Topic: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

When I listen to pretty much any DGG classical piano recording, the sound is fantastic. The piano sound is not harsh or clattery but is also not dull.  The reverb is always just right.
IMO the sample recordings from Modartt don’t approach this level.
Tinkering with the Pianoteq settings I have ben unable to do any better.  Far from it!

Does someone have a solution?

Some simple examples, for starters
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PD2NOIA7jMk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMNOwM18xkE

Thanks!

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

I wouldn't discount the interpretation or performance elements here.

You are directly comparing performances from world class professional classical musicians recorded in ideal real rooms to a completely synthesized instrument in a virtual room played by someone who is likely to be a highly capable musician but a jobbing jack of all trades too. In some cases maybe some of the parts are programmed in too, rather than played.

Pianoteq is very, very good and IMHO much better at conveying those  human performance elements than any other virtual piano technology but it's not real.

Is your performance up to comparison?
Do you have the best graded hammer action you could possibly afford, and the best technique at the fingers?

Taking your performance out of the equation-
Standard and Pro allow you to adjust the microphone positions. A lot can be done there to get the sound much closer to your favoured recording.

A lot can be done adjusting the reverb and EQ too - in all three versions.

Hammer hardness in Standard and Pro. Lots of factors.

External reverb FX and all kinds of other tricks can be done to modify the sound to your taste.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Yes, as I've always said, Pianoteq is a simulator - a very good one, but it's not a real piano in a real room. So we have to make allowances that it's not going to sound quite like the finest classical recordings. In some situations Pianoteq can sound very realistic, but it still has a way to go for pure classical work, IMO.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

AFAIK, the DG recordings are mastered very intensively, a lot of thought for each frequency at each intensity. Mastering, in a word! You can do the same thing in Pianoteq (Pro) but obviously it won't come instantly.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Luc Henrion wrote:

AFAIK, the DG recordings are mastered very intensively, a lot of thought for each frequency at each intensity. Mastering, in a word! You can do the same thing in Pianoteq (Pro) but obviously it won't come instantly.

Exactly! You can't ignore the professional skills of the sound engineers and mastering engineers who have spent a lifetime perfecting the DG sounds. Lots of work involved.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Yes, all of that.  I’m using the Steinway D setup.  I've tried reverb parameters and mic position.

I used to record classical professionally and know something about mic positions and the lore.
https://www.marlboromusic.org/recording...n/id-2579/
I took a class from RCA producer Max Wilcox and knew him and took symphony mic-position pointers from him at Marlboro.

And I have access to some pure gold private MIDIs recorded by a world class concert pianist.

It's not hard to get a great recording of a great player on a great piano in a great room with readily-available mics and other tech.  But I have found it very hard, impossible with the Pianoteq app.  There is some software I want to write to demonstrate musical expression, and Pianoteq seems the only option.

My question remains. 

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

I would think great classical recording is like great jazz recording, not a lot of mastering and frequency by frequency filtering or anything that leans into quality at the expense of fidelity.  They are simply recording great pianos set up properly and in the right spaces with the right recording techniques would be my guess - all stuff that is modeled in Pianoteq and should be the goal of Pianoteq to match.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Joseph Merrill wrote:

They are simply recording great pianos set up properly and in the right spaces with the right recording techniques.

This would be the case in a perfect world! I have also recorded dozens of CDs of classical music, and very often solo piano, and not all the elements are necessarily always available, believe me. A room is never perfect. A Steinway D (or B) is never perfect. Microphones are never perfect. Even pianists are never perfect, otherwise there should be no editing! ;-)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:

Yes, all of that.  I’m using the Steinway D setup.  I've tried reverb parameters and mic position.

I used to record classical professionally and know something about mic positions and the lore.
https://www.marlboromusic.org/recording...n/id-2579/
I took a class from RCA producer Max Wilcox and knew him and took symphony mic-position pointers from him at Marlboro.

And I have access to some pure gold private MIDIs recorded by a world class concert pianist.

It's not hard to get a great recording of a great player on a great piano in a great room with readily-available mics and other tech.  But I have found it very hard, impossible with the Pianoteq app.  There is some software I want to write to demonstrate musical expression, and Pianoteq seems the only option.

My question remains.

I have seen folks selling their idea of professionally created presets for Pianoteq.  Make of those what you will.

Have you tried the fxp section?

Choice and use of external reverbs and EQ makes a huge difference - whether that difference is preferable is up to your ears.
If you go by the microphone theory alone to guide your microphone positioning you could end up stumped - follow the theory of course but trust your ears first and foremost.

Have you tried with other commercial piano products - sample libraries like Synchron?

Maybe you just don't like the Modartt model of the Steinway D?
Have you tried the Modartt B, or one of the other models such as the Grotrian, Petrof, Bluthner and Steingraeber?

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:

Yes, all of that.  I’m using the Steinway D setup.  I've tried reverb parameters and mic position.

I used to record classical professionally and know something about mic positions and the lore.
https://www.marlboromusic.org/recording...n/id-2579/
I took a class from RCA producer Max Wilcox and knew him and took symphony mic-position pointers from him at Marlboro.

And I have access to some pure gold private MIDIs recorded by a world class concert pianist.

It's not hard to get a great recording of a great player on a great piano in a great room with readily-available mics and other tech.  But I have found it very hard, impossible with the Pianoteq app.  There is some software I want to write to demonstrate musical expression, and Pianoteq seems the only option.

My question remains.

Yeah, I know where you're coming from. I do a lot of educational music, and I've found it an epic struggle to find a really satisfying sound in Pianoteq that comes across well with very simple material. Somehow the timbre of the middle register is never quite convincing, and the attack sound is not quite there. Things have improved in v8, but I'm still having to settle for 'near enough'. Don't get me wrong, I do love Pianoteq for all sorts of reasons, and I still think it's better than pretty much any of the sample-based offerings out there. I have tried some sample-based pianos, and I always end up thinking 'OK, nice samples, but... ugh, it's so clunky!'

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Luc Henrion wrote:
Joseph Merrill wrote:

They are simply recording great pianos set up properly and in the right spaces with the right recording techniques.

This would be the case in a perfect world! I have also recorded dozens of CDs of classical music, and very often solo piano, and not all the elements are necessarily always available, believe me. A room is never perfect. A Steinway D (or B) is never perfect. Microphones are never perfect. Even pianists are never perfect, otherwise there should be no editing! ;-)

Ok, do you think Pianoteq sounds like the recordings, pre-master?

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Joseph Merrill wrote:
Luc Henrion wrote:
Joseph Merrill wrote:

They are simply recording great pianos set up properly and in the right spaces with the right recording techniques.

This would be the case in a perfect world! I have also recorded dozens of CDs of classical music, and very often solo piano, and not all the elements are necessarily always available, believe me. A room is never perfect. A Steinway D (or B) is never perfect. Microphones are never perfect. Even pianists are never perfect, otherwise there should be no editing! ;-)

Ok, do you think Pianoteq sounds like the recordings, pre-master?

Honestly no. Or not "from the start". But Pianoteq allows you to modify - whenever you want - many things that you could not modify after a "real" recording! And that's a huge difference.
That said, I did a lot of experimenting with the (virtual) positioning of the microphones, and I was amazed by the big difference in sound... too good to be true? I don't know.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Key Fumbler wrote:

I have seen folks selling their idea of professionally created presets for Pianoteq.  Make of those what you will.

Have you tried the fxp section?

Choice and use of external reverbs and EQ makes a huge difference - whether that difference is preferable is up to your ears.
If you go by the microphone theory alone to guide your microphone positioning you could end up stumped - follow the theory of course but trust your ears first and foremost.

Have you tried with other commercial piano products - sample libraries like Synchron?

Maybe you just don't like the Modartt model of the Steinway D?
Have you tried the Modartt B, or one of the other models such as the Grotrian, Petrof, Bluthner and Steingraeber?

Did not know about fxp, thanks.  But I didn’t find anything in the mp3 samples there.

Can you suggest external reverbs or EQ that will be the answer?

> Maybe you just don't like the Modartt model of the Steinway D?

Well maybe there is something fundamental about the synthesis that could be improved.  It feels to me like I'm hearing lots of little microphones placed right next to each strike point, and maybe no amount of mic placement or reverb is going to round that out and make it pleasing.  Maybe Modartt could think harder about how to produce sound that is more like a blend of the whole instrument instead of a summation of lots of right-up-close point sources, I wonder.

BTW, here is another example.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sonat...?i=4566026

Last edited by davealtos (18-11-2023 22:35)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:

Well maybe there is something fundamental about the synthesis that could be improved.  It feels to me like I'm hearing lots of little microphones placed right next to each strike point, and maybe no amount of mic placement or reverb is going to round that out and make it pleasing.  Maybe Modartt could think harder about how to produce sound that is more like a blend of the whole instrument instead of a summation of lots of right-up-close point sources, I wonder.

It appears that there are *a lot* of folks who *very strongly* dislike the sound of Pianoteq. You will not find them here, though, for obvious reasons.

Some of them want to like Pianoteq because the software checks all boxes (small footprint, very nice interface, lots of options conveniently laid out rather than the "holy mess" of Kontakt and friends). But they don't like the sound. They have given Modartt some feedback, but it has been too "generic" such as "it sounds nasal", or "it lacks body", "chords are not natural-sounding", "it does not sound like a piano" and so on, hence the developers have not been able to understand the problem. Most of these people share the same sentiment regardless of the amplification and speaker/headphone they use. This last observation led me to conclude that is not a simple EQ issue.

To some other people, Pianoteq sounds like a recording of an acoustic piano.

Very rarely, somebody is in between (that's me): can hear that is different (in some cases very different) from the recording of an acoustic piano, but it's at least decent, and occasionally good (sadly sometimes is also bad). I bought it and I'm happy with the purchase, but it really makes me mad that I don't understand why sometimes is good and sometimes it's not!

I know at least one of the "haters", a pianist who actually worked with Modartt as a "beta tester" and provided lots of feedback trying to improve the sound -- to no avail.

I speculate that both the physical ability to hear the sound and perhaps some psychological idea of "paying more attention" to some aspects of the sound is the culprit of this love/hate split. I suspect that the developers themselves are in the obvious camp in which they are not able to hear (or not able to pay attention) to the thing(s) that bother(s) some.

Let me nudge you to reach out to the developers: I think with your recording background and the ability to hear at least some problems as you described, you can be a great helper for them to understand what the problem is. Even if they can't hear it, they can measure it: some of them also have a recording background so you'd speak a similar, if not same, language -- unlike the pianist without any sound engineering expertise I mentioned above. And you can hear the problem for them. You could help making the product much better, which you may enjoy more, and they may reward you with freebies or even cash.

I've found their user support really responsive, both before and after I purchased the software. Start here: https://www.modartt.com/support (and check your spam folder if you don't hear back in a couple of business days).

Let us know how it goes, even if it ends in nothing, because I'm really curious (no need to share the nitty-gritty technical and perhaps proprietary details, just the big picture).

Where do I find a list of all posts I upvoted? :(

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dv wrote:

Let me nudge you to reach out to the developers: I think with your recording background and the ability to hear at least some problems as you described, you can be a great helper for them to understand what the problem is. Even if they can't hear it, they can measure it: some of them also have a recording background so you'd speak a similar, if not same, language -- unlike the pianist without any sound engineering expertise I mentioned above. And you can hear the problem for them. You could help making the product much better, which you may enjoy more, and they may reward you with freebies or even cash.

I've found their user support really responsive, both before and after I purchased the software. Start here: https://www.modartt.com/support (and check your spam folder if you don't hear back in a couple of business days).

Let us know how it goes, even if it ends in nothing, because I'm really curious (no need to share the nitty-gritty technical and perhaps proprietary details, just the big picture).

Thanks for writing!

Actually, I did reach out five years ago, and the reply was “How about asking for advice in the Pianoteq user forum?”  It took me a while to get here.  I’ve replied to that old email from Support, pointing them here.

One thing for sure: there are those who are into classical piano and therefore are at home with acoustic instruments, and there are those who aren’t.  Those who aren’t are fine with a piano recorded with a mic close under or over the soundboard or over the action.  I wonder if there is anyone of the former among the engineers.

There’s lots to like about the Pianoteq synth.  It feels to me like most of the problem is in the rendering to recording with room sound, not so much with the physical modeling of the instrument.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:
Key Fumbler wrote:

I have seen folks selling their idea of professionally created presets for Pianoteq.  Make of those what you will.

Have you tried the fxp section?

Choice and use of external reverbs and EQ makes a huge difference - whether that difference is preferable is up to your ears.
If you go by the microphone theory alone to guide your microphone positioning you could end up stumped - follow the theory of course but trust your ears first and foremost.

Have you tried with other commercial piano products - sample libraries like Synchron?

Maybe you just don't like the Modartt model of the Steinway D?
Have you tried the Modartt B, or one of the other models such as the Grotrian, Petrof, Bluthner and Steingraeber?

Did not know about fxp, thanks.  But I didn’t find anything in the mp3 samples there.

Can you suggest external reverbs or EQ that will be the answer?

> Maybe you just don't like the Modartt model of the Steinway D?

Well maybe there is something fundamental about the synthesis that could be improved.  It feels to me like I'm hearing lots of little microphones placed right next to each strike point, and maybe no amount of mic placement or reverb is going to round that out and make it pleasing.  Maybe Modartt could think harder about how to produce sound that is more like a blend of the whole instrument instead of a summation of lots of right-up-close point sources, I wonder.

BTW, here is another example.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sonat...?i=4566026

I don't know of a silver bullet. I'm more considering shaping the sound into something you like, not a solution that magically takes Pianoteq from say 90% realistic to 95%, just an enjoyable tone that you like more.
The engine is what it is and it's superb, it isn't perfect though. Pianoteq can very often sound totally real and at other times I think it sounds synthetic in some way - then again I will hear an old recording from the 60s say and the piano tone is synthetic in a similar way! - classical recordings are false and mere stereo simulacrum too. I think there is an expectation bias at play. Also sometimes the brain picks up on the false elements in the sound and exaggerates them in our imagination.

Sometimes I can enjoy a real recorded piano. Other times I find recordings false and annoying. A really wide spread out stereo piano can sometimes really irritate me - especially when it's not a solo piano recording.  Other times the same recording I'm not so bothered. When analysing plugin presets that's bound to get even worse. It's like when you spend too much time mixing you can no longer judge the sound accurately any more and you have to take a break.

For a low cost have a play with ARverb. Currently $19 in the sale. 
https://arverb.com/
Have a play with Liquidsonics reverbs too.

Mostly external reverbs are for mxing multiple instruments together though. You already have good sounding tools within Pianoteq.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Key Fumbler wrote:

Sometimes I can enjoy a real recorded piano. Other times I find recordings false and annoying. A really wide spread out stereo piano can sometimes really irritate me - especially when it's not a solo piano recording.  Other times the same recording I'm not so bothered. When analysing plugin presets that's bound to get even worse. It's like when you spend too much time mixing you can no longer judge the sound accurately any more and you have to take a break.

Of course everybody has a different experience but what I experience myself (and that other pianist I mentioned and a few others I spoke with) is exactly in the timbre of Pianoteq. Not the spatial reconstruction, not the reverb, not the EQ.

davealtos wrote:

Thanks for writing!

Actually, I did reach out five years ago, and the reply was “How about asking for advice in the Pianoteq user forum?”  It took me a while to get here.  I’ve replied to that old email from Support, pointing them here.

You are most welcome! Funny to hear that 5 year story. I wonder what you wrote them back then for them to send you here.

I doubt they would have sent you here if you told them what you told us. You wrote about Pianoteq sounding like it was mic'ed with 88 tiny microphones each next to each triplet of strings. Which is how I believe the sound is generated in the first place, and if so there's nothing we can do to help -- whereas they can do stuff by tweaking the inner workings of the model. My understanding (which might be wrong) is that only after the sound is generated string-by-string it is "predended" to be captured by the actual positioning of the virtual microphones by "simply" adding delay, perhaps phase, and certainly microphone frequency response. I believe the vast majority of people here have no clues about what an array of tiny microphones next to each string sound compared to a single mic capturing the whole thing.

Speaking for myself, during the pandemic I spent about $500 in microphones and audio interface and tried to record my piano. I find that thing really hard and quit: recording with a phone is *so* much easier and sounds *so* much better! Not in general, obviously, but with the time/experience level than I have.

davealtos wrote:

there are those who are into classical piano and therefore are at home with acoustic instruments, and there are those who aren’t.  Those who aren’t are fine with a piano recorded with a mic close under or over the soundboard or over the action.  I wonder if there is anyone of the former among the engineers.

There’s lots to like about the Pianoteq synth.  It feels to me like most of the problem is in the rendering to recording with room sound, not so much with the physical modeling of the instrument.

I don't think it's about that. I am into classical piano and I have had acoustic instruments of various kind (including two acoustic pianos) at home. I like Pianoteq sound in the way I described before. The pianist I mentioned earlier never owned an acoustic one (but he does play on one occasionally). One other "hater" does have an acoustic.

As I said to KeyFumbler above, we are talking about the timbre, which could be created by the individually mic'ed strings, not the room reverb/location, but given my experience above, what do I know? Only what I am conscious about, yet it's probably a subconscious thing...

Where do I find a list of all posts I upvoted? :(

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Key Fumbler wrote:

For a low cost have a play with ARverb. Currently $19 in the sale. 
https://arverb.com/
Have a play with Liquidsonics reverbs too.

ARverb demos sound really good, thanks.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

It may be the case that the art of modeling the piano and room properly is not the same expertise as setting mics in the proper places at the proper angles to get the best recording possible, a la Al Schmitt.  I wonder if the custom microphone tool is the answer, but not an easy answer and also hard to prove wrong because getting mic's placed right is hard, so it could always be mic placement settings.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:
Key Fumbler wrote:

For a low cost have a play with ARverb. Currently $19 in the sale. 
https://arverb.com/

ARverb demos sound really good, thanks.

So many great (and different) algorithmic reverbs out there but at that price it's well worth adding this one too for anyone that uses Pianoteq in a DAW.

It can do a believable hall sound but it's a very short reverb compared to normal competition, so it's not an ideal Pop/ambient music FX reverb, just dedicated to sounding realistic when gluing instruments in a virtual room space when dialled in properly - which is easy as it's quite a simple tool.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Wow, thanks Key Fumbler for that link to ARreverb. I'll have a play with it and probably buy it - it's very affordable!

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Joseph Merrill wrote:

It may be the case that the art of modeling the piano and room properly is not the same expertise as setting mics in the proper places at the proper angles to get the best recording possible, a la Al Schmitt.  I wonder if the custom microphone tool is the answer, but not an easy answer and also hard to prove wrong because getting mic's placed right is hard, so it could always be mic placement settings.

Properly micing pianos is very hard indeed. To the point that you’re far more likely to end up with a better sound using Pianoteq than with a real miced piano.

Using Pianoteq in a DAW with a good reverb is worthwhile, as is limiting the velocity range to under 120, say 117 (instead of the max 127). 

127 is like hitting a real piano as hard as possible, which isn’t how you’d be playing. This could avoid the metallic sound some don’t like. Depends on how you’ve calibrated your keyboard I guess. If you have to hit really hard to get 127, great.

For external reverbs you can get a lot for free these days:

Acon verberate basic

Impulses to be loaded in a convolution reverb:
https://www.grantnelson.co/article/1/le...-responses
https://samplicity.com/bricasti-m7-impu...nse-files/

Free convolution reverbs:
https://www.meldaproduction.com/MConvolutionEZ
https://www.bestservice.com/en/halls_of...50%20years
https://impulserecord.com/project/convology-xt-plugin/

Epic plate and reverb: https://varietyofsound.wordpress.com/downloads/

Valhalla supermassive plus some free presets:
https://howardsmithsounds.com/free-pres...ve-v2-0-0/
https://solidtrax.nl/product/earth-stars/
https://audiovoltage.com/montrose/

Adding at the end of the audio chain some nice EQ like a tube emulation one (Rule Tec heritage for example, not free) can help, plus stuff like a tube effect - tube2 from Airwindows is good (donationware).

For reverbs I’d also use the Abbey Road trick and control what the reverb processes. Typically nothing under 200Hz or above 5KHz is what I do.

Last edited by dikrek (19-11-2023 15:35)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Supermassive is good but isn't intended to have a realistic sound, or even model an old hardware reverb sound. It is an FX plugin that some people might enjoy on piano but for the purpose of this thread certainly doesn't suit comparisons with D. gramophone. Just as I wouldn't recommend chorusing or flanger for this purpose.
To reiterate a good plugin though.:)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Key Fumbler wrote:

Supermassive is good but isn't intended to have a realistic sound, or even model an old hardware reverb sound. It is an FX plugin that some people might enjoy on piano but for the purpose of this thread certainly doesn't suit comparisons with D. gramophone. Just as I wouldn't recommend chorusing or flanger for this purpose.
To reiterate a good plugin though.:)

Which is why I linked a bunch of presets that make it sound more like a great normal algorithmic reverb

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dikrek wrote:
Key Fumbler wrote:

Supermassive is good but isn't intended to have a realistic sound, or even model an old hardware reverb sound. It is an FX plugin that some people might enjoy on piano but for the purpose of this thread certainly doesn't suit comparisons with D. gramophone. Just as I wouldn't recommend chorusing or flanger for this purpose.
To reiterate a good plugin though.:)

Which is why I linked a bunch of presets that make it sound more like a great normal algorithmic reverb

Sure, but IMHO a bit pointless with plenty of free and very low cost plugins that were actually programmed with that intention around these days.

ARVerb ($17 currently) is obviously superior than a carefully honed Supermassive preset that's trying to fight against it's design - even if it's a free Plugin and free presets.
You should try the ARVerb demo, that's free for quite a while anyway.

Hopefully you won't take this advice as combative. Seriously it's not the right tool here - in this specific case.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Key Fumbler wrote:
dikrek wrote:
Key Fumbler wrote:

Supermassive is good but isn't intended to have a realistic sound, or even model an old hardware reverb sound. It is an FX plugin that some people might enjoy on piano but for the purpose of this thread certainly doesn't suit comparisons with D. gramophone. Just as I wouldn't recommend chorusing or flanger for this purpose.
To reiterate a good plugin though.:)

Which is why I linked a bunch of presets that make it sound more like a great normal algorithmic reverb

Sure, but IMHO a bit pointless with plenty of free and very low cost plugins that were actually programmed with that intention around these days.

ARVerb ($17 currently) is obviously superior than a carefully honed Supermassive preset that's trying to fight against it's design - even if it's a free Plugin and free presets.
You should try the ARVerb demo, that's free for quite a while anyway.

Hopefully you won't take this advice as combative. Seriously it's not the right tool here - in this specific case.

All good - anyway I put in there many that are really good for realistic spaces. But I added supermassive because it’s gotten me out of a jam several times where the usual suspects wouldn’t work.

It was unexpected but it worked amazingly well.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dikrek wrote:
Key Fumbler wrote:
dikrek wrote:

Which is why I linked a bunch of presets that make it sound more like a great normal algorithmic reverb

Sure, but IMHO a bit pointless with plenty of free and very low cost plugins that were actually programmed with that intention around these days.

ARVerb ($17 currently) is obviously superior than a carefully honed Supermassive preset that's trying to fight against it's design - even if it's a free Plugin and free presets.
You should try the ARVerb demo, that's free for quite a while anyway.

Hopefully you won't take this advice as combative. Seriously it's not the right tool here - in this specific case.

All good - anyway I put in there many that are really good for realistic spaces. But I added supermassive because it’s gotten me out of a jam several times where the usual suspects wouldn’t work.

It was unexpected but it worked amazingly well.

Indeed,  occasionally when mixing modern electronic style music, rock, pop funk and say modern jazz then Supermassive (and even some delay plugins) could sound less overly busy or muddy sounding on a track compared to adding another instance of a more naturalistic sounding room reverb. Especially when you have some reverb in your track already.

That's not what is required here. The OP wants just the raw piano in a real room sound. Not pop record style, DG or Decca classical style.

Last edited by Key Fumbler (19-11-2023 16:07)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Key Fumbler wrote:
dikrek wrote:
Key Fumbler wrote:

Sure, but IMHO a bit pointless with plenty of free and very low cost plugins that were actually programmed with that intention around these days.

ARVerb ($17 currently) is obviously superior than a carefully honed Supermassive preset that's trying to fight against it's design - even if it's a free Plugin and free presets.
You should try the ARVerb demo, that's free for quite a while anyway.

Hopefully you won't take this advice as combative. Seriously it's not the right tool here - in this specific case.

All good - anyway I put in there many that are really good for realistic spaces. But I added supermassive because it’s gotten me out of a jam several times where the usual suspects wouldn’t work.

It was unexpected but it worked amazingly well.

Indeed,  occasionally when mixing modern electronic style music, rock, pop funk and say modern jazz then Supermassive (and even some delay plugins) could sound less overly busy or muddy sounding on a track compared to adding another instance of a more naturalistic sounding room reverb. Especially when you have some reverb in your track already.

That's not what is required here. The OP wants just the raw piano in a real room sound. Not pop record style, DG or Decca classical style.

For real room sound, the Acon one plus the convolution ones with the right impulses would be the ticket.

But sometimes we think we want a realistic room sound, and in the end what we end up liking (and what works better with the sound source) may be something altogether different

A favorite trick: convolution reverb feeding an algorithmic one.

Last edited by dikrek (19-11-2023 16:19)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Well, I went ahead and bought ARVerb. It seemed too good to miss at the price, and I'll enjoy working with it. And there's no faffing around with iLok or installer software, yay!

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dikrek wrote:

For reverbs I’d also use the Abbey Road trick and control what the reverb processes. Typically nothing under 200Hz or above 5KHz is what I do.

This TY video recently "debunked" the Abbey Road trick "myth" concluding putting EQ pre or post reverb makes no difference.  I pushed back in a comment (Joseph Merrill) with some gentle skepticism based on it seeming to matter to my ears and the limited number of test cases used in the video.  I did a search on if reverberation creates any frequency content that is not there, even if you measure impulse responses inside a piano.  According to what I found reverberation, even in a piano, adds no new frequency content, which I found surprising but not shocking.  Still not completely convinced either way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UqSEOd...tionExpert

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Joseph Merrill wrote:
dikrek wrote:

For reverbs I’d also use the Abbey Road trick and control what the reverb processes. Typically nothing under 200Hz or above 5KHz is what I do.

This TY video recently "debunked" the Abbey Road trick "myth" concluding putting EQ pre or post reverb makes no difference.  I pushed back in a comment (Joseph Merrill) with some gentle skepticism based on it seeming to matter to my ears and the limited number of test cases used in the video.  I did a search on if reverberation creates any frequency content that is not there, even if you measure impulse responses inside a piano.  According to what I found reverberation, even in a piano, adds no new frequency content, which I found surprising but not shocking.  Still not completely convinced either way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UqSEOd...tionExpert

The way I experience it, if I don’t do some high pass filtering and also the trick, audio can become tiring.

It’s not just about how it sounds but also about long-term pressure.

So even with the Abbey Road trick I do a gentle 50Hz HPF at the final output.

FYI my normal reverb is the Relab LX480 which has a built-in system for what frequencies to process. I prefer that to having a separate EQ.

Last edited by dikrek (19-11-2023 20:17)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

I notice the Pianoteq mic tool lets you send the output of up to 5 mics to separate channels.  By default it seems most piano models have the mics routed to stereo channels.  One thing to try would be to send them all to separate channels, or two sets of stereo channels and do some separate processing.  This would be additional to any mic adjustments you think you can make to make it sound better. 

In a real world recording you can get a lot out of position and angle, manipulating the phase in a good way to enhance results.  Anyone get the sense that angle and position of mics is resulting in the phase relationships your ear expects?   I never really recorded live acoustic instruments so I can't really say.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dikrek wrote:
Joseph Merrill wrote:
dikrek wrote:

For reverbs I’d also use the Abbey Road trick and control what the reverb processes. Typically nothing under 200Hz or above 5KHz is what I do.

This TY video recently "debunked" the Abbey Road trick "myth" concluding putting EQ pre or post reverb makes no difference.  I pushed back in a comment (Joseph Merrill) with some gentle skepticism based on it seeming to matter to my ears and the limited number of test cases used in the video.  I did a search on if reverberation creates any frequency content that is not there, even if you measure impulse responses inside a piano.  According to what I found reverberation, even in a piano, adds no new frequency content, which I found surprising but not shocking.  Still not completely convinced either way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UqSEOd...tionExpert

The way I experience it, if I don’t do some high pass filtering and also the trick, audio can become tiring.

It’s not just about how it sounds but also about long-term pressure.

So even with the Abbey Road trick I do a gentle 50Hz HPF at the final output.

FYI my normal reverb is the Relab LX480 which has a built-in system for what frequencies to process. I prefer that to having a separate EQ.

Yeah my experience is EQ before the reverb sounds cleaner than EQ after.   That video is straight up saying the two null though.  To the extent someone exhaustively null tests in a scientific way, I think you have to accept the null test over ears but the fallacy that I worry about in the video is that a few null tests don't prove a generality and my ears definitely heard a difference in the past.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Joseph Merrill wrote:
dikrek wrote:
Joseph Merrill wrote:

This TY video recently "debunked" the Abbey Road trick "myth" concluding putting EQ pre or post reverb makes no difference.  I pushed back in a comment (Joseph Merrill) with some gentle skepticism based on it seeming to matter to my ears and the limited number of test cases used in the video.  I did a search on if reverberation creates any frequency content that is not there, even if you measure impulse responses inside a piano.  According to what I found reverberation, even in a piano, adds no new frequency content, which I found surprising but not shocking.  Still not completely convinced either way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UqSEOd...tionExpert

The way I experience it, if I don’t do some high pass filtering and also the trick, audio can become tiring.

It’s not just about how it sounds but also about long-term pressure.

So even with the Abbey Road trick I do a gentle 50Hz HPF at the final output.

FYI my normal reverb is the Relab LX480 which has a built-in system for what frequencies to process. I prefer that to having a separate EQ.

Yeah my experience is EQ before the reverb sounds cleaner than EQ after.   That video is straight up saying the two null though.  To the extent someone exhaustively null tests in a scientific way, I think you have to accept the null test over ears but the fallacy that I worry about in the video is that a few null tests don't prove a generality and my ears definitely heard a difference in the past.

It’s an incredibly common piece of advice for reverbs. And I don’t use the same EQ. My settings are 200Hz-5KHz or so in LX480, then at the main out (not the reverb out, but the actual master buss) I do the gentle highpass at 50Hz.

Anyway whether you EQ the input to the reverb or the reverb’s output (which is what I think the video tries to prove) isn’t the point.

The point is one shouldn’t apply reverb to the whole frequency spectrum all the time - that’s the essence of the “trick”.

Last edited by dikrek (19-11-2023 21:37)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Actually, I think it comes down to the sound of the piano and the room.  Mic placement is relatively easy:
- avoid being close, especially
   - close to the action (clattering)
   - under the soundboard (just horrible)
   - over the soundboard (thudding and/or clattering)
- avoid messing with the mic frequency response with cardioid etc.
- avoid mics with artifacts, like dynamic and ribbon mics

I find some high-reverb, non-DGG, live recordings can be very pleasing.  Examples:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AdJjcsOmzRo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bn-rhRmPI0k [too bad about the treble notes that stick out for some reason]

When I got my first real gig, at Marlboro Music Festival, Bud Graham, old hand classical recording engineer who had done lots of classical recording for Marlboro and decades prior, told me that in the old days when they recorded Rachmaninoff and others, they used to place the mic off the end of the piano, level with the top of the rim. This gave a good overall and warm sound, free of clatter and not lacking in treble.  Surprising, eh?

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:

Actually, I think it comes down to the sound of the piano and the room.  Mic placement is relatively easy:
- avoid being close, especially
   - close to the action (clattering)
   - under the soundboard (just horrible)
   - over the soundboard (thudding and/or clattering)
- avoid messing with the mic frequency response with cardioid etc.
- avoid mics with artifacts, like dynamic and ribbon mics

I notice a lot of the preset mic positions include ones placed right in the piano, often cardioids.  Pulling them out seems to declog the thickness a bit.  Shortened up the reverb as well, a mixed little drier and I liked it better.  When you look at default Pianoteq mic placements any general advice on adjustments compared to what you're seeing in presets?

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Joseph Merrill wrote:

When you look at default Pianoteq mic placements any general advice on adjustments compared to what you're seeing in presets?

I think I pretty much covered my understanding in my post that you replied to.

Last edited by davealtos (20-11-2023 10:05)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dikrek wrote:

Anyway whether you EQ the input to the reverb or the reverb’s output (which is what I think the video tries to prove) isn’t the point.

The point is one shouldn’t apply reverb to the whole frequency spectrum all the time - that’s the essence of the “trick”.

Not necessarily something I'd recommend for a fidelity situation but I also find that reverbs will sit better with a dry track if I put the reverb on a separate channel and do weird transformations on the way in that skew toward adventurous.  You get two benefits: quite weird effects but kind of hiding which is sort of like a best of two extremes, and the transformations pre-reverb seem to get the reverb and the dry signal out of each others' way.  If I do weird stuff on the way into a reverb, the reverb channel end up 100% wet or rather close to 100% wet.  This was like the one use I had for Waves Enigma for example.  The normal issue with reverb is it's a copy of a timing-blender version of the same frequencies and then you just add them back together.  EQing helps but modulation effects, things that tweak the frequencies, can also help them be complimentary textures.

Last edited by Joseph Merrill (20-11-2023 07:42)

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

@davealtos: are you willing to prepare some mic placements to upload to fxp corner? I'm always keen to try settings from people with real-world recording experience. In Pianoteq I can get the mics somewhere near to what I want, but then I struggle with the fine adjustments to get a really balanced sound. Generally in v8 I find that the Hamburg Steinway D seems to give me the best chance of getting a satisfying 'piano in a hall' sound.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

dazric wrote:

@davealtos: are you willing to prepare some mic placements to upload to fxp corner? I'm always keen to try settings from people with real-world recording experience.

I don’t have any to offer.  Everything I’ve tried is unsatisfying.  My hope was/is that there is someone here who has something interesting.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:
dazric wrote:

@davealtos: are you willing to prepare some mic placements to upload to fxp corner? I'm always keen to try settings from people with real-world recording experience.

I don’t have any to offer.  Everything I’ve tried is unsatisfying.  My hope was/is that there is someone here who has something interesting.

Sigh. I hope that Modartt looks hard at your "tiny microphones" comment, after your nudge from contacting them and perhaps uses that clue to improve the sound leaps and bounds beyond what they have done so far (as I wrote earlier, not that the current sound is bad, but the improvements have been marginal and the main problems -- for those who can hear them -- have remained unchanged for years)

Where do I find a list of all posts I upvoted? :(

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

davealtos wrote:
dazric wrote:

@davealtos: are you willing to prepare some mic placements to upload to fxp corner? I'm always keen to try settings from people with real-world recording experience.

I don’t have any to offer.  Everything I’ve tried is unsatisfying.  My hope was/is that there is someone here who has something interesting.

Oh, that is so disappointing, but somehow it doesn't surprise me. I've given up trying to do my own mic settings because I got so frustrated over the fine adjustments. I came to the conclusion that my time was better spent making music rather than messing around with virtual mics.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

I've always thought of pianos as morsels of very fine chocolate or a fine dessert. Some pianos are deep and dark just like an expensive dark semi-sweet chocolate. The real Bösendorfer Imperial comes to mind when I think of this while others are bright and minty such as the Petroff or in older pianos the Streicher both in real life and modeled. The Streicher in particular has its nice clear sound overall with its clear bell like treble and rumbly bass which is very similar to my own Vogel 177T grand I play often when not using Pianoteq.

The problem I've noticed since version 8 is the pianos sound brighter especially in the treble compared to the older versions of Pianoteq. The NY Steinway D for example lost its "Steinway sound" and became flatter and boring without that twinkle and overtone the real Steinway has and the earlier models captured somewhat. Comparing the NY Steinway D to the Steingraeber or other pianos and the same change is there as well. I wonder if the changes made in 8.x.x to fix some of the anomalies we had before flattened the sound overall for all the pianos.

This change has taken the individuality out of the pianos and made them all the same as this has flattened the overtones and timbre that each of the different piano builders offer.

Re: Pianoteq setup for the DGG classical recording sound

Has anyone from Modartt looked at this discussion?