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#507370 - 01/06/23 08:55 AM
"new" piano pics
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/20/09
Posts: 3230
Loc: Dallas, Texas
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Here's our new 1958 Baldwin Baby Grand Model M, in a limited edition mid century modern case. It has been fully restored to like new condition. My jazz piano teacher, who is about half my age, is quite the purist. He highly recommended that I practice on an acoustic instrument, and that will improve my touch on any keyboard. After months of searching, I found something that both my wife and I could agree on. She loves the mid century modern look, and I love the sound. Cool thing is that my wife is staring to play again too. When she was a kid, she studied classical piano at the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico, but she never connected to all the electronic keyboards I've had. Anyways, it been fun for us. She's teaching me about the classical repertoire and I'm teaching her how to comp and play from a lead sheet.
It's a major victory I was able to post the picture here at all. Thanks to Gary, Larry, and Diki with your assistance!
Attachments
Edited by montunoman (01/06/23 10:10 AM)
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#507372 - 01/06/23 10:20 AM
Re: "new" piano pics
[Re: montunoman]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
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I tend to distrust the opinions of ‘purists’..!
Your piano teacher may be right in saying time spent on a real piano may improve your touch, but translating that to a super light action like you find on mid-range arrangers is as much work as getting the fingers strong enough for full dynamics on an acoustic.
It would be as valid to say that playing a real clavinet, or a real Rhodes, or an old Hammond would be as useful if those are the sounds you wish to feature. Each feature actions utterly different to anything else, and the limitations (and strengths!) of those actions also contribute to what sounds best played on them.
I think the real importance of playing a fine beautiful piano like you have ♥️ is to step away from the machines, and reconnect with making music with no aids, no crutches, no shortcuts! No transpose button on a piano! No auto bass. No drummer. Just 88 notes and you….
Stripping music down to this and the voice gives us a focus, and an appreciation of how much can be achieved with so little gives us perspective when it comes to turning back to the machines, and perhaps helps us rely on them less and not overuse them.
A real piano is a joy, I hope you have many, many years of joy from it. If you never played real piano before, yes, I think it will help your finger strength and dynamics. But unless you use good quality 88 note controllers for everything else too, you need to be careful that all that extra strength doesn’t overpower the action when you go back to something like an SX900 etc..
Enjoy it!
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#507373 - 01/06/23 11:27 AM
Re: "new" piano pics
[Re: montunoman]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Great photo, Paul. Loved the restoration of the piano, and the mahogany veneer finish is just beautiful. Also loved the "Real" hardwood, red oak flooring the piano sits upon. Good luck, 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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#507375 - 01/06/23 02:57 PM
Re: "new" piano pics
[Re: montunoman]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/02
Posts: 5520
Loc: Port Charlotte,FL,USA
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What beauties, your new piano and your lovely wife Bernie
_________________________
pa4X 76 ,SX900, Audya 76,Yamaha S970 , vArranger, Hammond SK1, Ketron SD40, Centerpoint Space Station, Bose compact
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#507377 - 01/06/23 11:16 PM
Re: "new" piano pics
[Re: montunoman]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
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If anyone already has a decent action electronic 88, you could do well taking a VERY close look at some laptop software. The last few years, some of those grand piano libraries have got seriously good. I mean, to the point that reviewers are no longer really reviewing the software, they are discussing the pianos that were sampled themselves! Even the best of them are usually under half a grand US, many great ones are a hundred bucks, or a couple of hundred. For my taste, I don’t think you can go wrong with Spectrasonic’s Keyscape, which not only has amazing Steinway and Yamaha’s, but also basically every other electromechanical keyboard done just as well… Rhodes, Wurli, Clav’s, Pianet’s, you name it. Exquisitely sampled, superbly playable. Always reviewed very highly. If you want to tweak and voice your piano, and like me like a little ‘knocked about’ in your sound, Pianoteq7 (or are they on 8 already?) allows an insane degree of getting in there like a piano technician and screwing around with the per string tuning and voicing. Their slightly aged presets are amazing at replicating the sound of a piano that might not have JUST been tuned, but had a bit of time to get played in. I often feel most sampled sets are just a little TOO perfect, like you sat down at it the second the tuner was done! Few of us get that privilege for long, and most pianos on older recordings were a little ‘aged’. They sure didn’t get the tuner in for each take! An FP90 running into one of these softwares might get you pretty damn close to sounding real nowadays… Try this comparison. https://youtu.be/spDOiJcoKgUThis YouTube channel (Merriam Music) is an exhaustive resource for great honest reviews about everything from real pianos, digital stage pianos and software. He knows his stuff, and plays and demos them all beautifully. Can’t recommend the channel too highly! 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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