First day on the forum - actually joined an hour ago - and find this to be a fascinating conversation. There are so many different thoughts and threads of thought, so I would like to throw in another perspective. Have not taken the time to fill in my profile yet, but the short version is that I have been playing piano for 60 years, am a Juilliard-trained composer, and MIT-trained acoustician. And I do own an old Mason Hamlin Grand piano that does sound and feel better than any digital anything, but from my perspective, that is not the point. The perspective I would like to throw in is the reality of logistical constraints.
I can not bring my Mason to gigs or to recording sessions or play it when my wife is sleeping. And even though I do own a pile of microphones and recording equipment the time to get it all set up and tweaked just right directly subtracts from my joy of being a musician and a composer.
The Pianoteq pianos, in terms of realistic return on investment, and I do not mean just money, I mean effort in and music out, is simply fantastic. I say this, having been perhaps the first designer of a digital piano with an integrated sound system in the early 1980s when we could only afford to put under a megabyte of ROM in the instrument.
The real issue for me is the piano is the most musically powerful of all instruments and I say this as a person who has professional musical experience spanning the concert stage to farmers' markets. And since pianos are expensive, heavy, and get out of tune and I know I am not telling this group anything new, you all know this.
But as some of you have been mentioning, there are an infinite number of different musical-acoustical contexts that impact the way things sound. Yes, I agree with the consensus here, that Pianoteq sounds less real but is spectacularly expressive, in fact proably more so than a real piano. As a composer, musician, acoustician and electroacoustical engineer, I have spent decades, as many of you have, messing around with this stuff. But I still compose, record, and perform and do not want to spend all of my time being an engineer and moving man, and all of my money on conventional pianos because almost no one in the world can tell the difference. Pianoteq is good enough that the vast majority of the world can not really tell the difference and furthermore having a distinct sound is the desire of all musicians for if you sound like everyone else you can not make it anymore except in snob dominated circles but this is not where the action is. Most of the world is far more interested in authenticity of artistic expression than in technical details so while I applaud and admire all of you for expressing the diminishing returns with good points on every side being raised, I have decided, now that I am 70, I want to spend the rest of my time being a musician, and a composer, more than an intellectual and for my purposes Pianoteq really hits it out of the park, and yes it is getting better and better.
So, no disrespect intended and I love this forum's conversation, and the intellect of everyone expressing themselves, but hey we do have a miracle on our hands here. We get more than 90% of an excellent piano in a far more convenient and affordable package. And I, for one am totally delighted even though I am as calibrated to excellence as most of you, and by the way, after a decade at Bose I became in charge of sound and music worldwide at Apple Computer, now the world's largest sound and music company. And in fact, the world's most valuable company and the reason is sound-centric computing.
The real world makes tradeoffs between art and science and money and in this regard, I am totally impressed with Pianoteq and the community it has spawned.
So keep up disecting the details, but I am thankful and appreciative for the hours I spend with Pianoteq and have performed dozens of times in
the last two years and not a single person in a single audience ever said anything other than wow that's amazing.
Nice to meet all of you.