It doesn't need repackaging, it's a great secret weapon just the way it is.
Add a couple of the little reds a stereo imager and an mclass eq to the channel and I'm happier with it than the 99 bucks I spend on radkeys and processed piano res....
It doesn't need repackaging, it's a great secret weapon just the way it is.
I can confirm when record came out, some reason piano patches were porte into id8.selig wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022Yes, it is exactly that as far as I can tell.Termigator wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022so id8 grand piano is reason pianos Steinway d close mic i think, so i use that for more classical
radical has a nice busted up home piano sound
I'd say it's more a question of availability than affordability...
yeah see i’m with you i mainly like upright sounds slightly out of tunejoeyluck wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022I like quite a few pianos and each offers a little bit of a different sound. The pianos at the top of my list are the Abbey Road Challen and Mrs. Mills, Spitfire's OPW, and Rad Piano.
I really enjoy pianos that can feel like I'm sitting at a piano and can also fit nicely in a mix. The ones on my list, including Rad Piano check those boxes. I really like pianos with character!
I have found that when I use pristine concert grand pianos, even the meticulously sampled ones, within a mix, they can be hard to differentiate from a common workstation grand. Depends on the piece/mix of course and whether or not it is just piano. And obviously you can tell when you're playing it, but just speaking about the mix.
One of my favorite patches in Rad Piano is After Dinner Gatherings. That's one that sounds like I'm sitting at a piano in somebody's house. I like that. And then of course many of the Production Pianos are great for browsing to find the best one for a mix and the Radical Pianos category is great for scoring.
Instead of creating the Processed Pianos RE (from the Reason Pianos ReFill), I wish they would've just added those pianos to expand Radical Piano. I like its interface much better. The interface of Processed Pianos is funky IMO and it never clicked with me. It's similar to Scenic, where the idea was cool, but the interface is just clunky and doesn't feel well thought out. I think in part for those reasons, you don't see much talk of Processed Pianos and Scenic around here.
Rad Piano though is very well done. One of the first and still one of the best.
is spitfires opw a felt ? is it an upright ?joeyluck wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022I like quite a few pianos and each offers a little bit of a different sound. The pianos at the top of my list are the Abbey Road Challen and Mrs. Mills, Spitfire's OPW, and Rad Piano.
I really enjoy pianos that can feel like I'm sitting at a piano and can also fit nicely in a mix. The ones on my list, including Rad Piano check those boxes. I really like pianos with character!
I have found that when I use pristine concert grand pianos, even the meticulously sampled ones, within a mix, they can be hard to differentiate from a common workstation grand. Depends on the piece/mix of course and whether or not it is just piano. And obviously you can tell when you're playing it, but just speaking about the mix.
One of my favorite patches in Rad Piano is After Dinner Gatherings. That's one that sounds like I'm sitting at a piano in somebody's house. I like that. And then of course many of the Production Pianos are great for browsing to find the best one for a mix and the Radical Pianos category is great for scoring.
Instead of creating the Processed Pianos RE (from the Reason Pianos ReFill), I wish they would've just added those pianos to expand Radical Piano. I like its interface much better. The interface of Processed Pianos is funky IMO and it never clicked with me. It's similar to Scenic, where the idea was cool, but the interface is just clunky and doesn't feel well thought out. I think in part for those reasons, you don't see much talk of Processed Pianos and Scenic around here.
Rad Piano though is very well done. One of the first and still one of the best.
Yes to both I believe. It's soft, but not too soft IMO. And OPW is a toolkit with a collection of instruments, but the piano is the standout to me. Definitely one of the better $29 libraries they offer. I bought Epic Brass and Epic Choir and both sound nice, but are pretty limited in comparison to what you get with OPW.Termigator wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022is spitfires opw a felt ? is it an upright ?joeyluck wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022I like quite a few pianos and each offers a little bit of a different sound. The pianos at the top of my list are the Abbey Road Challen and Mrs. Mills, Spitfire's OPW, and Rad Piano.
I really enjoy pianos that can feel like I'm sitting at a piano and can also fit nicely in a mix. The ones on my list, including Rad Piano check those boxes. I really like pianos with character!
I have found that when I use pristine concert grand pianos, even the meticulously sampled ones, within a mix, they can be hard to differentiate from a common workstation grand. Depends on the piece/mix of course and whether or not it is just piano. And obviously you can tell when you're playing it, but just speaking about the mix.
One of my favorite patches in Rad Piano is After Dinner Gatherings. That's one that sounds like I'm sitting at a piano in somebody's house. I like that. And then of course many of the Production Pianos are great for browsing to find the best one for a mix and the Radical Pianos category is great for scoring.
Instead of creating the Processed Pianos RE (from the Reason Pianos ReFill), I wish they would've just added those pianos to expand Radical Piano. I like its interface much better. The interface of Processed Pianos is funky IMO and it never clicked with me. It's similar to Scenic, where the idea was cool, but the interface is just clunky and doesn't feel well thought out. I think in part for those reasons, you don't see much talk of Processed Pianos and Scenic around here.
Rad Piano though is very well done. One of the first and still one of the best.
i was looking at that but as i can’t demojoeyluck wrote: ↑18 Oct 2022Yes to both I believe. It's soft, but not too soft IMO. And OPW is a toolkit with a collection of instruments, but the piano is the standout to me. Definitely one of the better $29 libraries they offer. I bought Epic Brass and Epic Choir and both sound nice, but are pretty limited in comparison to what you get with OPW.
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