|
|
|
|
|
|
#199825 - 08/25/06 11:46 AM
What is this obsession with.........
|
Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
|
piano samples, especially in a arranger keyboard. In a studio, yes; but then I'd be using a dedicated sampler (hardware or software) or high-end sample-capable synth. From what I've heard on this board, the quality of the pianos in the high-end arrangers is already better than the quality of the playing. It's like giving ME a Stradivarious.....or a $15,000 mic to sing through; all it's going to do is showcase my horrible voice (in exquisite detail). Before I get blasted, sure there are a few good pianist on this board, but they are never the ones crying out for uber piano samples; that's because their playing sounds good on whatever equipment they use (ex. George V uses a DGX305 or something). IMO, the pianos on the Tyros2 (and my PA1xpro..though not as good as on the T2) are more than adequate for the usual ARRANGER functions....OMB or songwriting or arranging or family entertainment. They have probably already been optimized for balance within the mix of other instruments on that board. I just think that somewhere, long ago and far away, someone decided that the measure of a keyboard was how good the acoustic piano was and that somehow, over the years, we've forgotten to modify that criterion. It may still have some legitimacy in the high-end synth market, but arranger keyboards....I don't think so. This whole subject of loading piano samples into the Tyros2 came up in another thread, but since it had little to do with the original topic of THAT thread either, I thought I'd move it so as not to further extend the original thread. I believe, and I could be wrong about this, that the sampling capabilities offered on arranger keyboards such as the Tyros2, were meant mostly for special effects, vocal loops, etc., not full-blown multi-layered, multi-gig, multi-$$$, single instrument samples that would be totally out of step with the quality of the other on-board voices. Personally, I think a sample of James Brown yelling "Good God" or "Hit Me" would be more beneficial to those among us that don't posess the "soul" to do it live. Just a thought. chas PS: Carrie_UK, that last paragraph was a little long but I'm working on it .
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#199827 - 08/25/06 12:18 PM
Re: What is this obsession with.........
|
Senior Member
Registered: 02/23/01
Posts: 3849
Loc: Rome - Italy
|
Cgiles, I agree that, if I were a piano purist, I would never think of playing a high-end piano sample from a keyboard like the Tyros 2, with 61 non-weighed keys, that would make it difficult to control the expression of said sample. Part of the illusion of playing a real piano comes indeed from the action and this -together with the sound itself- is one of the most debated issues in other Fora, everytime the issue of the "best digital piano" comes up. However, I have to disagree with you that the sample importing function should be used more to import vocal sounds or effects a la James Brown, to enhance the impact of a live show. Let me make a few examples. People keep saying that the T2 drums are too "polished" and lack the dirty quality found in other arrangers, like the Ketron SD1 or the Korg PA1 X; well, with 1 Gb of memory at your disposal you can import a ton of drum samples and build up your own drum kits, and this is a really easy task, first because you have to deal with no-looping samples and second because each sample takes just one note. Personally, I have sampled all the keyboards and the drum machines I have had in the past. These samples reside now within my Akai S 2800 and my Ensoniq ASR 10, but they both have shortcomings: they have only 16 notes of polyphony, the Akai lacks the powerful effect section of the Tyros 2, the Ensoniq has a very poor user interface and the list could go on and on. Now, can you imagine having all these samples within a machine like the Tyros 2? I have recently expanded the RAM memory of my T2 to 1 Gb and have loaded all the vocal samples Yamaha made available on their website. They fill a gap the original Tyros had, compared with the PSR 9000, but I still have many other samples of vocal sounds, from almost every synth: Roland, Korg, Kurzweil... The possibilities are endless!
_________________________
Korg Kronos 61 and PA3X-Pro76, Roland G-70, BK7-m and Integra 7, Casio PX-5S, Fender Stratocaster with Fralin pickups, Fender Stratocaster with Kinman pickups, vintage Gibson SG standard.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#199829 - 08/25/06 01:35 PM
Re: What is this obsession with.........
|
Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
|
A great set of piano samples will make Mary Had a Little Lamb sound better....... strangely, I think a great piano sound benefits the weaker player, a great player makes any set sound good, whereas a simpler player benefits more from the sound itself, especially if they play simply (think Norah Jones simple).
However, the slow speed of sample loading makes all the arrangers, in a live situation, close to impossible - max out a T2's RAM and it takes over 30 minutes to load (from USB)...... and forget about it if there is a brown-out or power loss during a set. UPS's are a MUST.
When, oh when are keyboard manufacturers going to speed up data transfer from HD to memory? USB 1 is WAY too slow, and even older samplers with SCSI could make barely 1MB/sec, glacial by computer standards even back in the day.
Until they address this, sampling, at least for live work, does tend to be only useful for little hits and fx.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#199830 - 08/25/06 02:57 PM
Re: What is this obsession with.........
|
Senior Member
Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
|
I like Dreamer's idea myself. If there is one weakness on this board for me, it's the drum sets. I have plenty of excellent sounding sets for DR008 and some of my other samplers that aren't all that large, and will load relatively fast into the T2.
This weekend I'll be taking the 512 mb's of ram from my Motif ES and putting it into the T2. I never use the sampling feature on the ES anyway, since in comparison to my software samplers it's pretty much a nightmare to use.
T42, as far as getting more out of my arranger.. yep I sure want to. That's why I converted all of those BIAB styles in the first place... so I'd have them long before I might get a bit tired of the internal ones. Next up are some new multipads, because the ones that loop certainly can add spice to a style or allow me to turn off and then substitute a style's guitar part, or bass line, for example.
I'll probably add a few synth sounds and multipads to my board as well. Good synth samples don't have to take up a whole lot of memory in comparison to some acoustic sounds - remember you're not trying to recreate all of the nuances of an acoustic instrument. I've got some nice synth soundfonts that are well under 8 mb total that have some great synths on them. Some are less than 1 mb overall.
As far as doing any serious sampling work, where I might want to have the best instruments in a studio / recording setting, I'd simply stick with my computer samplers and software modules. Using them is simpler than using most hardware and besides, noone I know of who is serious about using sampling in a production ( other than one shots or simple phrases ) would use a non dedicated sampler in the first place, whether it was a workstation like the Motif ES or Triton series, or an arranger.
AJ
[This message has been edited by Bluezplayer (edited 08-25-2006).]
_________________________
AJ
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#199833 - 08/25/06 09:12 PM
Re: What is this obsession with.........
|
Member
Registered: 01/09/05
Posts: 331
Loc: Sofia
|
Chas wrote: Before I get blasted, sure there are a few good pianist on this board, but they are never the ones crying out for uber piano samples; that's because their playing sounds good on whatever equipment they use (ex. George V uses a DGX305 or something) Hi, Thank you for your compliments, However, there are several reasons I do not complain about the piano sound on my DGX-305. First, I try to avoid complaining about anything. From what I observe on the forum, expressing negative feelings always leads to pissing contests, mine is better than yours, etc. Such topics are undoubtledly interesting but I think it's ridiculous to complain about a $400 keyboard. My complain-list is very long (incl. Live! grand piano sound) but I know that the solution will always be "George, go for a better keyboard". Until this happens, I'll try my best with the DGX-305 Secondly, no reason to point out the shortcomings of my keyboard since no-one who is reading this forum would go to buy it. Last but not least, I know you enjoy to listen to something different than Tyros 2, PSR 3000 or G70. Anyway, I agree with you. My fear is that one day people will stop playing the acoustic piano and the digital one will become the standard. So many options, so many sounds. It's a terrific gadget. Regards, George
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|