joannchr wrote:Mark959 wrote:joannchr wrote:Thank you. It looks like this is what they have modelled here. I actually find it is clever as you get full resonance for the notes not being played and dampers on the strings for notes that have been played if the pedal is half depressed and standard sustain when pedal fully depressed.
Hi,
I own a Feurich Grand with harmonic pedal.
If anyone has any questions or would like anything demonstrated, then feel free to ask!
Feurich have now discontinued the harmonic pedal - I was lucky enough to get hold of the last one sold in the UK
Indeed you are lucky. I wonder why this pedal wasn't more widely adopted. I guess it is because the extra engineering cost was not compelling enough for the use case. I essentially use it for baroque music ( Bach , Scarlati…) . I think the ability to add / change pedal types on modelled piano is unique in the market. Some other pedals are really great too such as the glissando pedal which I imagine is close to the 4th pedal implemented in some Faziolis.
Yes, the harmonic pedal typically added about £1,500 to the piano cost, but there wasn't enough demand for it for Feurich to consider it worthwhile to continue, especially as it was a nightmare to maintain due to its somewhat temperamental reliability! Luckily, Paul Barton showed me how to fix it when the occasional damper fails to behave!
I've just tried the glissando pedal - it actually creates an automatic glissando if you hold one note and then play another.
Useful for playing Beethoven's Waldstein Sonata, which has glissando octaves, almost impossible on modern pianos.
The Fazioli 4th pedal is a half-blow pedal, similar to upright piano soft pedals. Very useful for playing very quietly and lightly on a 10 foot grand!
Being somewhat pedal obsessed, I've now added a half-blow pedal to my acoustic grand, using the Stuart and Sons design.
The "Mozart Rail" (Steingraeber's name for their half-blow device) is the closest option on Pianoteq which gives this effect.
If you look up "Nils Frahm", he's invented a mute pedal on his Yamaha Grand - possibly another Baroque-like harpsichord-stop effect.
The fact that Pianoteq has something very similar (Buff Stop Pedal) is very exciting indeed.
If anyone knows where I can get an 8-pedal midi controller, please let me know!!!
EDIT: I've just noticed that the automatic glissando can be switched off, leaving the pedal as a variable-sensitivity half-blow pedal, which is how the Fazioli and Stuart pianos are designed. I made the mistake of assigning the function to my middle pedal, which is on/off only, and has no half-pedal capability.
This puts Pianoteq 8 even further up in my ratings - amazing software!
Last edited by Mark959 (14-04-2023 12:24)