I personally dislike Ivory quite strongly. Pianoteq 7 is a far better virtual instrument. It sounds better, much more alive and with much better soundboard resonance and interaction between the strings. And it's infinitely more playable. The soundboard modelling on Ivory is a joke, as far as I'm concerned. I stopped playing it some time ago.
Then again, I generally feel that the days of sampled pianos are essentially over -- the problem doesn't lie specifically with Ivory. Piano sampling is an unwieldy, unsophisticated, obsolete technology and I literally don't buy it anymore.
Playing a sampled instrument is like playing a corpse. Sometimes I play my Garritan CFX, only to be shocked once again by how frustrating it is to play compared to Pianoteq. Its soundboard resonance modelling is unconvincing -- way over the top and just weird-sounding. And its noisefloor is shocking, especially when you're playing complex parts; the noise in all the individual samples just piles up.
I recently bought a beautiful second-hand Grotrian-Steinweg grand (a Cabinet 192 from 1990) and I can switch back and forth pretty seamlessly between Pianoteq (played through the Kawai VPC1) and the Grotrian. Pieces which I practice on the VPC1/Pianoteq translate very well to the Grotrian, without a need to adjust my playing much. That's because Pianoteq responds like a real instrument -- instead of playing back prerecorded notes, with some thin-sounding overtones and static sustain resonance thrown in. The Garritan CFX and Ivory work fine for, say, a piano part in a pop song but they're unsuitable for serious classical or jazz playing.
For hardware digital pianos, too, physical modelling has by now overtaken sampling in terms of sound quality. I'd choose the sound of a Roland LX708 over even that of a high-end sampled instrument like the Yamaha N1X any day (though the keyboard on the N1X is arguably better).
None of this means that Pianoteq is 'perfect' of course. I'd rather play a fantastic, perfectly tuned and maintained Steinway D in a great-sounding concert hall. Or my Grotrian grand in my living room. But in my view sampled software pianos can no longer hold a candle to Pianoteq (played on a good controller, and through a decent interface and speakers).
Last edited by Pianophile (21-10-2022 11:50)