Thank you for playing while talking and not just talking without a sound about what you're talking about. There are so many videos that just speak and show but zero sound, it's a waste of time for me, so thanks again for a proper DEMO
I have transferred my komplete 9 ultimate to a different computer and its missing some pianos that I can't find online. Upright piano, Vienna piano and Clavinet/pianet are all missing and the links that Native instruments has online to download them does not work. Is there a way to get those working?
-5 semitones when pitching down for a perfect 5th, +7 when pitching up; get it together buddy haha . Dope reverb tips though, gave me an idea. Nothing but transposing the reverb from -12 to +12 but would a good way to transition into a pickup section.
Do you have any tutorials on how to make a piano vst sound realistic in a solo instrumental track ? If yes please give me the link in the comments section . Looking forward for your reply :)
Quick outline, sorry for no timestamps: 1. Layer two different pianos 2. Reverse the stereo panning of the piano recording/track 3. Play the piano low, then crank the gain to have a soft piano sit properly in the mix 4. Render the piano track reverb to audio and mess around with that track 5. Try the extremes of the plugin/FX controls in the context of the full mix 6. Apply slow, subtle effects to add shine/richness/movement 7. Use ghost reverb by using the reverb signal of duplicate tracks that are slightly different alongside the original track 8. Use amp simulator to give some subtle warmth
NI has the worst software support. When I finally got hold of them on their forum, they said that they found a solution to my problem, but didn't post it. Instead they said to contact them via ticket. And when I did they never answer...
The truth is that this guy teaches how to mask the poor sounding quality samples with deceptive and blurry effects rather than show how to make vsti samples sound like real acoustic instruments, which is a gazillion times more important than the crap in this video.
I would never have thought to implement any of those techniques. Thank you!
Thank you for playing while talking and not just talking without a sound about what you're talking about. There are so many videos that just speak and show but zero sound, it's a waste of time for me, so thanks again for a proper DEMO
Wow, in 13 minutes I have learnt so much. Thank You.
Yea that render reverb technique was mad helpful never thought of it
This is a great tutorial! How could i miss this after making almost 400 videos on my channel with the giant ...
Wow, those are fantastic techniques and tips, thank you very much!!
Reverb trick is AWESOME!
the giant FTW! still my favorite piano vst after all these years!
It's not even a vst
low end sounds weird tho
Love @9:54 where you've done the saturation. You can really hear the difference. Great tips!
Wow very nice tips here. Super useful thank you
These are some great tips! Good piano music as examples too, easy on the ears and to hear the effects take hold.
Yikes! :D
Thanks for the great tips!
How did you print the reverb effect in Ableton?
I have transferred my komplete 9 ultimate to a different computer and its missing some pianos that I can't find online. Upright piano, Vienna piano and Clavinet/pianet are all missing and the links that Native instruments has online to download them does not work. Is there a way to get those working?
Excellent tips. Love this tutorial.
The rendered reverb tip is golden
This is really neat and useful, thanks for this!
-5 semitones when pitching down for a perfect 5th, +7 when pitching up; get it together buddy haha . Dope reverb tips though, gave me an idea. Nothing but transposing the reverb from -12 to +12 but would a good way to transition into a pickup section.
what daw did you use for the humanizing feature? can I do it in ableton just as easily?
Do you have any tutorials on how to make a piano vst sound realistic in a solo instrumental track ? If yes please give me the link in the comments section . Looking forward for your reply :)
Quick outline, sorry for no timestamps:
1. Layer two different pianos
2. Reverse the stereo panning of the piano recording/track
3. Play the piano low, then crank the gain to have a soft piano sit properly in the mix
4. Render the piano track reverb to audio and mess around with that track
5. Try the extremes of the plugin/FX controls in the context of the full mix
6. Apply slow, subtle effects to add shine/richness/movement
7. Use ghost reverb by using the reverb signal of duplicate tracks that are slightly different alongside the original track
8. Use amp simulator to give some subtle warmth
Great tips. Thank you!
Nice
Kick drums sounds so nice, I can feel it in my soul while not being too prominent (or at all). :P
Which software is this? I mean the recording one, not kontakt.
How do you render your reverb??
Yess!!! Thank you. I make piano music and use these instruments.
more gems please :)
Thanks NI
Good complimentary tips, but the best way to get a good piano sound will always be actually learning how to play the piano.
#7 sounds like what Coldplay did on Clocks
Dj james russel
in the mix
doing the trix
that the others can't fix.
Boom son
NI has the worst software support. When I finally got hold of them on their forum, they said that they found a solution to my problem, but didn't post it. Instead they said to contact them via ticket. And when I did they never answer...
Pretty standard for these big company’s,all their tech support sucks.
This guys sounds in rage...
The truth is that this guy teaches how to mask the poor sounding quality samples with deceptive and blurry effects rather than show how to make vsti samples sound like real acoustic instruments, which is a gazillion times more important than the crap in this video.
Yo