Pboy wrote:Oh me oh my, guess it's time for me to take a closer look ...
Didn't realize there are more settings hiding behind the pretty piano pictures ...
Fab
Whatever you do, don't right-click on any of those sliders! - Even more controls
BTW above kawai_user3535 mentioned 'humanized probability' - to try that out.. you can set some of that with right-clicks on various controls, so that Pianoteq doesn't just default to stagnant amounts for the things you set. Not all controls have it, but many do - so you kind of can tailor a kind of loosen up the 'Condition' for various aspects, whilst keeping other things more tight - esp. good if you don't want the condition slider to go too far with out-of-tune elements.. instead, keep tuning perfect, but right-click the various sliders and increase the amount of random behaviours for just the things you want to go more randomly 'not perfect'.
That's an awesome double sound-and-a-half+ there Piet! with a twist of lemon! Like you say mmmmaybe not 1:1 with a physical sitar but actually sounds more inspiring to me than some software sitars.
Absolutely love layers, for making 3 differently edited instruments work together.. like making different attacks/blooms, fussing with extended reverb for one or more layers, echoesechoesechoes and extreme EQs, amp etc and mixing those so that maybe 2 layers are mixed low in volume but give a 'pad' background for one of the layers with kind of a melody focus - it's fun trying to make sounds you haven't heard before.
For Pboy or anyone getting into the idea of checking out what' spossible with all the controls, which can go well beyond subtle too, a totally simplistic way to get started in layers, along those lines.. try loading in 3 layers (any piano you have, even the same one for all 3).. then for each click the 'random' icon. See how absolutely non-piano-like it sounds.. then mix those layers until you hear something you kind of like about those.. then try making a strange piece of music.. imagine it's for a film (a scene where someone walks in a forest at night - or drives in a car in a neon-lit city at night - or a desert island at sunset - whatever takes your imagination).
Absolutely agree too Stig - temperaments can inspire in a lot of different ways. Love those from the past, esp. nice with period era pianos and similar era of music.
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors