-read those. Your words, it seems, like particle physics might suggest, are two different things, or more, at once.
That's not my nitpicking - that's YOU noticing, because I bent the fabric of space time to repost them back to you
Opus32 wrote:This is 100% a Pianoteq flaw
I don't see what you get from not admitting your 100% fault for hurting your own ears.
That's to me the only true white elephant stomping around, which you say you can't see.
BTW - we're not animals, Opus32.
You're maybe stuck in text books much, so much as to not realize what you're saying much of the time, nor to whom you say it down to, from on high.
Opus32 wrote:The real way to have a *good and fruitful conversation* is to try to make your opponent's argument as *strong as possible first* to demonstrate genuine understanding, i.e. look up steelman vs. strawman.
Well no. You might apply that if falsifying other studies? You didn't do that yourself.. you just made a pretty large leap, which though interesting, is undoubtedly wrong. That's what you have to give up, to admit you harmed your own ears. There's not a time machine or quantum computational fix for that.. yet.
The comments you posted only really outline, to us, a guy with possible potential, notably excited yet unfortunately too 'into the tweaking' to stop and think "Eek, something's wrong Beavis!" until it was too late.. honestly, anyone can sympathize with that.. every kid who ever got an electric guitar and amp for one trillion examples.
Nobody sold humbuckers on the notion "These have less harmful overtones than the old coils".. it would have been howled down. Hendrix's Strat was old school coils mostly.. it's how WE opertate the machinery that still counts.
Nobody is strapping your head into those cans and forcing you to listen at any volume.. there are many and various repeated warning all over the forum (incl. from me) - so yeah, nobody should consider Pianoteq a danger unless you lose track of your levels.. it's not a Piantoeq thing to 'seem quieter than it is' - NO musical item might be correctly ascribed that to the point where it's damaging.. everything sounds different, incl. different pianos/presets, different studios.. rooms.. volume controls on all the diffferent PCs or hardware out there for nearly a century still in use.. or all the new digial stuff.
What you might not like is your DAC.. run that through the logic machine a bit.. there will be varying results (as to overtones, how they sound) if a DAC is doing a poor job of decoding the digital to the analog signal.. Just a few bucks can make a large difference to how good a lot of things can sound on any system. That's not to mention all the great and still relevant hardware DAC setups, which may cost many thousands per box... they may be big, heavy and have lots of capacitors that a 'digital chip' might not really emulate well.. they may smooth things quite a lot (like a good studio 'desk' or 'console' or other equipment in any good production chain.
Also consider, what are you doing?
A: I want a real sounding piano in my room.
B: I want a fine album piano sound.
Understanding your goal helps a lot in discussing what things might help anyone's sound along best.
Someone wanting the piano in room experience, might go beyond 2 speakers, and try all kinds of nice things - and would do well to aim at quality hardware in the mix.
Someone wanting to make nice 'studio-like' album quality piano recordings.. well, like tweaking Pianoteq, it's endless.. but a good DAW, a good set of plugins in the DAW (many now come inexpensively with good stock plugins).. but all that is taste, garnered from experiences you give yourself, by trying these things out, reading up, watching some Yoochoobs.. etc. Just be aware of smoke and mirror nonsense entertainers.. and stick with good info providers, you'll easily with time, discover the best tools to beging that journey with. Beyond learnings early on (everyone must pass through those gates if serious), you develop your own methods (hopefully based on sound principles first).. and then later on, you may get awards, and lots of downloads... excellent luck to those who attempt it.. it's worth it.. within safe listening bounds!! ;0)
I don't really believe there's reasonable value in the rest of this stuff about 'maybe the overtones are.." Just.. nope.. I just wish you'd take responsibility for what YOU did Opus32, and leave off with the impossible fabrications around something different and special about Pianoteq where hearing loss is of concern.
Like pointed out, everyone's audio setup will sound different.. nobody making any audio software can do more than produce products suited to a kind of objective/subjective balanced for some kind of grand average, which moves as tech moves - the analog to digital decades was full of horribly un-levelled things.. it's immensely improved in this current epoch.. and I do know first hand, that Pianoteq is improving the very things, like attack, hammer overtones, tail overtones all the time.
The next update will probably blow a lot of minds.. and ahem, not eardrums!
Honestly - all that is to hopefully help you out of the bunny pit and into the fresh meadows O.
Best to you.
P.S. to everyone posting - massively appreciate your efforts to help Opus32 and to work out what's on the plate here.
@Stig - your advice is excellent, and you output more music than anyone I've known, mostly with Pianoteq.. Opus32 and anyone new to Pianoteq would do well to read your post!
@Keys - yes, it's possible O is just moving through understandable upset.. and I hope he gets beyond it.. part of that will be like what Defenz0r mentioned 'man up' to get on with the road ahead, instead of focussing on shadows irrelevant to all, and mostly to himself. You defaulted first to helping Opus32 - and that's golden, thank you - such a super good guy you are.
@Defenz0r - the first to say some good words to Opus32 - and I hope he understands that we all say these things to help, as you did. Fantastic!
@Robert - so sorry the threads like this cause upset to you and likely others. In the rinse though, I believe reality is separated from fiction, only through maintaining a line on the realities.. I understand what a sensitive and expressive and cool guy you are - and hope you don't mistake what's been a process to sort through Opus32's issues, without being fooled into just saying "yes, there must be something to this".. like I pointed to, the whole audio industry is full of products, some we like or dislike - for professional use cases Pianoteq is exceptional fwiw.. but indeed, some like yourself can assuredly dislike some of the pianos' sounds.. that's not abnormal for any VSTI.. sadly it's often just down to equipment, room, PC power, DAC, other audio components.. there's no exact perfect setup for every user.. we all make do. I really dislike a lot of the piano software which others may love outside of here.. but I love realism provided by Pianoteq and it's always improving things like the overtones etc.. and like I mentioned above, I'm very confident the engine is going to sound better with a new update as I'm certain overtone development, incl. hammers/attack has been on the cards a long while. Please, do stick around. You know, my account is just here now for helping new users and defending sometimes. The rest of my time is often spent listening to the music you and Stig, Gaston and all others in the music sub are posting.. I go from quiet and not posting much there, to sometimes posting a mega-wall to defend Pianoteq here.. you know that of me I'm sure. Sorry for that esp. in relation to your feelings which I feel are the exact feelings on this forum, which I wish to guard against ideas which I do regard important to defend us all from. Bad barking dog, I may be sometimes!!
@Opus32 - oh.. no.. nothing else.. just.. er.. see above! Cheers
Sincerely.
Boom.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8N72t7aScY
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors