T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1244.1 | some have more than 16 note polyphony | AITG::ARNOLD | Back from Brown University (sort of) | Thu Mar 10 1988 09:18 | 6 |
| Not that it diminishes the argument of .0 at all, but I think the
Kurzweil PX-1000 (or whatever the piano version is) supports 24 notes.
I believe the folks at Kurzweil (in their brochures) think that
this helps add to the realism of their products.
- John -
|
1244.2 | 101 strings.... | BARTLS::MOLLER | Vegetation: A way of life | Thu Mar 10 1988 11:45 | 11 |
| An awful lot of piano music is dependant on the sympathetic vibration
of the 'non-played' strings, when the Pedal is pushed. I happen
to like the feel of it. I suspect that you could set up simple patch
that came close to this quality, but the tone would end up changing
for each note that you hit, or the background tone would be a chord's
worth of background tones. I don't think that it would sound right.
Then again, if you set the tone up as a single note type of sound
& used some reverb..... Naw, I'll just keep my Piano for that sort
of thing when I record at home, and not worry about it live.
Jens
|
1244.3 | new pedal approach needed | PLDVAX::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Thu Mar 10 1988 12:21 | 19 |
| I think the sustain on the SPX90 would suffice, but you'd have to
be able to turn it on and off with a pedal.
Well, you CAN 'bypass' with a pedal (I do), but the thing is,
when you push the pedal to use the effect, you would hear
sustained tones from all previous recent playing; i.e., it wouldn't
just start over acquiring tones to sustain when you hit the pedal
Now, it would work to RECALL the sustain effect each time you
hit the pedal, and bypass when you let it up, but that would require
computer control, taking pedal inputs and sending them out to the
SPX.
It's obvious (from other current discussions here) that there is
a
need (I can hit my own RETURN, thankyou) need for a device like
so:
Accepts switch pedal inputs of different types, sends them to the
computer, the computer program interprets them any way you want,
and sends appropriate codes to the synths/effects.
Tom
|
1244.4 | | RANGLY::BOTTOM_DAVID | Wilderness king of da' bluz | Thu Mar 10 1988 13:33 | 4 |
| I noticed that even my curde JX3P sounds more piano-like with a
good reverb patch running on the MIDIverbII....but only more 'like'
dave
|
1244.5 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Lion showing teeth .NE. smile | Thu Mar 10 1988 15:38 | 28 |
| As the former owner of a 16-voice 'piano' and current owner of a
24-voice 'piano', I tell you that I never heard ANY truncation from
EITHER unit. I've also got some decent piano samples for the Emax,
an 8-voice unit, and you can hear some truncation when playing
passages with the sustain pedal down.
I don't think the 'generic string wash' sample idea would work,
for the simple reason that the overtones generated sympathetically
are changing moment by moment. Perhaps some very fast calculations
could be made regarding what overtone series to emphasize. However,
this would also impact the number of available voices issue.
My only other offering on the sustain wash issue is the one I put in the
Kurzweil note : use a MIDI-switchable digital reverb and somehow
link (software/hardare) pedal on/off (MIDI controller #64) to the
MIDI patch changes for the reverb unit.. pedal off, small & 'dark',
on, large and 'bright'. This is possible today.
When I saw the topic name I thought this was gonna be about the
resonant characteristics of the piano body; the 'formant' EQ curve.
Finding a way to digitally impose various formant EQ curves on
outgoing samples (not just pianos, cellos, basses, etc.) would add
more realism.. of course, all those notes were sampled from real
instruments anyhow, so maybe those 'formant' frequency curves are
builtin already.. except that the formants change as the notes are
transposed digitally..
karl
|
1244.6 | y | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Snowstorm Canoeist | Thu Mar 10 1988 15:41 | 9 |
| Re: "Formants"
The ESQ-1 and SQ-80 have formant waves (multisampled across the
KB) built right in.
The PIANO2 patch uses one, I believe.
-Bill
|