![]() ![]() That's unlikely to happen with Pianoteq, especially if you know you already like the sound. ![]() You could easily be put off playing/practicing by getting a sample library that you just don't get on with or that you don't feel 'connected to' when you play. I'd say get the standard edition as soon as you can, and if you find yourself longing for a different sort of sound, poke around in the world of samples later on. I've spent 15-20 years chasing great sample libraries and it's only this year that I've found ones that I enjoy playing as much as Pianoteq. I don't know what stage you're at in learning the piano, but for the reasons you mentioned, I'd buy it and not look back: The chord recognition is a great learning tool, not having to wait for samples to load encourages a few minutes noodling or practicing when you might otherwise not bother, and the touch responsiveness/dynamics are good (I think) for helping develop good playing technique. If you want that particular combination of goodies and enjoy the sound of it, Pianoteq is hard to beat. Its perfect for practicing, since I can be up in running in literal seconds.ġ) are there any comparable libraries out there with unique features like thisĢ) how nice are the sales at Moddart usually? I don't think I would use any of the extra features pro introduces, but if someone has a compelling argument as to why its worth going with the pro version over standard, I would love to hear their thoughts! Anybody know what the discounts are usually like? I kinda just want to buy it now, but I am ballin on a budget already.I am gunning for the Standard Edition btw.Īre there any other piano libraries that have a nice standalone player, and that offer features like the persistent midi record feature PianoTeq has, or the way it tells you which chords you are playing if you hold the notes? Both of these features seem incredibly useful to me, and I love how fast PianoTeq is to load up since its modeled. With samples to complete the smorgasbord of sounds in your blockbuster soundtracks, cinematic masterpieces or industry topping tracks. Upgrades from previous releases are available, priced per where you are coming from. Version upgrade prices are a straightforward difference between base prices. So first of all, it looks like they usually do Black Friday sales. Bound to Divide is back with even more sweet FX in this fun-sized pack ‘Ear Candy FX Toolkit 3’ will indulge your ears and give your production that little extra love. There are three versions of Pianoteq: Stage, Standard and Pro, priced respectively at 149 USD, 299 and 449. ![]() To me, PianoTeq sounds good enough, but also adds features on top that make it a must have for me. Yes, I have already read through a ton of threads on here about pianos and yes, I know full well about the sampled vs modeled debate, especially regarding PianoTeq. But that is just my (n00b) opinion.I am learning piano, and have been looking into various piano libraries. I guess the problem is mixing samples together, tails from samples recorded separately as arithmetical sum are far away from real piano response, which generates strange sounding, a kind of "unnatural" effects. This Piano World forum thread has links to Phil Best’s demo, Woody’s review, and some others. I have tried old Ivory, got several cheap samples (including last IK sale) and come to the conclusion that I dislike pure sample based solutions even when the samples are huge. Includes revoiced instruments, updated GUI, new classical guitar, sympathetic resonances as its own plugin, and the announcement that an iOS version will be released soon, identical to the pc/Mac version. Pianoteq is an award-winning virtual instrument which you can install on your computer (PC/Mac). When I press keys on Pianoteq app by mouse, it is working. Pianoteq is an award-winning virtual instrument which you can install on your computer (PC/Mac). While playing, I hear sound of keabord, not sound of Pianoteq. Even the latest version sounds "too perfect" for me. Thank you, Marco, for answer, I plugged fp 10 to PC ia usb cable from printer, but Pianoteq 7 demo do not accept the keyboard. I have tested several Pianoteq generations, was ready to take 3 when 4 was introduced but 4 was not sounding "right" and 3 become "obsolete". And so for VSTi piano, TruePianos sound ok for me. So I went to Kawai, which has somehow hybrid engine. Next step was Roland, with there SuperNatural (means "Absolutely Synthetic".) engine. But the sound in headphones (they use short samples + what I can call "sin waves" for decay) was not acceptable. When choosing DP several years ago, my first choice was Yamaha based on keys. I took TruePianos several days ago, do not forget that they have 30% CakeWalk discount if you have some X Pro. ![]()
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