Could be. It never fails to demonstrate the flaws a sample set has, though... you listen to it on the better sets (Ivory, TruePianos Diamond come to mind) and it sounds convincing. Others (in fact I am appalled by how many!), not so good...
My problem with the midifile is that the person who recorded it in the first place would have been greatly influenced by the sound of the Piano they recorded it on. It's hard to disconnect yourself and play that well in a sterile way that will suite one song to be a universal demo.
That's only one part of the problem. The second part is depending on what Piano you sample, it's dynamic response curve will be very different. This must be taken into consideration when performing as how the piano responds will effect the level of emotion you put into your playing.
In short, you will play the same song completely different. This is why I don't believe a single midi file can do any piano sound justice.
Yes, it can give you a very good idea of what it sounds like, but to really hear the sound a demo needs to be recorded playing the sound. No generic midi files.
Pianoteq of all things is a great tool for proving this. You can load up a Yamaha C3 Grand and play a song with all your heart while it records the midi file. Now switch between two Pianos in Pianoteq and for one the song sounds fantastic, and the other just sounds wrong. The motion is lost because the dynamic curve response is wrong for the sound and you don't get the most from the sound board, hammers and everything else that makes up the sound. Yet re-record the song played on the second sound, and you will actually play it differently.
And, I'm sorry, but for all their vaunted advantages with having unlooped, no pitch-stretched, high count velocity switched, multiple mic position sets, it amazing to me how few stack up to to or three of my favorite ROM pianos.
Yep... it does happen. Sampling a piano is also nothing short of your worst nightmare and it took me a few attempts to get anywhere at all.
That said, on the flip side you would be surprised how listening to the factory Piano sounds also colours peoples opinion of what a Piano actually sounds like. I know quite a few people who believe the KORG M1 Piano is the best they ever heard. ..lol
Listen to the Nord Stage Yamaha, Kurzweil PC3X New Triple Strike, and of course, my favorite, the FantomX Ultimate Grand Piano, and you realize how careful sampling and obsessive attention to getting the dynamics just right can make quite small pianos (RAM-wise, that is still very effective.
Yep, that's the joys of unlimited time at the Piano in a Studio. A Piano can make or break the sale of a keyboard, so a lot of effort goes into creating the sample data for the factory sound.
What did you think of those K-Sounds Kurzweil demos, BTW? Did you see how it could be warm AND bright, depending on the program (EQ and dynamics, etc.)?
I know Ksounds, he's a member on KORG Forums and we first spoke when he wanted to develop those sounds for the Triton Series. They are very good. The EQ / Dynamics would be the Engine, the filter modulation and MFX/IFX. His sample data is very likely to be 100% natural and untouched by EQ.
Anyway, I still don't think you can call the file heavy handed. It hits 127 only ONCE in the entire piece, seldom exceeds 116, and goes to a low of 28. Just eyeballing it, it looks like the average sits about 90-100.
Yeah heavy handed is really the wrong word to describe this. It would have been better to say that the performance is more focused around a single layer of samples.
For example if the average is 90 to 100, and the majority is played on a single layer. Your 0 to 127 needs to be divided by the number of layers to work out the range each layer covers, and at 90 to 100 you can be sure a lot of the sound is coming from a single layer.
That at what I've said above about dynamic velocity curves are in my opinion what make the midi file nowhere near as effective as a proper performance played live by a human on the sounds being demoed.
What velocity points do your samples cross over at?
The cross over points between layers vary depending on the keybed of the workstation being used to play back the sounds, but for something like my 5 layer piano.... your looking at something like this at the sampling stage.
Layer 1 – 0 to 25
Layer 2 – 26 to 49
Layer 3 – 50 to 75
Layer 4 – 76 to 101
Layer 5 – 102 to 127
One of these days, someone is going to use a weight to play the samples, dropped from different heights, so there is force consistency across the action, then use weights on a target MIDI piano so that they match up... Then finally we might have some really accurate dynamics
They have been for years, it's called a Keyboard Thumper.
Anyway, keep up the good work... it's a pleasure hearing about this...
Thank you, I'm enjoying the conversation.
Most people don't question me over on KORG Forums and I end up just being a Moderator answering peoples tech questions. It's nice to be asked real questions and talk about something interesting for a change.
Kind Regards.
James