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Recording acoustic piano
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wyntergrace
Larry Oji, Super Moderator, Judge, "Dirge for the Follin" Project Director, VG Frequency Creator


Member 23125

Level 2.74

Jul 2007


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Old Jul 9, 2007, 04:08 PM Local time: Jul 9, 2007, 03:08 PM #1 of 3
Recording acoustic piano

Is there anyone out there recording acoustic piano digitally? I have been using Apple Garageband to record a real instrument track, importing it to itunes, and burning it to a cd from there. Is anyone using a different program they find works well for this type of application? I am recording mostly classical type pieces, and only occasionally working with other instrumentalists. Thank you very much!

Jam it back in, in the dark.
Yukie
Syklis Green


Member 19355

Level 8.29

Feb 2007


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Old Aug 16, 2007, 12:01 PM Local time: Aug 16, 2007, 12:01 PM #2 of 3
I think most professionals/studios either use Pro Tools or a hardware recorder. I use Cakewalk Sonar 6 myself.

I'm interesting in what kind of mic setup you use. Almost touching strings (close)?, a few feet away (mid-ambient)?, far away (ambient)?, mixed? etc... I wish I had access to a hall with nice acoustics to record my playing, it's tough to get good results when ever I record anything...

How ya doing, buddy?
RainMan
DAMND


Member 19121

Level 28.96

Feb 2007


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Old Aug 16, 2007, 09:33 PM Local time: Aug 16, 2007, 09:33 PM #3 of 3
I utilize a sampler. Its Garritan Personal Orchestra's piano. Its not as realistic as I would like but sometimes its easier to use a sampler than find a player.

(ex)

http://www.allacrost.org/staff/user/rain/Prelude2.mp3

I imagine the best way to get a good crisp mic recording of a piano, would be to set up 2 mics , (for L, R stereo) near the piano's aural 'sweet spot'. The thing is, most piano's are different and therefore adjustments need to be made to take advantage of each piano's sound.

For a brighter piano, I tend to like a closer mic, to catch the vibrant key tones for a brighter, jumpier responsive sound. On an older piano, the wood has aged and probably has a different quality of sound. Therefore, mic-ing the piano a bit further might help to take advantage of the tone and pick up the natural reverb of the room/piano nicely.

It depends on what you want.

This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
...
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