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| quote: | Originally posted by Vizay
ahh yeah pianoteq, forgot to mention that one.
It's a really nifty plug if you can settle for somewhat good. It's easy to use but compared to a multisample steinway or something similar it's lightyears behind. |
I've never tried pianoteq, could you elaborate on this? In what way is it light years behind?
Watching a pianoteq video, they talk about things such as if one key is held down (without sounding) and you play a different key, it will affect the sound of the key that is played. They say that multisampled pianos don't change the sample being played - if you play C4 for example, it will play one of the C4 samples, it doesn't trigger a different sample if you happen to be holding down C0 while you play, or C#0 while you play, or D0 while you play (and so on, for every key on the piano - then you can hold two keys down and repeat the process) - obviously it's not just when holding keys down, but when you play keys together, the interaction of the harmonics between the keys.
It just kinda made sense, that multisampled pianos won't do that. I haven't actually tried pianoteq, but going by the audio demos, to my ears it just sounds like a well recorded piano. Potentially they have a lot of work to do on the synthesis engine, but to my ears it sounds totally fine to put into a trance song. And 15 megs as opposed to many gigs is a big plus in my book.
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