On Mon, 16 Jan 2017, jonetsu wrote:
> CPU is a concern that is explored by u-he. As they state, it's not
> much if people cannot use it. pianoteq does just fine, so one could
> wonder - in general - what could be the difference between the
> physical modeling of piano and drums regarding CPU usage.
One piano model vs many drum models?
> world. Simply play one of pianoteq pianos or vibraphones and you will
> immeditely feel it - it is very clear and distinctive. The actual
Personally, I would say that the difference in modelling a piano with keys
where the inputs for any one key is known is a lot different that the
number of sounds just one snare drum can make just by hitting it in a
different place. This does not even include things like rim shots (again
with various touch points for both skin and rim) or sidestick. MIDI
describes a keyboard quite well, a drum not so much. I don't think there
is even a controller that comes close to picking up the whole information
of a drum performance... for even one drum, let alone a kit or percusion
section. I suspect that really getting a drum performance in MIDI would
require a model for each drum, that uses the note numbers as stick zones.
So pianoteq times 8 or so.... and then no controller anyway. (one might
get away with one drum engine for all toms... might) This is the reasona
guitar synth sounds like a synth... a keyboard synth IMO.
pianoteq is a wonderful sounding instrument. If I was a piano player, or
even had a piano controller (rather than a DX7), I would have it. It
sounds way better than any sampled piano I have heard.
-- Len Ovens www.ovenwerks.net _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Mon Jan 16 20:15:01 2017
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