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Comments
Great video. Thanks so much.
Nice job helping the "little guy" get a fair hearing. For $3 it's quite good and the developer
has provided several updates to address complaints.
This developer could create a whole series of "sample based" products using his sound engine too.
He is a real nice dev/
I’m going to get this, been after a piano on IOS for sometime, price and storage put me off the rest! Well done Pablo.
Done!
@thesoundtestroom, what are your thoughts on the new PureSynth upright piano?
It's much taller than all the Grands.
@McD, actually, the string lengths on full uprights can have the same length strings as a grand,
Everyone knows it not length that matters... it's how you use it. And laying down beats an upright
hump every day of the week. (Couldn't resist the overhead volley).
Still... It's the sound board of the grand that's compelling. When I had a really good musician over to tinkle my Petrof I would laydown under the sound board and soak up the full impact. Grands are generally easier to mic and get a great sample too. That small slit in the top of the upright doesn't really let the piano fill the room and most people shove it up against the wall and loose any benefit from the sound board too. But for an apartment it might be required. If I owned a physical piano it would be an upright in a smaller home.
Still, for the honky tonk, "Lady Madonna", sound an upright can come in handy. Many will take a cheap upright and put tacks in the hammers to make it have an interesting tone.
A felt piano will usually be an upright so the felt can be hung vertically between the hammer and the strings. That also can make it a good practice piano for shared walls.
I own most of the Colossus Pianos except for the uprights... I have a bias for good tone. With a close mic'ed piano it can be hard to tell if it's real or if it's Memorex because the major benefits are resonance. String resonance in particular is enhanced with a massive sound board. Not unlike a big box guitar the acoustics of the enclosure is a factor in the sound of the instrument.
The build quality of Grands is typically much better than an upright and the hammer action also requires gravity to participate in key return I think.