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#504539 - 12/18/21 12:54 PM
Re: the difference in piano sound ? 3800 dollars !!
[Re: john smies]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14289
Loc: NW Florida
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Listen to Keyscape demos, or any of the virtual piano well regarded libraries, and you rapidly see that we are discussing the difference between bad and slightly less bad..!
I know it’s an arranger forum, but we aren’t discussing arrangers here, just a piano sound. And a $400 VSTi puts them all to shame. And throws in almost every other keyboard you might ever want (name an arranger’s Rhodes or Wurlitzer that even comes close to Keyscape’s?).
Lately I’ve been using SWAM’s saxes on my iPad, a $30 purchase, and they utterly destroy the best articulated saxes in the Genos and PA4X. I hate to say it, but for the standout sounds that front most pop music, the day of the arranger has long passed.
With a piano, I agree with Crossover. You gain more realism playing it from a fully weighted 88 than you do from an extra GB of samples. Is there a difference between the two recorded examples? Definitely. Thousands of dollars worth? No. But the difference between the cheapest arranger and a VSTi costing even less is exponentially more.
Arrangers aren’t the be all and end all. If cost vs. quality is the question, an arranger is virtually never the answer…
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#504548 - 12/19/21 01:59 AM
Re: the difference in piano sound ? 3800 dollars !!
[Re: cgiles]
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Senior Member
Registered: 05/05/00
Posts: 1384
Loc: koudekerke, Holland.
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Agree with Chas here.
Rachel, YOu are right about the 88 weighted keys ( and so is Diki). However and once again here I see eye to eye with Chas, most arranger keyboard players are not truly proficient pianists and most music they play ( let alone most music their listeners listen to) are well served with most current piano samples in the main brands of keyboards. As to Diki's comments on VST sounds etc. I think with all respect Diki this is an entirely different ballgame. Far removed from your "just switch on the arranger, pick a style , pick a sound and PLAY. VST require a fast computer with a fast processor ( has its price), requires the purchase of high quality VST sounds, you mention some famous brands ( has its price) , and requires knowledge and being capable of arranging all that stuff with your computer and keyboard(s). It is entirely unsuited for gigging imho and when, like me, at home, it still requires all the aforesaid. Mind you some of these ( more expensive ) VST are fantastic. But they are entirely beyond the scope and premise of this thread, see below. I purchased Mixcraft 9Pro which has a fair number of meritable VST sounds on board, I added the Korg M1 VST package as well as the Piano VST package Addictive Keys. All very nice but still a lot of work and not substantially very superior to what I have got now.
Ah yes.....the premise of this thread was.......:
Would/ should you if you had a little money to spare ( 200 dollars), while in the possession of one or more (arranger) keyboards but nothing from the Yamaha brand, consider the purchase of the PSR373 or similar keyboard , like I did ?
regards, John
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#504549 - 12/19/21 05:07 AM
Re: the difference in piano sound ? 3800 dollars !!
[Re: john smies]
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Member
Registered: 09/02/19
Posts: 64
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Would/ should you if you had a little money to spare ( 200 dollars), while in the possession of one or more (arranger) keyboards but nothing from the Yamaha brand, consider the purchase of the PSR373 or similar keyboard , like I did ?
regards, John
To me the answer is NO. For the same reason you mentioned about the VST babel vs HW: convenience (or lack of). Having many pieces of equipment to manage (stand/desktop space, cables, mixer, different UI, difficulty to integrate them, .....) is inconvenient. And this fact offsets any possible marginal gain you might have in this or that sound. And after all, above a certain threshold, nobody will ever notice the difference. The realism of the sound itself is not even important, what matters is the beauty/appropriateness of the sound in the context of the song. Take for example some Italo Disco hits of the 80s. The piano sound was pathetic if compared to today’s standards. But those tunes are nonetheless masterpieces and sound great even today, some 40 years later. But there is also another consideration to make: are 3-4 k€ arrangers (and premium products in general) worth the asked price? Probably not. The much higher price, if compared to the mid range (normal, for the masses) model is not justified by a corresponding higher quality. It is astronomically high on purpose, just to catch the wealthy people that will pay any price just to have the best. Even if they are barely capable to play with a single finger. Instead of having a 4000 + 200 $ arrangers, maybe a single 1000-2000 $ one would be better.
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#504551 - 12/19/21 09:21 AM
Re: the difference in piano sound ? 3800 dollars !!
[Re: john smies]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14289
Loc: NW Florida
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The complexity of using virtual instruments has diminished radically in the last few years. There are quite a lot of host applications designed specifically for live playing that make using virtual instruments almost a joy compared to 20 years ago.
And honestly, if you compare them to the complexity of using a top-of-the-line hardware arranger, I honestly don’t see much difference at all!
I am starting to get a little tired about the argument of how poor arranged players in general tend to be. I don’t believe that is the case, and I’ve heard much playing here that supports that. The truth is, it doesn’t matter WHAT sound we are talking about, in the hands of a bad player it is going to sound bad! And the greatest virtual instrument piano is still going to sound bad, Just like if an eight year old sits down at an REAL piano!
The thing is, do we just stop here, and say “OK, that’s good enough!“, or do we strive for ever better for the apparently few of us that can either hear the difference or play the difference? Me, I’m inclined to think that more of us CAN hear the difference, and CAN make musical use of the difference. Settling for what’s ‘good enough’ for the average arranger user would have stopped the last 20 years worth of progress. It was ‘good enough’ back then too…
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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