Sympathetic resonance is not only about the higher keys - any time you have more than one key down, there will be sympathetic cross-resonance between the corresponding strings. This is why a piano chord is more than playing the samples of different notes together.
I think you need to hit the pedal on that tubular bell setting to let them ring, but you're not wrong. Also, "Hey man, can I borrow everything" on the handpan section made me laugh out loud at work. You're going to get me fired. Another great vid man!
14:56 is such a good moment hahahah your reaction is so genuine. I bought pianoteq a year ago because of this you and this video; thank you -- this is hands down the best money iv ever spent on a virtual instrument. So much value.
Pianoteq is the best for playing. As responsive and live as an acoustic piano. And that's what a pianist needs. Sampled VST pianos may have better sounds for hitting one key or some limited recordings, but playing them... they are as cold as dead. Just recorded sounds with limited velocity and resonance. No response to the touch and definitely not live!
Yes totally agree. You can't fully appreciate Pianoteq's qualities until you try playing it for yourself - just listening to it doesn't do it justice. I've been using Pianoteq since version 1, and while it didn't sound as good back then as some of the massive piano sample libraries out there, it was far more enjoyable to play. Since then, Pianoteq have been really working on the sound modelling, and improving it with each iteration. The piano feels 'alive' under your fingertips, rather than playing sample libraries that just don't respond in the same way.
One of the greatest features, albeit hard to find at first, is 'MIDI Archiving'. You can find it if you click the little triangle that appears beneath the MIDI song title at the top right. You can enable or disable the automatic recording function, and set it to save every note you play while in Pianoteq, from "One Hour" to "A Billion Years", in the archives folder, (which can also be exported to MIDI files). The ability to render a MIDI file, or your own live playing into a 24 bit .WAV file is another feature built in that makes it well worth the price, when you consider most sample banks and VST require a DAW to render a MIDI file. If you are on a slow machine that can't process all the polyphony in a MIDI file in real time, or keep up with one's virtuosity, (or "lead-foot" sustain pedal playing) you can still easily render the file for auditioning at full resolution. (I use a MIDI file of Rhapsody In Blue played live, as an average benchmark for CPU performance indexing.) Another technique to increase available polyphony is to dial the sample rate output to 22Khz, which will still give you sound comparable to a home digital piano, which often use 22,000 Hz as a sample rate, brick-walled, depending on the fact that the average piano tone does not exceed upper range frequencies. The fact that it is now endorsed by Steinway & Sons should be reason enough to buy it, because a real Steinway B or D is out of the budget of most keyboardists anyway. But the real reason to own it is so Moddart can make it even better. They are a truly dedicated team of geniuses, and the community that has sprouted up around it and in the forums, are the nicest people who really love music for the sake of it, from all walks, and not just the "studio geeks" that have every sample bank ever recorded. Pianoteq, from Stage to Pro runs the gamut of piano enthusiast from the MIDI file collectors who just want a great "Player Piano", to the professional musician who wants the full expression that even the best multi-sample libraries can't pull off. It reminds me of my first Keyboards, a Kurzweil K1000, followed by a DX7II-FD; one that had a great piano sample for the time, (but with very little expression), and the DX that had such a dynamic, expressive FM sound, (and I wanted both combined). Ever since I read about piano modeling in an Issue of Keyboard magazine in the eighties, I dreamt about having the perfect digital piano that would rival even a real acoustic piano. I thought sample technology would get us there first, but I had the feeling a computer might edge it out when computing power reached a much higher exponential. Pianoteq, for me, is that dream realized. I would like to also say, I am not affiliated with the company, but please don't listen to any excuses you hear, or nay-sayers arguing what is better in the comments sections, sampling or modeling, they are branches on the same tree. Pianoteq is one of those tenacious products that keep getting better, even when you think it can't. I suspect that trend will continue, but not when the misconceptions about it and the process of obscured by misinformation are allowed to filter through the "social engines". Most people easily 'get' the process of sampling, and most here have attempted it, and know what an art it can be, but this is alien territory for most, the math and theory alone is incomprehensible to many, and that is intimidating. But what I find even more intimidating, is seeing innovation like this squashed by the market-place, for the almighty dollar, or having it become the newest trend for the big keyboard makers to exploit and go no further for lack of affordability, or to be looked at as mere "research" into sound synthesis. It is beyond that at this point. A good indication of this can be witnessed in the failure of the V-Piano, and Roland's foray into 'modeling' early on with the RD-1000 (MKS-20). I wonder if Pianoteq were burned into a ROM, and marketed as a physical keyboard alike, it might die a similar death in the market-place, but my hope is with the 'Steinway' stamp of approval, amongst the Grotrian, Bluthner, ETC. (I'm waiting for Bosendorfer to get onboard), this is the product to bet on for the future of Digital Pianos to come. I wish I could recall the actual article and issue of "Keyboard" magazine, because I recall the author (Bob Doerschuk?) implying that someday sampling and or modeling technology may someday create a sound to rival and even replace the acoustic piano entirely. We may almost be there with Pianoteq 6...
I was caught by the title, and wondered what you ment by that. This surpriseed me and I was blown away! I new that pianosounds are hard to emulate, but didn’t know it has come to this level....! Thank you so much for showing!
I remember checking this out a couple years ago and it wasn't too convincing, but I see it now sounds great ! And WOW, seeing all the presets ! This is really an amazing instrument.
I like the idea of real time production of a sound because then you're actually producing it from scratch each time, working and interacting with an entity, instead of playing a sample.
This was such a thorough and well thought review, I'm surprised that I actually watched the entire thing! Best of luck on your new studio space and hope to see more of your videos.
This is definitely way ahead of most sample libraries in a number of ways, it seems more seamless and naturally dynamic through out the entire key range. I can see how this modeling will be especially nice for small ensembles.....the Swam instruments are very impressive as well.
aw man this is so cool, I was just messing around with the trial version on their website... a 0.7MB file with so many realistic instruments inside of it and instant load times. Really looking forward to stuff like this becoming the norm
IMO I am totally satisfied with Pianoteq Stage. The presets are perfectly crafted, I actually like it that there's less stuff to fiddle with. Less distraction= more playing.
Awesome and knowledgable, thank you! I have been using the trial (which btw just has some dead keys and goes off after 20min) on Linux (as a plugin in Ardour) and am still blown away how it turns a stage piano into a real upright.
Well I just discovered your channel. I’m impressed mostly by the fact that not only do you love synths but you are clearly a highly educated musician. You are Right On about the Medusa by the way. I’m a fan now to be sure. I also love this piano program. Those guys are not fucking around!
Totally agree with you, actually I predicted this when the first Pianoteq version was released. Just two things, Kontakt libraries can be used with Kontakt player which is free, and for sympathetic resonance hold sustain and press several keys with the same note on different octaves, once the sound gets quiet and without releasing the sustain, hit the same note on a lower octave, because the fundamental frequency of the higher notes corresponds to the harmonics of the lower notes they will resonate in cascade producing a very rich harmonic content, then release the sustain and hit the same lower note to see the difference. Great review btw, subscribed already and looking forward for more. Cheers!
a simpler way to demonstrate this is press e.g. a lower C note down, so softly that it doesn't make a noise. keep it down. then play C notes and octave higher and you will see the note you holding down 'resonate'. once you lift that note up you will notice the sound disappear.
"Dear Lord, this lighting makes me look like a 50 year old cigar smoker!" I can hear my 50 year old cigar smoker friends harrumphing all the way from over here.
I was lacking a piano sample for my laptop with no HD space left and couldn't believe my luck when I found Pianoteq. I just bought the cheap stage version, which was around £90 and, although it might lack some advanced features, it still has settings for action, mallet bounce, eq and effects - which is plenty for me. At that price, it's a no-brainer. I still prefer the Korg Kronos Piano in the higher notes, but I think the Pianoteq is more fun to play - it responds to the keys better. Great video :)
OK, so, awesome video as usual. You're one of the greats on this platform IMHO. If you ever get around to reading this, I'm wondering if you could shed some light on a mystery regarding the Benn and Gear theme song. I'm noticing that I can distinctly toggle between hearing it two different ways. I can hear it as a V-IV-I progression but I gravitate toward it being an unresolved I-bVII-IV progression. Did you intend the first or last of these three chords as home base or was made to be it ambiguous by design? I know I've definitely taken artistic advantage of tonal ambiguity on occasion.
Sympathetic resonance: To show off sympathetic resonance, take two notes that have common overtones, hold one quietly (or let it fade), keep holding it, Then hit the other note hard. The common overtones will resonate on the held note. For example: hold C4 quietly, hit F3 (a perfect 5th below), you should hear C5 resonate, for it is the 2nd harmonic of C4 and 3rd harmonic of F3. If you switch keys (hold F3, hit C4) you will still get C5 only that now it resonates off of F3. This is just a simple example, others can be much more complex. String length: it mainly affects the sound of the bass notes - the longer they are, the cleaner they are (less "inharmonious" overtones)
Yes, but the price comparison that makes sense is with sample-based plugins, because that's the alternative within a computer, not an actual piano. Same way it wouldn't make sense for a city-building game to cost $10 billion just because "it's a lot less expensive than actually building a city".
@@foljs5858 The comparison is fair because all of the sampled pianos are audio Polaroids of a given piano at a given moment in time and anyone playing them is playing the exact same thing every time they fire it up. The Pianoteq is everything that's a piano, warts and all, and up to you. There's no way to get an overtight tuning in the mids of a sampled piano from sounding like a banjo, just like there's no way on a real piano, either, until you call somebody it wears itself loose. save the sample will never wear. Add realtime sympathetic resonance and you're completely out of the sample ballpark. This and samples is apples and oranges.
except you can find pianos and organs for free EVERYWHERE simply due to the effort and cost of transporting them, ive acquired 3 pianos and one 70s organ for free in the past few years.
I'm as excited as you about Pianoteq ( 6 in particular ) .. The possibilities are mind boggling and the one certain fact about it is that it makes me want to play music on it. I honestly don't know about the "lack of attack" according to one comment here thus discarding it as "rubbish". I have an acoustic Yamaha C3 and this is the only software piano that can give me a dead note (no sound) if I don't manage my pianissimo well which is a challenge in playing a real piano. I am also able to play fast repeated on it notes without lagging, it just snaps back as a real piano. This in my opinion it is the closest experience to playing a real piano from a computer.
You can lower the cpu usage in the preferences/perf section, by lowering internal sample rate Great review, a great product. For people who say it sounds fake, well, not sure what they're hearing.
That's a great sounding piano! I recently bought an acoustic upright piano for practice but might get Pianoteq just for the sounds. The only thing that comes close for me is the Keyscape but I haven't tried it hands-on, only listened on YT so if the loading times are true, then Pianoteq is the only player left. Great video, those 40 minutes flew by fast!
For me sampling is already payed for because I have the equipment. I think it's very interesting with the possebileties this software opens the door to. I don't use the piano so much anymore, but I see this is crazy good compared to the last piano emulation software I tryed and never used for anything.
Actually, I prefer Syntronik over Arturia much more. Syntronik is a hybrid, has sampled oscillators of all important synths in combination with modeled filters. Preserves all the flexibility, but sounds much more alive. Omnisphere has something like that as well, and UVI Vintage Vault.
@@aleksandari.7834 Honestly, I own uvi vintage Vault and Syntronik and I've used archery acquired a bit, and for synthesizers, all of them are extremely disappointing compared to real synthesizers. It's just so lifeless. I like the Wurlitzer, but still it can't nearly compared to a real Wurlitzer. It makes sense to use if you can't afford real synthesizers or you need to produce a lot of music with a very specific sounds and you need to get in the ballpark of specific classic synthesizers, but I'd much rather own 3-4 synthesizers that are and sound real compared to every vintage classic synthesizer in software that doesn't even come close.
Okay, Pianoteq is insane. Too expensive for me personally, but insane nonetheless. Hopefully other companies joins them in the quest to end sampling! Off-topic: I bought Reaktor 6 in the black friday sale thanks to your video on it! Having a ton of fun with Blocks, and just finished(ish) my first 80's-style synth in primary. Endless possibilities, I love it. So, thanks for the tip!
sympathetic resoance is not just for the high keys It 's for strings that resonate at the same frequencieswithout being striked ,obvious when the pedal board is lifted
I have used Pianoteq since 3. I have 7 standard and, to be honest, don't use anything that Stage doesn't have. One of the days I'll look more into it, but as an instrument you can just sit down and play I massively prefer it to the sampled ones that come with Komplete.
I didn't notice any parameters that would not lend themselves to changing in real time. Might be fun to see how far you can take it, and sequence rapid preset changes every 8th note. For rhythmic textures. Even just holding a chord and have the presets change rapidly.
Hi Benn. Really glad I found your channel. I love the content and your presentation. Just adding my "+1" to your idea of doing a series of vids on setting up one's studio space. I could really use a lot of help there and would love to see how you go about it and to get your advice on the matter. Looking forward to that later this year!
...you get every instrument with the Studio Bundle and all subsequent new ones free for a year. And the pedal (with my Kawai MP11SE) is continuous. I'm not sure if that is just for Pro.
i wonder how the developers convinced Steinway that they were going to model their pianos and make a plugin that basically puts Steinway out of business... wild stuff
The types of people who buy this software probably wouldn't buy a real piano, and the types of people who have the means to get a piano would probably still want one. I don't think programs like this are taking away from the acoustic piano market, but rather offering an affordable, portable, and space-efficient, yet realistic-sounding option for users who would otherwise have to settle for sampled sound or an inferior synthesized piano.
Well, I assume that this way they at least get paid for it, which can't really be said for sample libraries (if they aren't Steinway branded, the only money they get is the initial piano purchase).
I’m really interested to know if you’ve ever tried out or used Keyscape? Hammer noise, pedal noise, and bunch more packed in. I’m in the middle of making a final decision on whether or not to get it. But after seeing pianoteq in action, I would love to see a comparison between the two. Noted that the pro version has a TON more options for tweaking, but as for like the $400 to $500 version to Keyscape. Love your videos, thanks for inspiring me!
I love Pianoteq. Simple, quick, handy and it runs on any platform, even on Raspberry Pi! Try and do that with libraries ;) YC5 is a Yamaha C5, unlike other companies, I guess Yamaha hasn't endorsed yet Moddart's version of their pianos, there is also a CP-80 in there. You can run a full calibration of your key and pedal velocity (indlucing half-damper) to suit your keyboard and style and save your presets. You can basically create your own pianos. You get regular updates and can choose what package to buy. All sounds are already included by default, they are just in demo version in case you haven't bought the licence for them. As soon as you do, they are activated once you launch the app again. Even just the Stage version is good enough and allows you to tweak a few things, including effects. Does it sound like a 'real' piano? I guess that's a bit of a moot point given that each single piano is different, even the exact same model, add to that the room, the mics, the time and date, the speakers or heaphones, your ears and a thousand other factors so... what is the real sound of piano exactly? There isn't ONE, there's an infinite amount...
It's indistinguishable from a recorded high end acoustic piano. I'm not sure that all the various piano models are really necessary. The speakers you use have a lot to do with the sound. I've found a smaller woofer is more realistic than larger woofers because the smaller ones reproduce the higher overtones of the bass strings I found I had to flatten the tuning of the bass strings with the Steinway Model B to get it to sound sweet. Originally I didn't like that piano, but it is my go to instrument now that it is "stretched tuned."
The sound of a real piano is a real piano. This is pretty good in a way but I can clearly tell that it's not a real piano. As for yamaha's endorsement, they probably won't get it because Yamaha is their competitor in creating fake pianos. Steinway is not.
5 years I would say no. But after Modartt released Pianoteq 8 which even has acoustic guitar and Organteq, I can say, yes it has became obsolete. You can listen to voljum dayscapes EP, he used physical modelling software mostly, and samples only for drums and effects obviously.
I once had a Roland Juno with several piano presets. I decided I wanted a better piano sound so I tweaked it a lot. That's when I ran into the "Comma of Pythagoras". I got two octaves of very good piano sound but when I played above those two octaves it started sounding like a little girl with a sore throat.
have you tried playing some staccato on the low-end keeping a chord pressed (so the strings "open") on the high-end? they will resonate accordingly! Very realistic!
Yes. Also trying playing a loud staccato chord, then a split second after you release the keys put your foot on the sustain pedal. You should hear the residual energy in the strings resonating on the sound board - just like a real piano.
Is it just me, or am I happy with the Steinway sound out of a Kurz PC2? I can hear the differences in all of these VST's and modeled pianos. I just don't care. I pick the best sounding one and use that. But then again I think the M1 Piano still has much use, especially in EDM.
100% thinking about doing this myself. I went off PT STAGE and bought into sampled libraries, but now having discovered this combination, with a bit of tweaking I've got what I consider the perfect piano for jazz/pop. Haven't found a sample library that can compete, and that's without taking storage space into account.
I am very happy about physical modeling getting as good as it is. Samples are large and static, this is not. I love plenty of samlle sample libs but it's nowhere as powerful as a infinitely tweakable setup like that plugin. Awesome.
hearing pianoteq on its own in the first part I thought WOW they got the organic-beating-fade-out (aka sympathetic...) part just right, but then against the Giant I started to hear the "peaky resonators" sound in pianoteq. what I mean is more clear e.g. in the 4MS SMR Eurorack-Module: that "hollow, peaky, ear-splitting resonator-style-frequency-weighting" - maybe I am allergic against that type of timbre? The intimate/gentle pianoteq presets were much better in that regard. The Giant was simply "round & woolly" & didn't suffer any peaky-ness.
Sympathetic resonance is not only about the higher keys - any time you have more than one key down, there will be sympathetic cross-resonance between the corresponding strings. This is why a piano chord is more than playing the samples of different notes together.
The changing of the mic positions blew my mind, that sounded so real.
I think you need to hit the pedal on that tubular bell setting to let them ring, but you're not wrong. Also, "Hey man, can I borrow everything" on the handpan section made me laugh out loud at work. You're going to get me fired. Another great vid man!
It was pretty funny. I think if I heard someone playing that well in the woods I'd let the borrow at least "some things". :D
14:56 is such a good moment hahahah your reaction is so genuine.
I bought pianoteq a year ago because of this you and this video; thank you -- this is hands down the best money iv ever spent on a virtual instrument. So much value.
Pianoteq is the best for playing. As responsive and live as an acoustic piano. And that's what a pianist needs. Sampled VST pianos may have better sounds for hitting one key or some limited recordings, but playing them... they are as cold as dead. Just recorded sounds with limited velocity and resonance. No response to the touch and definitely not live!
Yes totally agree. You can't fully appreciate Pianoteq's qualities until you try playing it for yourself - just listening to it doesn't do it justice. I've been using Pianoteq since version 1, and while it didn't sound as good back then as some of the massive piano sample libraries out there, it was far more enjoyable to play. Since then, Pianoteq have been really working on the sound modelling, and improving it with each iteration. The piano feels 'alive' under your fingertips, rather than playing sample libraries that just don't respond in the same way.
exactly
One of the greatest features, albeit hard to find at first, is 'MIDI Archiving'. You can find it if you click the little triangle that appears beneath the MIDI song title at the top right. You can enable or disable the automatic recording function, and set it to save every note you play while in Pianoteq, from "One Hour" to "A Billion Years", in the archives folder, (which can also be exported to MIDI files). The ability to render a MIDI file, or your own live playing into a 24 bit .WAV file is another feature built in that makes it well worth the price, when you consider most sample banks and VST require a DAW to render a MIDI file. If you are on a slow machine that can't process all the polyphony in a MIDI file in real time, or keep up with one's virtuosity, (or "lead-foot" sustain pedal playing) you can still easily render the file for auditioning at full resolution. (I use a MIDI file of Rhapsody In Blue played live, as an average benchmark for CPU performance indexing.) Another technique to increase available polyphony is to dial the sample rate output to 22Khz, which will still give you sound comparable to a home digital piano, which often use 22,000 Hz as a sample rate, brick-walled, depending on the fact that the average piano tone does not exceed upper range frequencies. The fact that it is now endorsed by Steinway & Sons should be reason enough to buy it, because a real Steinway B or D is out of the budget of most keyboardists anyway. But the real reason to own it is so Moddart can make it even better. They are a truly dedicated team of geniuses, and the community that has sprouted up around it and in the forums, are the nicest people who really love music for the sake of it, from all walks, and not just the "studio geeks" that have every sample bank ever recorded. Pianoteq, from Stage to Pro runs the gamut of piano enthusiast from the MIDI file collectors who just want a great "Player Piano", to the professional musician who wants the full expression that even the best multi-sample libraries can't pull off. It reminds me of my first Keyboards, a Kurzweil K1000, followed by a DX7II-FD; one that had a great piano sample for the time, (but with very little expression), and the DX that had such a dynamic, expressive FM sound, (and I wanted both combined). Ever since I read about piano modeling in an Issue of Keyboard magazine in the eighties, I dreamt about having the perfect digital piano that would rival even a real acoustic piano. I thought sample technology would get us there first, but I had the feeling a computer might edge it out when computing power reached a much higher exponential. Pianoteq, for me, is that dream realized. I would like to also say, I am not affiliated with the company, but please don't listen to any excuses you hear, or nay-sayers arguing what is better in the comments sections, sampling or modeling, they are branches on the same tree. Pianoteq is one of those tenacious products that keep getting better, even when you think it can't. I suspect that trend will continue, but not when the misconceptions about it and the process of obscured by misinformation are allowed to filter through the "social engines". Most people easily 'get' the process of sampling, and most here have attempted it, and know what an art it can be, but this is alien territory for most, the math and theory alone is incomprehensible to many, and that is intimidating. But what I find even more intimidating, is seeing innovation like this squashed by the market-place, for the almighty dollar, or having it become the newest trend for the big keyboard makers to exploit and go no further for lack of affordability, or to be looked at as mere "research" into sound synthesis. It is beyond that at this point. A good indication of this can be witnessed in the failure of the V-Piano, and Roland's foray into 'modeling' early on with the RD-1000 (MKS-20). I wonder if Pianoteq were burned into a ROM, and marketed as a physical keyboard alike, it might die a similar death in the market-place, but my hope is with the 'Steinway' stamp of approval, amongst the Grotrian, Bluthner, ETC. (I'm waiting for Bosendorfer to get onboard), this is the product to bet on for the future of Digital Pianos to come. I wish I could recall the actual article and issue of "Keyboard" magazine, because I recall the author (Bob Doerschuk?) implying that someday sampling and or modeling technology may someday create a sound to rival and even replace the acoustic piano entirely. We may almost be there with Pianoteq 6...
I love my Pianoteq so much. It's just 50Mb and it sounds amazing and is so much fun. *fiddle* *tweak*
I personally like the ability to change the piano's condition. I like the sound of a slightly detuned old piano, it just sounds so natural.
I was caught by the title, and wondered what you ment by that. This surpriseed me and I was blown away! I new that pianosounds are hard to emulate, but didn’t know it has come to this level....! Thank you so much for showing!
I remember checking this out a couple years ago and it wasn't too convincing, but I see it now sounds great ! And WOW, seeing all the presets ! This is really an amazing instrument.
I like the idea of real time production of a sound because then you're actually producing it from scratch each time, working and interacting with an entity, instead of playing a sample.
"Hey man, can I borrow everything?" Two years late but had to sub for that one.
This was such a thorough and well thought review, I'm surprised that I actually watched the entire thing! Best of luck on your new studio space and hope to see more of your videos.
I know what you mean. I normally only watch perfunctory reviews that are ill-conceived all the way to the bitter end.
Sorry. I had to say that.
The jazz definitely helps ;)
This is definitely way ahead of most sample libraries in a number of ways, it seems more seamless and naturally dynamic through out the entire key range. I can see how this modeling will be especially nice for small ensembles.....the Swam instruments are very impressive as well.
I started watching this video and about halfway through I realised you were one of my favorite artists. So that was surprising and awesome.
aw man this is so cool, I was just messing around with the trial version on their website... a 0.7MB file with so many realistic instruments inside of it and instant load times. Really looking forward to stuff like this becoming the norm
IMO I am totally satisfied with Pianoteq Stage. The presets are perfectly crafted, I actually like it that there's less stuff to fiddle with. Less distraction= more playing.
I was already in awe but then you move the mics wherever you want? With orientation?! Holy smackaroonies
Awesome and knowledgable, thank you! I have been using the trial (which btw just has some dead keys and goes off after 20min) on Linux (as a plugin in Ardour) and am still blown away how it turns a stage piano into a real upright.
This program is like the gift that never stopts giving it sounds GREAT
Yea, best virtual anything I bought ever! ON THE PLANET!!!!!!!!!
Love your free-flowing style, man. Great video!
Well I just discovered your channel. I’m impressed mostly by the fact that not only do you love synths but you are clearly a highly educated musician. You are Right On about the Medusa by the way. I’m a fan now to be sure. I also love this piano program. Those guys are not fucking around!
Been using pianoteq for years and I love it!
Totally agree with you, actually I predicted this when the first Pianoteq version was released. Just two things, Kontakt libraries can be used with Kontakt player which is free, and for sympathetic resonance hold sustain and press several keys with the same note on different octaves, once the sound gets quiet and without releasing the sustain, hit the same note on a lower octave, because the fundamental frequency of the higher notes corresponds to the harmonics of the lower notes they will resonate in cascade producing a very rich harmonic content, then release the sustain and hit the same lower note to see the difference. Great review btw, subscribed already and looking forward for more. Cheers!
a simpler way to demonstrate this is press e.g. a lower C note down, so softly that it doesn't make a noise. keep it down. then play C notes and octave higher and you will see the note you holding down 'resonate'. once you lift that note up you will notice the sound disappear.
"Dear Lord, this lighting makes me look like a 50 year old cigar smoker!"
I can hear my 50 year old cigar smoker friends harrumphing all the way from over here.
I was lacking a piano sample for my laptop with no HD space left and couldn't believe my luck when I found Pianoteq. I just bought the cheap stage version, which was around £90 and, although it might lack some advanced features, it still has settings for action, mallet bounce, eq and effects - which is plenty for me. At that price, it's a no-brainer. I still prefer the Korg Kronos Piano in the higher notes, but I think the Pianoteq is more fun to play - it responds to the keys better. Great video :)
Awesome stuff man, pianoteq has me in awe.
OK, so, awesome video as usual. You're one of the greats on this platform IMHO. If you ever get around to reading this, I'm wondering if you could shed some light on a mystery regarding the Benn and Gear theme song. I'm noticing that I can distinctly toggle between hearing it two different ways. I can hear it as a V-IV-I progression but I gravitate toward it being an unresolved I-bVII-IV progression. Did you intend the first or last of these three chords as home base or was made to be it ambiguous by design? I know I've definitely taken artistic advantage of tonal ambiguity on occasion.
Sympathetic resonance: To show off sympathetic resonance, take two notes that have common overtones, hold one quietly (or let it fade), keep holding it, Then hit the other note hard. The common overtones will resonate on the held note. For example: hold C4 quietly, hit F3 (a perfect 5th below), you should hear C5 resonate, for it is the 2nd harmonic of C4 and 3rd harmonic of F3. If you switch keys (hold F3, hit C4) you will still get C5 only that now it resonates off of F3. This is just a simple example, others can be much more complex.
String length: it mainly affects the sound of the bass notes - the longer they are, the cleaner they are (less "inharmonious" overtones)
Hold notes down like c e and g (yeah, I know...!)
Stomp foot down on damper pedal... listen to the strings not damped...
It's a piano!!
There are no dampers on the highest of strings in a piano.
Yeah - you should be able to hear where the dampers cut off in the treble range.
I can confirm that is modelled accurately.
your content is brilliant. You are very inspiring dude. Thanks Benn from Sheffield!
Love your videos, Ben! Keep up the great work and your channel will definitely grow bigger and bigger!
All this hee-haw about how expensive it is, but just think: it's a hell of a lot less expensive than a real piano...
AltGrayMusic thank you! That's the whole point! Otherwise we'd all have these expensive pianos housed in each room in our homes!
Yes, but the price comparison that makes sense is with sample-based plugins, because that's the alternative within a computer, not an actual piano. Same way it wouldn't make sense for a city-building game to cost $10 billion just because "it's a lot less expensive than actually building a city".
@@foljs5858 The comparison is fair because all of the sampled pianos are audio Polaroids of a given piano at a given moment in time and anyone playing them is playing the exact same thing every time they fire it up. The Pianoteq is everything that's a piano, warts and all, and up to you. There's no way to get an overtight tuning in the mids of a sampled piano from sounding like a banjo, just like there's no way on a real piano, either, until you call somebody it wears itself loose. save the sample will never wear. Add realtime sympathetic resonance and you're completely out of the sample ballpark. This and samples is apples and oranges.
except you can find pianos and organs for free EVERYWHERE simply due to the effort and cost of transporting them, ive acquired 3 pianos and one 70s organ for free in the past few years.
they usually need tuning but either do it yourself or keep it as a "feature"
I'm as excited as you about Pianoteq ( 6 in particular ) .. The possibilities are mind boggling and the one certain fact about it is that it makes me want to play music on it. I honestly don't know about the "lack of attack" according to one comment here thus discarding it as "rubbish". I have an acoustic Yamaha C3 and this is the only software piano that can give me a dead note (no sound) if I don't manage my pianissimo well which is a challenge in playing a real piano. I am also able to play fast repeated on it notes without lagging, it just snaps back as a real piano. This in my opinion it is the closest experience to playing a real piano from a computer.
Wow - I've been sleeping on this. Also 5 years ago, I'm sure it's improved even more
You can lower the cpu usage in the preferences/perf section, by lowering internal sample rate
Great review, a great product. For people who say it sounds fake, well, not sure what they're hearing.
Thank you for your time and in-depth review!
23:24 - "Hey maaaaan, can I borrow everything?"
HAHAHAHA
Another great Video!
Amazing, this was the biggest suprise impact what a musicsoftware had to me, crazy stuff and a good sign for the future.
The loading time and mentioned SSD price really dates this video haha
Pianoteq all the way. Steinway endorsed - top shelf effort by Modartt.
Keep up the great work man! Love your videos.
That's a great sounding piano! I recently bought an acoustic upright piano for practice but might get Pianoteq just for the sounds. The only thing that comes close for me is the Keyscape but I haven't tried it hands-on, only listened on YT so if the loading times are true, then Pianoteq is the only player left. Great video, those 40 minutes flew by fast!
For me sampling is already payed for because I have the equipment. I think it's very interesting with the possebileties this software opens the door to. I don't use the piano so much anymore, but I see this is crazy good compared to the last piano emulation software I tryed and never used for anything.
this is stunning. thanks for the video. Your channel is really great!!
This is why I love arturia v collection instead of just samples. Modeling the real thing is just so much more flexible.
Actually, I prefer Syntronik over Arturia much more. Syntronik is a hybrid, has sampled oscillators of all important synths in combination with modeled filters. Preserves all the flexibility, but sounds much more alive.
Omnisphere has something like that as well, and UVI Vintage Vault.
@@aleksandari.7834 Honestly, I own uvi vintage Vault and Syntronik and I've used archery acquired a bit, and for synthesizers, all of them are extremely disappointing compared to real synthesizers. It's just so lifeless. I like the Wurlitzer, but still it can't nearly compared to a real Wurlitzer.
It makes sense to use if you can't afford real synthesizers or you need to produce a lot of music with a very specific sounds and you need to get in the ballpark of specific classic synthesizers, but I'd much rather own 3-4 synthesizers that are and sound real compared to every vintage classic synthesizer in software that doesn't even come close.
Paul Mina Storm true. This is why I bought Pianoteq for piano. Their synth stuff is great, but Piano V isn’t great.
Okay, Pianoteq is insane. Too expensive for me personally, but insane nonetheless. Hopefully other companies joins them in the quest to end sampling!
Off-topic: I bought Reaktor 6 in the black friday sale thanks to your video on it! Having a ton of fun with Blocks, and just finished(ish) my first 80's-style synth in primary. Endless possibilities, I love it. So, thanks for the tip!
Arturia has a modelled piano. While it offer some more creative offerings in terms of body. It doesn't offer the same fine detail for editing sounds.
TruePiano from 4front. It is an amazing modeled piano and much cheaper especially on holiday sales. I got mine for $69.
sympathetic resoance is not just for the high keys
It 's for strings that resonate at the same frequencieswithout being striked ,obvious when the pedal board is lifted
Pianoteq can turn any older digital piano with MIDI into a much more satisfying instrument.
Concantenative, granular, and physical modeling synthesis -- these are the future!
I listened to the demos on their site, it sound very nice. 😀😀
that's honestly , probably the most incredible virtual instrument wares I've ever seen online.
I have used Pianoteq since 3. I have 7 standard and, to be honest, don't use anything that Stage doesn't have. One of the days I'll look more into it, but as an instrument you can just sit down and play I massively prefer it to the sampled ones that come with Komplete.
The Bluthner sounds very nice, one of the newer models offered.
That's my go-to piano
Big love dude ! Congrats!
I didn't notice any parameters that would not lend themselves to changing in real time. Might be fun to see how far you can take it, and sequence rapid preset changes every 8th note. For rhythmic textures. Even just holding a chord and have the presets change rapidly.
1:36 ----- what is the multiplication by 81 for?
the best piano plugin i've heard
Now I know what VST I need. Just need some string synthesizers to catch up for other orchestral bits.
Tarnith SWAM, perhaps?
6 years later. It does not seem to be but I wish it was and that physical modelling was better in many cases.
I wonder if the virtual piano products have a “panic button” which restores the factory settings, if I get lost with the tweaking?
Hi Benn. Really glad I found your channel. I love the content and your presentation. Just adding my "+1" to your idea of doing a series of vids on setting up one's studio space. I could really use a lot of help there and would love to see how you go about it and to get your advice on the matter. Looking forward to that later this year!
Caught the hand panner - "hey man, can I borrow everything" swipe. hahahahahha
...you get every instrument with the Studio Bundle and all subsequent new ones free for a year. And the pedal (with my Kawai MP11SE) is continuous. I'm not sure if that is just for Pro.
looking forward to the studio building videos!
Man i just tried the demo and amazed... i hate the sound of my Yamaha DGX 660... and pianoteq wooow it is giving me a new feeling
"hey man can i borrow everything"
why are jazz pianists always just the funnest dudes lol
It sounds much better than the version I heard a few years ago! It is hard to believe it is not a real piano or sampled!
Even moreso when you consider the whole VST including all those presets and instruments is only around 50 to 60 Mb in filesize.
Subbed for more advanced synths like this and your additive cello.
i wonder how the developers convinced Steinway that they were going to model their pianos and make a plugin that basically puts Steinway out of business... wild stuff
The types of people who buy this software probably wouldn't buy a real piano, and the types of people who have the means to get a piano would probably still want one. I don't think programs like this are taking away from the acoustic piano market, but rather offering an affordable, portable, and space-efficient, yet realistic-sounding option for users who would otherwise have to settle for sampled sound or an inferior synthesized piano.
Well, I assume that this way they at least get paid for it, which can't really be said for sample libraries (if they aren't Steinway branded, the only money they get is the initial piano purchase).
You can't put a flower vase on an emulation.
No way that Steinway or other “real” pianos will go out of business. There are still many purists who won’t settle for anything less.
Impressive and entertaining. Thanks for the vid!
I’m really interested to know if you’ve ever tried out or used Keyscape? Hammer noise, pedal noise, and bunch more packed in. I’m in the middle of making a final decision on whether or not to get it. But after seeing pianoteq in action, I would love to see a comparison between the two. Noted that the pro version has a TON more options for tweaking, but as for like the $400 to $500 version to Keyscape. Love your videos, thanks for inspiring me!
A great introduction to some awesome technology. Thanks!
I love Pianoteq. Simple, quick, handy and it runs on any platform, even on Raspberry Pi! Try and do that with libraries ;) YC5 is a Yamaha C5, unlike other companies, I guess Yamaha hasn't endorsed yet Moddart's version of their pianos, there is also a CP-80 in there. You can run a full calibration of your key and pedal velocity (indlucing half-damper) to suit your keyboard and style and save your presets. You can basically create your own pianos. You get regular updates and can choose what package to buy. All sounds are already included by default, they are just in demo version in case you haven't bought the licence for them. As soon as you do, they are activated once you launch the app again. Even just the Stage version is good enough and allows you to tweak a few things, including effects.
Does it sound like a 'real' piano? I guess that's a bit of a moot point given that each single piano is different, even the exact same model, add to that the room, the mics, the time and date, the speakers or heaphones, your ears and a thousand other factors so... what is the real sound of piano exactly? There isn't ONE, there's an infinite amount...
It's indistinguishable from a recorded high end acoustic piano. I'm not sure that all the various piano models are really necessary. The speakers you use have a lot to do with the sound. I've found a smaller woofer is more realistic than larger woofers because the smaller ones reproduce the higher overtones of the bass strings I found I had to flatten the tuning of the bass strings with the Steinway Model B to get it to sound sweet. Originally I didn't like that piano, but it is my go to instrument now that it is "stretched tuned."
The sound of a real piano is a real piano. This is pretty good in a way but I can clearly tell that it's not a real piano. As for yamaha's endorsement, they probably won't get it because Yamaha is their competitor in creating fake pianos. Steinway is not.
@@ezrashanti You do have a point.
5 years I would say no. But after Modartt released Pianoteq 8 which even has acoustic guitar and Organteq, I can say, yes it has became obsolete. You can listen to voljum dayscapes EP, he used physical modelling software mostly, and samples only for drums and effects obviously.
I once had a Roland Juno with several piano presets. I decided I wanted a better piano sound so I tweaked it a lot. That's when I ran into the "Comma of Pythagoras". I got two octaves of very good piano sound but when I played above those two octaves it started sounding like a little girl with a sore throat.
Easiest way to get a decent digital piano sound is buy a dedicated digital piano module and drive it from a full weighted keyboard.
Gotta admit, Firth of Fifth is my go-to test for piano sound quality. I think I need to spend some money on this
OMG - sounds amazing... and I love Sakamoto... easily one of my favorites of his. Never forgot after seeing film.
You gotta smash that sustain for the tubular bells and marimba dawg!!
the pricing sounds confusing...
man, i feel you. this is amazing.
Last guy who plays Hand Pan I met was exactly that Hey Man Can I Borrow Everything guy.
have you tried playing some staccato on the low-end keeping a chord pressed (so the strings "open") on the high-end? they will resonate accordingly! Very realistic!
They do indeed.
Yes. Also trying playing a loud staccato chord, then a split second after you release the keys put your foot on the sustain pedal. You should hear the residual energy in the strings resonating on the sound board - just like a real piano.
@@benjaminpeternorris I know! Pianoteq is ultimate.
Is it just me, or am I happy with the Steinway sound out of a Kurz PC2? I can hear the differences in all of these VST's and modeled pianos. I just don't care. I pick the best sounding one and use that. But then again I think the M1 Piano still has much use, especially in EDM.
Wow this is impressive! I’m using Alicia’s Keys right now and Piano in Blue, but I may grab this.
Very Good VST ..In my opinion the best......
this reminds me of the Roland Blues Cube guitar amp, it's solid state and lots of pros think it sounds better than real top end tube amps
Nice playing. What kind of keyboard do you use? And does it matter if your sustain pedal is a switch or variable?
Very nice..Have you compared pianoteq with the keyscape? It would be great to have it.
Didn't even press the random button. Basically makes unique sounding instruments each time.
I just upgraded Pianoteq to standard and got the Bechstein Grand which has a much nicer sound than Steinway.
100% thinking about doing this myself. I went off PT STAGE and bought into sampled libraries, but now having discovered this combination, with a bit of tweaking I've got what I consider the perfect piano for jazz/pop. Haven't found a sample library that can compete, and that's without taking storage space into account.
@@CrocodileRocker Their Hans Rucker II harpsichord is unmatched as well.
I am very happy about physical modeling getting as good as it is. Samples are large and static, this is not. I love plenty of samlle sample libs but it's nowhere as powerful as a infinitely tweakable setup like that plugin. Awesome.
Pretty amazing stuff. It's neat you can build a hardware dock for this with raspberry pi 3.
So you could essentially build a digital piano with this. Wow.
The designers of Logic Pro should make stock instruments like this, because I imagine that would be a game changer.
I don't play any instruments but I watched this whole video.
Lol I could watch this all day. Pianoteq is the shit
I know this was years ago but, you didn't use a SSD, right?. Beacuase loading times, being slow, are not so cumbersome with a SSD
Love the content. Any more details you can share about your California show in April?
Impressive indeed, not only the software.
hearing pianoteq on its own in the first part I thought WOW they got the organic-beating-fade-out (aka sympathetic...) part just right, but then against the Giant I started to hear the "peaky resonators" sound in pianoteq. what I mean is more clear e.g. in the 4MS SMR Eurorack-Module: that "hollow, peaky, ear-splitting resonator-style-frequency-weighting" - maybe I am allergic against that type of timbre? The intimate/gentle pianoteq presets were much better in that regard. The Giant was simply "round & woolly" & didn't suffer any peaky-ness.