Dexibell less but their Vivo H7 is very nice sounding. It can be used both in standalone mode and as an instrument plug-in in VST, AAX, and AudioUnits hosts. It is available for Windows, macOS, and Linux, and will even run on some ARM-based boards such as the Raspberry Pi. All FX processing in Keyscape can be disabled, something I do regularly. Pianoteq is an award-winning virtual instrument which you can install on your computer (PC/Mac). General audio quality and level of detail is considerably higher, there is no contest. The instruments are much easier to play and fit into a mix. Kawai and Dexibell are getting quite some praise for their upright hybrids. I have Key Suite Electric and Keyscape which is in a different league. No, he is more looking for a kind of hybrid instrument like this one What do you mean real (but electric)? Is he looking for a hardware synth that has a real piano sound? If that's the case, Korg Kronos and Nord Stage/piano 3 both have great piano sounds and are both used by pros. I know Yamaha have some great recreations, but do any of you has extensive knowledge on that kind of beasts? So, he really want a real (but electric) instrument. This is the kind of things I proposed him but he told me that the sound of a real piano cannot be fully simulated by a software because of two things : the stereo “only” source of song and the effect produced by the vibrations of the body of the piano. I know Yamaha have some great recreations, but do any of you has extensive knowledge on that kind of said: I really like the UVI Grand IAP and ELEC IAP con said: I would like to ask what people think is the best quality and LOWEST CPU use piano? With today's laptops, fast SSD drives and Kontakt Disk Streaming, you're ready to play just as fast as a modern keyboard needs to boot up Good sample libraries include Spectrasonics Keyscape, or Kontakt-based libs like Soniccouture The Hammersmith, Synthogy Ivory pianos, 8Dio 1969, Native Instruments The Giant or Alicia's Keys or the Definitive Piano Collection. I mostly find sampled pianos more "organic" but he can try the Pianoteq demo and decide for himself. Piano sounds are a matter of taste, some prefer samples, some prefer Pianoteq because it's both tweakable and very expressive. I would personally opt for a good master keyboard controller with Fatar keybed and a laptop with some of the best piano libraries. He is now looking for a very good electric piano that can perfectly recreate the sound and the touch of a real grand. I forget so often that Im playing samples. Ive found my holy grail in VSL Synchron pianos - got all of them and finally ended my quest for 'the best'. And I find PianoTeq 'not there' yet, but its getting better and better with every major update. A friend of mine is a great piano player. I love Keyscape but definitely not for its piano.
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