![]() ![]() The ones here ( and others) all sound great to me. I haven’t used the most recent and advanced of the sample based instruments. But I haven’t really made comparisons with sampled pianos. I don't think you can really say the majority here are into generative stuff. Many that do post are non generative like and quite a few said:Īt most there is a sub-section of people here that are into generative music, but also plenty of songwriters, composers, performers, and musicians of all stripes. Also, a very small percentage of members are regular creation contributors, so we don’t know what they are doing. I think it is a false generalization that most folks here follow a generative prescription. And you can tweak Pianoteq around as well to sound not piano-ish, but depending on Modartt's iOS price point it may not be worth it. Ok, I wasn't aware that most here were into generative music, but fair enough. ![]() Many of these people would love to have an (arguably) better sounding and (certainly) more flexible alternative on iOS, like Pianoteq. Piano apps like Ravenscroft and Pure Piano are among the targets they use for this generated music. Seems like the majority of people in this forum are into generative music, using sequencers and various other apps to create midi streams that they feed to synth apps. No one is playing Pianoteq on an iPad keyboard. Pianoteq, my favourite desktop plugin of all time, for iOS? I haven't heard so far of any deals for current owners, but it seems odd that Modartt would use it as a selling point for Pianoteq 8 if you couldn't get some kind of said: I rarely touch the screen after I get the sound. After a few touch tweaks you are playing. Plug in headphones/speaker (after hunting down audio dongle) or hook-up your audio interface. Laptop? Plug in midi keyboard and headphones out (or to speakers) and you're playing/ready to record. The more I think about it, the less inclined I am to get the iOS version. I've read a few posters online suggest that this is the case.Įdit: Actually the FAQ is for Pianoteq 8. Note also that the FAQ is for Pianoteq 7 and it's possible that Pianoteq 8 is more CPU intensive. *No mention of the Apple A12Z, but it's similar and probably a touch more powerful than the A12X The iPad CPUs on the high end cpus benchmark link are: Many bass notes in combination with the sustain pedal require lots of computations for the CPU. In what situation does the CPU load get high? The Linux version of Pianoteq 7 and later lets you work with ARM RISC based CPU's used in smaller Linux based consumer electronic devices. We recommend any multi-core CPU, listed on this page: īy restricting the internal sample rate in the Options menu, you can work with less powerful CPU's. Many modern computers already offer a fully sufficient CPU. Pianoteq is CPU intensive software for it computes the sound in realtime. In contrast to many other virtual pianos, there is no need to invest in any additional RAM sticks to achieve maximum performance. Most modern computers are equipped with at least 8 GB (gigabytes) of RAM. How much RAM (internal memory) is needed for smooth playback? ![]()
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