1/25/2024 0 Comments Truepianos forefrontRegarding TruePianos modeling, I was't necessarily referring to resonance modeling, specifically, but just that Forefront advertised it as a modeling synth even before they released that one patch that included resonance modeling. There's definitely potential for interoperability issues there, depending on how a given synth renders audio. At least, that's the hardware synth model things may be a little different in the soft synth world where the host architecture has a bearing on how MIDI and audio are buffered into and out of the plugin. ![]() And with or without sustain, it's up to the synth to keep track of what note ons and offs have been received, and to advance the envelopes for each voice in the order that they were originally triggered accordingly. If the sustain pedal isn't down, you might not normally expect to have more than one voice being used at a time, but the potential for more than one still exists if a second note on is received while the first voice is still in its release stage. The synth should only advance the envelope for a given voice to the release stage if a corresponding note-off has been received (and the pedal is up), not just on receiving another note on. I figured you understood all of this quite well, and had just mis-stated. ![]() I know it has one piano that models soundboard resonance with just a pedal down, but I didn't know about modeling resonance build-up from multiple keystrikes, if that's what it is. In this case, with a DAW (Sonar's original recorded track) and keyboard both sending (albeit filtered by Sonar), is there a parity of note-offs with note-ons? Do they arrive in a strict sequence? Does Ivory depend on that in some way? And the question behind this question is what is Ivory doing wrong that Truepiano is doing right, and what is the exact circumstance that generates this unexpected behavior? That's why I am wondering about the flow of note-ons & -offs. According to OP, there is no sustain involved anyway. Otherwise, it wouldn't know whether or not to extend the note when the sustain pedal is lifted. The synth should remember that note-off was sent. In the synth it just extends the sustain phase if the patch parameters so dictate. The keyboard has no idea what the synth is supposed to do about the sustain pedal. But from a real keyboard, there would be a note-off before the next note-on for any note number the sustain pedal does not prevent an incoming note-off from a keyboard. ![]() Yeah, it should interrupt/mute/restart at least, if not cancel.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |