|
|
|
|
|
|
#407738 - 09/04/15 02:37 PM
Re: NEW..KORG PA 4X
[Re: Hal2001]
|
rosetree
Unregistered
|
"Included is a new multi-layer stereo grand piano (with damper and body resonance), plus electric pianos from the acclaimed KORG SV-1 Stage Piano."
So from that description you quoted I think you are right that it is not 100% of the Kronos German Grand with its unlooped decay, but I guess it is somewhere between the Kronos and the M3 expansion piano, still with several hundreds of MB at least. This is the comparison I made between the two, the M3 piano even sounds better than the 2 GB Krome piano here because no sustain pedal was installed in the store where I line-recorded the Krome, otherwise the recording settings were equal. You can really tell from this recording that both pianos go back to the same sampling session some years before the Kronos was released. For the M3 they had to make a compressed version, for the new technology of the Kronos they were able to implement the full amount of data. https://soundcloud.com/rorosetree/piano-comparison-korg-krome-vs-korg-m3-xp-2013Actually I would even be glad if the PA-4X version was a reduced version, because that would mean that there are a lot of other excellent, large samples, as the total waveROM is stated as over 2 GB. In fact, the easiest way to fill the 2 GB would have been to just take one of the Kronos pianos and leave the rest unchanged from PA-3X. Some people tend to think a 2 GB piano must sound 10 times better than a 200 MB piano, of course that's not true as most of the 1.8 additional GB are spent for very long loops or even a loopless decay of 20 seconds and for maybe 8 velocity layers instead of 4. But the actual full-bodied sound of the piano is usually already in the "first" 200 MB, the other characteristics are only audible in very specific situations. And even a 2 GB sample can be screwed if the original sampling session is not done properly. This is why the old Roland expansion boards have wonderful sounds despite their ridiculous waveROM of 8 MB. They were sampled by Eric Persing
Edited by rosetree (09/04/15 03:03 PM)
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#407747 - 09/04/15 07:06 PM
Re: NEW..KORG PA 4X
[Re: ]
|
Member
Registered: 02/28/11
Posts: 154
Loc: U.S.
|
Ha Ha. I’m really surprised that some players would not want a better sounding piano if they could have it anyway, without giving anything up in their arranger. I never said that the piano sound is the only reason I would buy an arranger. Perhaps I wasn’t clear enough. I like some things I’m reading and hearing about the Pa4x from Korg’s description and videos and if the arranger comes with a better piano at no expense, then it seems to me like a no-lose, win situation. I was just getting excited (based on rosetree’s comment about a better Grand Piano in the Pa4x), that an excellent current arranger might actually be getting an improved piano. Yes, the majority of my leads are piano, but I would hate to play a jazz or pop piece on an arranger (with a jazz or pop style backing) and have the lead piano in the arranger sound sub-par. Thank you rosetree for describing some of your Korg piano sound experience. What you say makes sense, and I agree that a better piano without overconsumption of waveROM is a good thing in an arranger. From the limited info I see so far from Korg’s materials, It sounds like the Pa4x will be able to accomplish that. Fran, I think you interpreted what I said the way I meant it. Bottom line, if Korg says, I can have it all, great arranger features and styles, continued nice selection of voices, good allocation of memory resources, plus a wonderful sounding Grand Piano, I’ll be very interested.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|