Nabeel Ansari Posted July 27, 2014 Share Posted July 27, 2014 I'll have to check out Legacy Grand. I, too, tend to prefer Steinways over other makes. (My current favorite sampled piano is the Steinway from QL Pianos.) It's really good and has a lot of tone shaping options. I have the 1969. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timaeus222 Posted July 27, 2014 Share Posted July 27, 2014 Storing a synth preset is different from storing a sampled synth preset. Well yeah, and that's part of my point of comparison. Of course waveforms vs. samples makes that big a difference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nabeel Ansari Posted July 27, 2014 Share Posted July 27, 2014 Of course waveforms vs. samples makes that big a difference. "waveforms vs. samples" Samples are stored waveforms, whereas synth presets are just stored values for the knobs/parameters. No waveforms at all, except in special cases like Zebra 2. Even those single periods in a "draw your wave" synth maybe have 100-200 frames in their construction, super tiny. In most other cases (like most synths that aren't Zebra 2), a preset is just a text file storing the values of each parameter. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timaeus222 Posted July 27, 2014 Share Posted July 27, 2014 "waveforms vs. samples" Samples are stored waveforms, whereas synth presets are just stored values for the knobs/parameters. No waveforms at all, except in special cases like Zebra 2. Even those single periods in a "draw your wave" synth maybe have 100-200 frames in their construction, super tiny.In most other cases (like most synths that aren't Zebra 2), a preset is just a text file storing the values of each parameter. Okay, I'll clarify. Basic waveforms vs. Samples. Squares, triangles, etc. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnappleMan Posted July 28, 2014 Share Posted July 28, 2014 This is a great sounding piano. There are so many versions of this that are all great sounding that there's no reason to bitch. If you're gonna be doing a full mix with all kinds of drums and basses and bagpipes then you can use a simpler piano and get away with it, but if you're doing a piano piece you definitely want something with this level of detail, and for that it's very worthwhile. But yeah, I'm definitely picking up one of the lighter versions of this plugin sometime. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nabeel Ansari Posted July 28, 2014 Share Posted July 28, 2014 (edited) Okay, I'll clarify. Basic waveforms vs. Samples. Squares, triangles, etc. Again, synth presets are not stored waveforms. They're just stored parameter values. A synth preset is like a text file that reads: "knob1: 50% knob2: 32% ... ... ... " etc. (think of it like a save file in a game. It just stores the state of everything.) That's why these files are insanely small. Synth presets don't store waveforms unless it's something like Zebra where it needs to save something that the user hand drew into the program. Otherwise, they're generated either through a wave table lookup or through functions. The waveforms in the wave tables are again not stored in a synth preset file, but independently stored for reuse. It's bad software design to generate new waveform tables for every new patch when they're all identical. Edited July 28, 2014 by Neblix Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timaeus222 Posted July 28, 2014 Share Posted July 28, 2014 (edited) Again, synth presets are not stored waveforms. They're just stored parameter values. A synth preset is like a text file that reads:"knob1: 50% knob2: 32% ... ... ... " etc. (think of it like a save file in a game. It just stores the state of everything.) That's why these files are insanely small. Synth presets don't store waveforms unless it's something like Zebra where it needs to save something that the user hand drew into the program. Otherwise, they're generated either through a wave table lookup or through functions. The waveforms in the wave tables are again not stored in a synth preset file, but independently stored for reuse. It's bad software design to generate new waveform tables for every new patch when they're all identical. Well, it's not like I actually know how preset saving works, dude. I don't design synths. Lighten up. Anyways... this topic's more about pianos. [/offtopic] Edited July 28, 2014 by timaeus222 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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