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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!hal.com!decwrl!csus.edu!netcom.com!chand
- From: chand@netcom.com (Charlie Hand)
- Newsgroups: ba.music
- Subject: Re: Weighted MIDI Controllers - Which?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.054255.28913@netcom.com>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 05:42:55 GMT
- References: <bryguy-230193111411@bryguy.apple.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <bryguy-230193111411@bryguy.apple.com> bryguy@apple.com (bRYgUY K. Carter) writes:
- > Admittedly, I don't know *what* I'm supposed to look for in a MIDI
- >controller. Features, responsiveness of the weighted keys, etc.
- >
-
- I went through this process a year ago. I looked at number of controllers
- and sound boxes, comparing them against digital pianos, and I finally
- went with a Yamaha Clavinova model 560 piano. My main problem with the
- controller/sound box combination was the sound box. The considerations
- I ended up with were:
-
- 1) Stereo piano samples - I like real stereo piano samples, not just
- phased mono samples.
-
- 2) Total number of samples - A lot of sound boxes take a few samples
- of a piano, say one sample every two octaves. This leads to
- an abrupt change in character at the seams. Play the entire
- chromatic scale from bottom to top to discover these seams.
- The Clavinova has none.
-
- 3) Pedal response (this is a function of the sound box, not the
- controller) - In a real piano, when you release the sustain
- pedal, a felt pad contacts the strings and they begin to die
- out. Only they don't die out instantly, it takes a short period
- of time. In a real piano, if you release the pedal and then
- quickly press it again, the strings will have died out part-way,
- but then when you press the pedal again, they will sustain again
- at their new, lower, volume. Many sound boxes don't do this.
- Once you release the pedal, that's it. They do have a release
- contour, the sound doesn't die all at once, but if you press
- the pedal again after releasing it, it won't do you any good.
- If you want to play piano, you may want this level of emulation
- now or in the future. The Clavinova emulates a piano in this
- regard. (Hold down the sustain pedal, strike a key and release
- it, then quickly release and re-depress the sustain pedal.
- The note should sustain at a lower volume than before.)
-
- The Clavinova is not terribly portable, but I don't imagine those
- weighted 88-key controllers are, either. Of course it has MIDI
- in and out so I can play my synth from the Clavinova keyboard, and
- play the Clavinova from the sequencer, or whatever.
-
- Of course poliphony is always a consideration. The Clavinova has
- 16-note poliphony for the stereo pianos, 32-note for the mono
- pianos and other voices. I'd say 16 is an absolute minimum. I
- occationally get into dropped-note situations with the stereo
- piano.
-
- - charlie
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