[pianotech] idol voicing

Dean May deanmay at pianorebuilders.com
Mon Mar 30 16:56:38 PDT 2009


I'm listening through a satellite signal, surround stereo with subwoofer. 

 

I do understand your point, that the sound I'm hearing is not the actual
sound of the piano. I guess my request is: pretend that it is. What could be
done to fix it or does it need fixed (assuming you watched the show and
heard the piano)? 

 

Dean

Dean May             cell 812.239.3359 

PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272 

Terre Haute IN  47802

  _____  

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of David Andersen
Sent: Monday, March 30, 2009 12:23 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] idol voicing

 

Hi Dean----some questions:

---what speakers are you hearing it through?

---is it just through the the TV, or is there an external amp and system
involved?

 

Speaking in a highly simplified manner, the sound you hear is NOT the sound
that's coming out of the piano. The signal you hear has been digitally
compressed several times along its signal path before it gets to your ears;
has lost both real low and real high frequencies; has had upper midrange
frequencies boosted, sometimes in sonically ugly ways. 

 

That said, a majority of pianos used in a "pop" situation sound way too
bright, clangy, and metallic for my taste---it's like, why not use a digital
keyboard if you want that sound? But that's just the way it is: every person
grew up with a different "ideal" piano sound; if your tonal memory of great
piano sound was formed by Bruce Hornsby and David Foster-produced records,
that snarling, lo-fi GH1B sound is just perfect.  Every head is a tonal
planet: different gravity, different atmosphere.

 

Listen to the pianos on the recordings on my website. We try to capture the
brilliance and percussive aspect of the instrument AS WELL AS the golden and
throaty aspect. Those recording are, as a whole, pretty good representations
of how the pianos actually sound----IF you are listening on decent
speakers.....

 

Hope this helps.....

David A.

 

 

 

On Mar 30, 2009, at 8:45 AM, Dean May wrote:





Voicing has always been a difficult subject for me and I think many other
technicians. Uppermost is the question, exactly what kind of tone are we
trying to achieve? For those of us who have not had the benefit of working
alongside a master concert prep technician we are left with exploring what
is pleasing to us and our customers, who most often are happy to leave well
enough alone. So when Dale Erwin, David Anderson, Ric Brenke, et al, use
words on this list to describe a wonderful tonal palate of some hammer's
sound, I'm sorta left wondering what that sound really is as I am not there
experiencing it.

 

Having said all that as way of introduction, I found myself watching
American Idol last week. This is a show I have studiously avoided watching
as I vigorously disagree with the premise that a true artist's career can
only be launched by winning the fickle public's voting lottery. This year
they seem to have some good candidates as finalists, and several of them are
making use of a 9 foot Yamaha grand. Since I suspect many of you have
watched the show, I'd be pleased if you would chime in on what you thought
of this piano's sound.

 

Myself, I do not care much for it. I find it too percussive and shallow,
sounding more like a GH-1B than what it seems like a 9 footer should sound.
I don't know if it is a hammer issue, a microphone issue, or a mixing issue.
It might be instructive for us less experience voicers out here if some of
you more experienced ones could tell us your opinions of this piano.
Perhaps, if you are aware of other high profile pianos on TV shows, you
could comment on those as well.

 

Dean

Dean May             cell 812.239.3359

PianoRebuilders.com   812.235.5272

Terre Haute IN  47802

 

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech_ptg.org/attachments/20090330/342d94a3/attachment.html>


More information about the pianotech mailing list

This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC