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The sound it made, although probably less than 1% of the audience noticed, was that of a pristine modern piano.
![pianoteq 6 pan left right pianoteq 6 pan left right](http://gapyx.com/cmt/2008/12/ptq_microtonal2.jpg)
#PIANOTEQ 6 PAN LEFT RIGHT TV#
In an early episode we were presented a parlor scene in which a young lady sat playing a keyboard instrument that could have been either a harpsichord or a first-generation piano – hard to tell without a closer look than what we got on the TV screen.
#PIANOTEQ 6 PAN LEFT RIGHT SERIES#
The Netflix hit series Bridgerton was set in the early nineteenth century. They are probably well worth demoing, however, if you just want a generic harpsichord or early piano for soundtrack purposes or the like.
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Modartt also has a number of free instrument packs, nearly all of them also historical keyboards, but I have not had the time to explore those, so we’ll not be looking at them here. It can be played in diatonic mode just like the concert harp, if that’s of any use to you.įour instrument packs provide a selection of historical keyboards, both harpsichords and pianos, the origins of which range from 1600 to the end of the nineteenth century. The Celtic harp is a pleasant-sounding instrument that’s probably got a bigger range than most real-world instruments of that type. The concert harp in chromatic mode presumably recreates that instrument, which is no doubt easier to play by a keyboardist than the original was by a harpist.
#PIANOTEQ 6 PAN LEFT RIGHT HOW TO#
There was once an actual chromatic concert harp instrument having twelve notes per octave that only a tiny number of people ever learned how to play. Clever, no? Actually, you can reverse the operation of the sustain pedal for any instrument – for most instruments that’s not a logical choice but it makes perfect sense here. Press it down and notes not having the keys depressed are silenced. So Modartt made it possible to invert the functions of the sustain pedal. Pluck a string on the harp and it continues to sound until silenced by natural decay or the player touches it such that it stops vibrating. The harpist silences notes with their hands and/or forearms. Harps have no dampers like pianos and harpsichords. There’s another smart design choice to appreciate. The black keys otherwise don’t trigger a note. The trio-clusters of adjacent black keys become virtual harp pedals, as can be probably be intuited by those who understand the concert harp. The image just below shows the keyboard in diatonic mode. So, Modartt came up with an inspired and clever mechanism to provide a keyboard equivalent that can be played almost like the real thing, glissandos and all. For example, if we lower the Fs to Es and raise the Bs to Cs, we get a Pythagorean scale in the key of C but we get two Cs and two Es if playing a glissando. By duplicating some keys, other non-seven-note scales can also be created. Thus, any of the seven-note scales (major and minor) can be created. A pedal can cause its associated notes to be raised a semitone or lowered a semitone from the pitch of the middle position. Play a glissando and you get a C major progression of notes. With all pedals in their middle position, the harp strings correspond to white keys on a piano. Each pedal is associated with one note of the octave (all the C notes, all the D notes, etc.). They have seven pedals, each pedal having three positions. If you already know how concert harps work, you can skip the next paragraph.Ĭoncert harps have seven strings per octave. The grand harp is particularly interesting in the design choices.
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The Harp pack offers a full concert grand harp and a Celtic harp with nylon strings.
![pianoteq 6 pan left right pianoteq 6 pan left right](https://bedroomproducersblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/pianoteq-5-review.jpg)
Be aware that all instruments are represented by demo tracks that ably show off their character – see the web site (URL at end) to listen. Suffice it to say up front, there’s not a loser in the catalog in my estimation. I don’t know a whole lot about xylophones and marimbas, for example, so I won’t risk getting in over my head. There are many packs to look at, and we’ll explore some more deeply than others, but more detailed coverage herein does not imply better. I’ll just include a reminder instrument packs have a list price of $59 USD, but have had frequent discounts of 20 to 30% in recent history. Here we’ll look at all the other Pianoteq 7 instruments which include historical keyboards as well as a considerable variety of non-piano instrument types, stringed and otherwise, in the form of instrument packs that can be purchased individually. Please refer to Part 1 to learn about pricing, etc. In Part 1 of this review of Pianoteq 7 we looked at the overall virtual instrument and the modern pianos available to run on that platform.