salvadorl wrote:Hi I am not from Modartt but I can say the B3 organ is an analog electronic instruments that radically differs from the non-electronic instruments they are modeling. For example, the routing path for generating notes on a B3 is nothing like a piano or a pipe organ making the PianoTeq & OrganTeq engines inapropriate for this purpose. IMHO I don't see why they would offer such an intrument especially knowing that a very accurate emulator plugin exist: VB3 II
I am not from Modartt either, and I completely disagree.
First, it doesn't matter that another company already has a similar product, otherwise they would not be modeling pianos either, since there were many other companies doing pianos when they started. The question is more about them being able to do it "better" in either sound quality, or technical requirements on the hardware (e.g. less disk space for the samples) or software (e.g. Linux version), or perhaps even price, etc.
Of course what it *does* matter is if Modartt think they can do such "better".
Most importantly, from the technical point of view, if you read the various science papers, Ph.D. thesis and the likes, you'd see that there is no inherent limit on the modeling being limited to the electronic vs acoustic: pianoteq is just a very sophisticated synth that can indeed realistically synthesize the sound of the piano. The sound of the B3 organ is much simpler and hence within scope of what should be possible to do.
In fact starting with the existing electric pianos, increasing the attack envelope, zeroing the hammer noise, maximizing the impedance and reducing the spectrum profile of the higher harmonics, one quickly gets a decent sound of a electronic organ. I think that spending more time with the various other settings in both the design and voicing sections, one can get something really good. What you cannot do by yourself is giving the "infinite sustain" of the organ, obviously, because the impedence value in the user interface is limited in range. But as Modartt said in various occasions, they have internally access to larger ranges and more parameters that they use to model different instruments and I have no doubts that they could model a good (if not excellent) B3 organ with limited efforts, perhaps even less efforts than they spent for each of the branded pianos.
I am also sure that at the $50 regular ($35 discounted as it is now) it would be an instrument which would sell well on its own and would probably increase sales of Pianoteq itself too, with the Stage version (with the B3 and another instrument) for example being competitive with the VB3-II and having a much more competitive pricing update policy!
Where do I find a list of all posts I upvoted? :(