![]() I think perhaps if you built a scene with a few pianos to create different layers then you might be able to make something that feels and sounds a bit more natural. And I also found it a bit strangely pristine, in an over-simplified way, I couldn't detect key-up noise or damper release on pedal lift etc, all the little mechanical creaks and noises that other digital pianos copy so slavishly to make an illusion, there were settings for "damper" etc but they didn't appear to add those noises. There's no sense of digging in for more chaotic gritty wobbly string as you slam those hammers sounds, it's just the same over-perfectly even sound. The transients are all absolutely identical at all volumes and frequencies too, despite this trying to emulate the effect of a mechanical system that very definitely has differing levels and speeds of attack based on velocity. Especially in the upper registers there's some nasty audible artifacting on the transients that's almost like ring-modulation. They sound very synthetic to my ears - too even, too much like a harp. They offer greater dynamic range, fuller sounds, more polyphony and more effects like resonance simulation, damper simulation etc. ![]() I agree!Īll of them are a better than the inbuilt Logic pianos.
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