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#164341 - 09/27/07 07:58 PM
Will Yamaha ever re-do their drums to sound 'live'
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Member
Registered: 09/20/04
Posts: 95
Loc: Dallas, Boston, Orlando
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I love my PSR3000, and I also love my PA1XPRO, and this post is not intended to make any disparaging remarks about any manufacturer.
As great as both boards are, I continually wonder why a manufacturer as great as Yamaha, while creating very robust styles, makes them sound so compressed and over-produced, sacrificing a nice live sound.
And I wonder why a manufacturer as great as Korg, choosses to have many of the Korg styles just sound a little enemic, and have so few of the nice rich Yamaha type EP voices, and why their OS is just so darn clumsy and non-user friendly.
I am looking forward to the T2 replacement, and will likely buy it as soon as it comes out, but I'm wondering, Will Yamaha ever redo their drums to give them a nice LIVE, crisp, seperate and punchy sound, and will Yamaha ever change their styles to make them sound less 'canned' and compressed, less "wall of sound" and more live and dynamic with better instrument seperation.
Is it just me who feels this way about Yamaha and Korg boards?
I love Yamaha boards and their voices, and love their styles and love the OS. I just wish it all sounded more LIVE!!!!!! Why doesn't Yamaha do it? It's not like they can't, so it must be a deliberate corporate decision NOT to make the instrument sound more live, but rather to make this very polished, compressed wall-of-sound.
I just dont get it??? Would love to hear you long-time players opinions.
Thanks, Russ
_________________________
Russ Bolduc russbolduc@tx.rr.com 817-714-0488
PSR S900 Korg PA1XPRO Kurzweil PC3X Logitech Z
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#164344 - 09/28/07 01:42 AM
Re: Will Yamaha ever re-do their drums to sound 'live'
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Member
Registered: 03/31/02
Posts: 491
Loc: California
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The reason Yamaha's sounds seem compressed and over produced is because they are. Yamaha wants to yield as many sounds as possible with as little ROM as possible. In order to achieve this they use a compression/companding technique. The end result are sounds that are thin, weak, and many are in fact mono that are touted as being stereo. In fact Yamaha has many sounds that say stereo but are in fact two mono voices stacked and panned left and right to give a stereo effect. This doesn't sound anything like true stereo and the sound suffers when being summed to mono.
In order for companies to achieve a large amount of sounds within a small amount of ROM (a few hundred MB or less), that requires samples that are sampled at lower bit rates, companded, and often with very few multi-samples. Yamaha tends to use most of their ROM for the SA and Live voices, then the other sounds seriously suffer because of this. It's no surprise the SA and Live voices are the better of the bunch, they utilize most of the ROM.
Unlike Yamaha, Korg, Roland, Ketron, and others, companies like Wersi use very high amounts of ROM for their factory sounds. In fact Wersi uses nearly 1 GB of ROM for their OAS 7 instruments. The end result of this are sounds that sound so real, aren't compressed, and have a live feel to them, just like the real instrument would be. Wersi's factory sounds are so good that you'd be hard pressed to find many sounds that don't sound like the real instrument. I don't know of any other arranger or workstation with a set of factory sounds that even comes close to compare to the Wersi. Of course hearing an online demo won't show this, you really need to hear the instrument in person to know. Unfortunately Wersi's price point and small distribution limit those who would purchase it to a very small niche.
I await the day that Yamaha, Roland, or Korg comes up with an arranger that uses large amounts of ROM and can compete with the likes of the Wersi but unfortunately that doesn't appear to be in the near future. Korg could do it if they put arranger features of the PA2X into the Oasys and fixed the OS of the Oasys. The Oasys has some fantastic sounds but the GUI is so poorly laid out and the sequencer is an absolute joke. Wersi is already working on the "Plus" line of their OAS instruments which adds a 10.4 TFT touch screen, more fills/intros, and even more sounds. The advantage of Wersi being the first to utilize an instrument that supports not only large amount of factory ROM, but VST's, is that they've had years to get things right. It's hard to keep up with the Jones' when they are ten years ahead of everyone else.
If you think the likes of a Tyros, PSR, G Series, PA, or Ketron can hold up to the likes of an instrument like Wersi and Lionstracs that can play back very large sound files, give a listen to Giga, Halion, or Kontakt's available sound libraries and see how your instrument compares. I know of no arranger factory sound that can even come close.
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#164347 - 09/28/07 06:45 AM
Re: Will Yamaha ever re-do their drums to sound 'live'
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Take the time to tune the keyboard, the registrations and your PA system and you'll find those drums are great. You just need to get into the inner workings of the systems. I personally, love the way the drums sound, and as for mono VS stereo--Nah! I won't go there.
Got to get to work. Music begins at 11:00 a.m. today.
Cheers,
Gary
_________________________
PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!
K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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#164350 - 09/28/07 08:07 AM
Re: Will Yamaha ever re-do their drums to sound 'live'
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Member
Registered: 09/06/06
Posts: 365
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