Thinking of getting a digital piano
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 01:36 last edited by
Action is pretty good! This is the first thing I ever played on it. I didn't know pianoteq automatically recorded everything, but apparently I can just save anything I play to Mp3. A whole new universe of unwanted sharing awaits me. My fingers got stuck on the keys a couple times, but I'll get used to it.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 01:51 last edited by
PianoTeq is ALWAYS recording. You can save the most recent recording as a MIDI file.
Then, at a later time, you can load that MIDI, and output to MP3, choosing what instrument you want.
It's fun.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 02:10 last edited by
I have a slightly different setup in that I have the output going to a DAC/headphone amplifier which I use to listen to the piano. It's a a little overkill. At first, I didn't realize it was always recording, but I love it as if that one in thousand times I think "that was really good. No one would believe you played it" - is there for posterity. When I plan to make a recording, things don't always go as planned.
When I first started playing, I experimented a bit with different instruments, but as with George, I've settled into the Hamburg Steinway. For a while, nearly all of my practice was on the digital, but now I'm back to being balanced, playing the grand about 35% of the time and the Roland the rest. It's nice for real work where I want to play a couple of lines 1100 times until muscle memory is better. Playing the real piano keeps me honest - and sometimes brings out things I didn't catch on the digital.
I'm using a PC to store Pianoteq and also for Roon and streaming. I don't use it for anything else.
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I have a slightly different setup in that I have the output going to a DAC/headphone amplifier which I use to listen to the piano. It's a a little overkill. At first, I didn't realize it was always recording, but I love it as if that one in thousand times I think "that was really good. No one would believe you played it" - is there for posterity. When I plan to make a recording, things don't always go as planned.
When I first started playing, I experimented a bit with different instruments, but as with George, I've settled into the Hamburg Steinway. For a while, nearly all of my practice was on the digital, but now I'm back to being balanced, playing the grand about 35% of the time and the Roland the rest. It's nice for real work where I want to play a couple of lines 1100 times until muscle memory is better. Playing the real piano keeps me honest - and sometimes brings out things I didn't catch on the digital.
I'm using a PC to store Pianoteq and also for Roon and streaming. I don't use it for anything else.
wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 03:25 last edited by@kluurs said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
I have a slightly different setup in that I have the output going to a DAC/headphone amplifier which I use to listen to the piano. It's a a little overkill.
But still you listen to the pianoteq sounds, right?
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 03:50 last edited by
The treble on the HB Steinway "classical" mode is beautiful.
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Here we are. My Steinway Ds (one Hamburg and one NY) and my Bechstein 282. Why not 283? I don’t know. Maybe Bechstein is just lazy. I got the audio interface box just in case I had latency with windows audio. I did, and with the box there is none. So I won’t be returning it.
The Pianoteq license gave me two pianos, and I chose the Steinway package because there’s two of them, and I think Pianoteq spent the most development on them. The Bechstein is on honor of our dearly departed Larry. I will play a lot of classical music on it. His favorite.
wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 04:10 last edited by@Horace said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
Here we are. My Steinway Ds (one Hamburg and one NY) and my Bechstein 282. Why not 283? I don’t know. Maybe Bechstein is just lazy. I got the audio interface box just in case I had latency with windows audio. I did, and with the box there is none. So I won’t be returning it.
The Pianoteq license gave me two pianos, and I chose the Steinway package because there’s two of them, and I think Pianoteq spent the most development on them. The Bechstein is on honor of our dearly departed Larry. I will play a lot of classical music on it. His favorite.
I have to admit your proximity to the bathroom door is quite inspirational. To be able to traverse between the ivory gods and the porcelain false gods is nothing short of brave.
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@Horace said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
Here we are. My Steinway Ds (one Hamburg and one NY) and my Bechstein 282. Why not 283? I don’t know. Maybe Bechstein is just lazy. I got the audio interface box just in case I had latency with windows audio. I did, and with the box there is none. So I won’t be returning it.
The Pianoteq license gave me two pianos, and I chose the Steinway package because there’s two of them, and I think Pianoteq spent the most development on them. The Bechstein is on honor of our dearly departed Larry. I will play a lot of classical music on it. His favorite.
I have to admit your proximity to the bathroom door is quite inspirational. To be able to traverse between the ivory gods and the porcelain false gods is nothing short of brave.
wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 04:14 last edited by@89th said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
@Horace said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
Here we are. My Steinway Ds (one Hamburg and one NY) and my Bechstein 282. Why not 283? I don’t know. Maybe Bechstein is just lazy. I got the audio interface box just in case I had latency with windows audio. I did, and with the box there is none. So I won’t be returning it.
The Pianoteq license gave me two pianos, and I chose the Steinway package because there’s two of them, and I think Pianoteq spent the most development on them. The Bechstein is on honor of our dearly departed Larry. I will play a lot of classical music on it. His favorite.
I have to admit your proximity to the bathroom door is quite inspirational. To be able to traverse between the ivory gods and the porcelain false gods is nothing short of brave.
That's my office closet. I keep all my gay in there.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 14:36 last edited by
just noticed this morning a loud clicking noise coming from several of the black keys if they are released quickly. it's loud enough, and intermittent enough across the keyboard, that it can't be normal. I'll go to Costco today and buy another and swap the keyboards and return it as defective. Hopefully they are still in stock.
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just noticed this morning a loud clicking noise coming from several of the black keys if they are released quickly. it's loud enough, and intermittent enough across the keyboard, that it can't be normal. I'll go to Costco today and buy another and swap the keyboards and return it as defective. Hopefully they are still in stock.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 15:22 last edited by
I've decided it's less unethical to return the floor-bought piano as the online purchased piano, as long as the keyboard you're returning really is defective, and really is the one you got online.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 15:23 last edited by
Tell the Costco guy what you are doing.
He won't care.
Then you might feel better about it.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 15:26 last edited by
Got someone who's pickup you can borrow?
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 15:41 last edited by
@George-K said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
Got someone who's pickup you can borrow?
They unboxed keyboard fits comfortably in my trunk with the back seat folded down.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 16:43 last edited by
But what caused the clicking sound?
Ace Hardware sells a kit for working on electronic instruments.
Good time for you to familiarize yourself with your new piano!
Take it apart, get the grease gun out of the garage, go to it.
Or, I guess let warranty take care of it if necessary.
But have the grease gun at the ready.Anyway, huge congratulations on the piano. I'm envious, in a good supportive way.
And, more recordings! That was enjoyable! -
But what caused the clicking sound?
Ace Hardware sells a kit for working on electronic instruments.
Good time for you to familiarize yourself with your new piano!
Take it apart, get the grease gun out of the garage, go to it.
Or, I guess let warranty take care of it if necessary.
But have the grease gun at the ready.Anyway, huge congratulations on the piano. I'm envious, in a good supportive way.
And, more recordings! That was enjoyable!wrote on 18 Nov 2023, 17:34 last edited by@Rainman said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
But what caused the clicking sound?
Ace Hardware sells a kit for working on electronic instruments.
Good time for you to familiarize yourself with your new piano!
Take it apart, get the grease gun out of the garage, go to it.
Or, I guess let warranty take care of it if necessary.
But have the grease gun at the ready.Anyway, huge congratulations on the piano. I'm envious, in a good supportive way.
And, more recordings! That was enjoyable!Thanks RM. I don't really fit behind the keyboard because I'm so fat, which is why I miss some notes sometimes.
I just went to costco and replaced the keyboard. This one is totally click-less, feels perfect, but the bluetooth doesn't work. Sigh.
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wrote on 19 Nov 2023, 06:26 last edited by
What headphones do you Pianoteq peeps use? I am investing in Sennheiser 650s. I think I am bottlenecked in sound quality with my cheap headphones.
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What headphones do you Pianoteq peeps use? I am investing in Sennheiser 650s. I think I am bottlenecked in sound quality with my cheap headphones.
wrote on 19 Nov 2023, 12:50 last edited by@Horace said in Thinking of getting a digital piano:
What headphones do you Pianoteq peeps use?
You'll have to go to @kluurs for that one. I use some cheapo headphones - a no-name brand. For my needs they're OK. If I want great, room-filling, sound, I'll go to my grand.
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wrote on 19 Nov 2023, 13:44 last edited by
I use Sennheiser HD 800 which I run through a Topping D90SE DAC/headphone amplifier.
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wrote on 19 Nov 2023, 14:30 last edited by jon-nyc
I literally just ordered my third pair of Sony MDR7506 professional studio headphones yesterday. They seem to last about 8 or 9 years then the ear piece cushions start disintegrating from all the contact with my scratchy face. I briefly considered looking what else was out there but I’m so used to the weight and feel of these, I’ve been using them since 2005.
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wrote on 19 Nov 2023, 14:38 last edited by
The only thing I don't like about mine is that the earpiece is a bit too small. I might consider replacing them with something that's more "over the ear-ish".