On Thu, Feb 04, 2010 at 03:32:23PM -0500, Paul Davis wrote:
> >I don't need 20 pianos, I also need
> > strings, pads, hard synths, Atmo-FX and the lot.
> given that pianoteq is using physical modelling, its hard to see how
> their technology could be applied to hard synths, pads or atmo-fx.
That's why Steinberg's Hypersonic2 is a hybrid: it has a sample ROM, it
has the usual synthesizer stuff (VCO+LFO) for the hard leads and a FX
section, an arpeggiator plus some more to combine everything.
I don't expect Pianoteq to be anything else than a piano, but this
doesn't change the point that there's no allround virtual instrument on
Linux that's suitable for the average pop producer or live keyboardist
playing in a Top40 band. (that's exactly what the microX does: it
delivers a wide variety of decent sounds ready to be used for
straight-forward tasks)
I guess the hardest part of making such a Motif/Triton/Phantom clone is
getting some nice samples, which won't probably happen for free. I could
sample an acoustic guitar, but I can't record a whole orchestra. ;)
Cheerio
-- mail: adi@email-addr-hidden http://adi.thur.de PGP/GPG: key via keyserver _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list Linux-audio-dev@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-devReceived on Fri Feb 5 00:15:03 2010
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