![]() ![]() ![]() Ergo the Purgatory Creek (or any other midi data source really) testing midi file means each keyboard is getting EXACTLY the same data. They need to be exactly the same note and velocity data, and no matter how GOOD one is this is nearly impossible to achieve by human means. ![]() This is exactly the problem when doing comparisons. Thanks for the "thanks" on my PX-5S intro videos All of my other equipment is used in my studio where compositions are done with music libraries, film and television quality in mind. I use the PX-5S (and the PX-350) for all of my performances where no piano is provided. Sometimes people get up and start singing along! But the bottom line is, unless the live performance takes place at a concert hall where the performer IS the reason people come (ie: Lang Lang for instance), then subtle differences don't matter. I'm there to provide background music or ambience. I'm a solo pianist who does live performances (no band), and in a live performance, people are talking, eating, drinking, moving around, socializing. Subtle differences are always the case in live performances. They've really helped me get to know my new Px5. It's one thing to sit and listen in my living room, wearing headphones, to VST versus onboard it's often an entirely different thing in a live performance where the keyboard is only one of several instruments playing simultaneously- at least that's what I've found in the context of my classic rock band.īy the way, thanks for your intro vides on the Px5, PianoManChuck. One thing I've discovered is that subtle differences between VST's and onboard sounds often are washed away in live performances. ![]()
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