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Steinway Virtual Concert Grand Standard Version

Steinway Virtual Concert Grand Standard Version

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Steinway Virtual Concert Grand Standard Version

 
 
 
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Features
  • Published by Garritan 98 Pages

  • CD-ROM


Description

Software. With CD-ROM. 6.7x10.75 inches. 98 pages. Published by Garritan.

The Steinway concert grand piano chosen for the sample set is among Steinway's finest Model Ds - newly voiced, regulated, and meticulously tuned by a master Steinway technician. Recording was done in one of the finest venues in the world, the Troy Music Hall. The Standard Version includes only the under-the-lid perspective and 16 GB of sounds. Cross-platform.


Product Details
Product Weight:1.5 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 3 reviews

System Requirements
Platform:Windows Vista / Mac OS X
Media:CD-ROM
Item Quantity:1

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.5 ( 3 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:


5Garritan Steinway goes to the top of the class  Jul 06, 2008 By Mark Walmsley
The only thing that beats this product is actually sitting at a recently tuned quality grand in a nice room.
I got so excited by this sample set that I bought a 3 pedal controller so I can feel even more like I'm playing an actual piano.
I only wish this had been available in the late 1970's when I got a big loan for a Yamaha cp70 electric piano before going on the road (and also hurting my back!)

There are other very good similar products but I really think this is top of the current heap.

The only thing I'm not sure about is whether there is an upgrade path from the standard version that I bought (16 bit with 2 mic perspectives) to the Pro version (24 bit with 5 mic perspectives).

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:


5VERY difficult to get better than this  Dec 10, 2009 By Cybershopper "CS"
I noticed this product last year. I should start off by saying that I just purchased the Pro version that has a lot more than this product (basic) in this listing. I remember being frustrated last year as it was announced and months later there was still no release. I then really forgot about it.

It came to my attention recently and found it was available so I purchased the full version that has the 24 bit samples. I have ran both 24 bit and the Pro version "high quality" 16 bit versions and I am not sure after listening the short amount that I have it IF there is any material difference. BOTH are quite impressive.

I was going to buy a 10,000 RPM hard drive for my Icy Dock Sata, Firewire 800 enclosure (these are VERY sweet because they, different hard drives, just slide and snap-in, taking seconds and you just buy accessary trays that you can use as many hard drives you have as long as they are compatible like SATA) but I found my 7200 external quite nice and effective, a Western Digital, for the 24 bit samples going USBII into my 2.2GHz, Macbook Pro.

Earlier, I changed my Macbook Pro (laptop) hard drive to one of those Momentus 7200 RPM drives so the minimum requirements of the Garritan Steinway to run on a 7200 RPM are there actually, *inside* the laptop without an external.

So I tried it. I ran the laptop having the samples on the *internal* using a Firewire 800 connection to an RME Fireface 800 rack acting as my sound-card. Worked GREAT! right from my laptop!!! (with no external drive). HOWEVER, after playing for about an hour or so, the program crashed. (not the laptop, obviously it's a MAC!!). I suspect that it was system file interference, OR one would have to disconnect Airport temporarily to run the Steinway samples direct from the Macbook Pro. I will play with that later, while in the meantime, I am running the 24 bit samples from the Icy Dock with no issues.

The first thing I noticed with playing the Garritan Steinway is the 'singing' capability of the 'instrument'. I am currently using a Yamaha graded action (P80). Singing notes of the strings or selected tones that are struck harder just stand out with it's dynamic range, something I only perceived at this level by playing a actual acoustic grand. The tone is sweet and not artificial. It is warm and addicting to play and if you intend to play for only a few minutes you will likely get up an hour later.

This software will get you back practicing. You will not tire of the quality like another version of your hardware, digital piano comes out 3 to 6 months later that you wish you waited to buy. The instrument if you look up on the forums is worked on profusely for upgrades by the developer(s). It IS a sampled piano but offers the versatility of having some DSP programming to add and tweak to your desired sound the peripheral tones of the instrument. Hammond actually did this with organ to bring out a new B3. They combined samples with modeling as a hybrid to get just about the EXACT sound in the recent model vintages but tweakable. This was called VASEIII though surely not on the same model parameters as the Garritan but the concept is the same.

The Pro version has 5 perspectives. You need to try them all to find out which one is 'you', having the ability to change to another perspective (mic positions with 5 sets of samples) for a change-up or for a targeting sound for a certain tune or location where you are playing.

For *loud* bands that want to use this: the dynamic range may be a problem for cut. The solution has been to use on the 'loud band' stage a compressor, it would seem. The best compressor methods, imo, have been the upward compression available with some compression software that does not effect the attack or the envelope of the struck string. Using compression, the tone with a lower dynamic range can hang longer, cut through the mix, before it decays (not as realistic but can improve the piano-cut with loud music, as I said, where you really cannot hear the fine nuances of an accurate emulation and sympathetic sounds).

For my playing, I see no need for this. Can't see that compression would be necessary for moderate band volumes either.

This software is really a great gift to the digital piano world, in my view. Garritan should be congratulated as I suspect this has been and still is, quite a 'life event' struggle to get this right from start to finish. These Garritan Authorized Steinway packages are a phenomenal deal to get the REAL sound to those of us who cannot affort the real-deal. Does it replace the real Model D Steinway? No. But it is sure fun to play something this close.

8 of 13 found the following review helpful:


1DRM is NOT graceful as advertised  Feb 08, 2009 By decapitor
Garritan advertises graceful DRM protection with this software but fails to mention that there is a 4 computer installation limit, which means that if you reinstall your operating system 4 times or get new computers 4 times, you will no longer be able to use the software. I actually bought this product and then figured this out so I'm not just spamming about DRM issues. I reinstall my OS at least once a year and I absolutely detest the feeling that I paid full price for software that will self destruct after about 3-4 years for me. If you're into repaying for your software periodically then the piano itself is pretty great. But buyer beware...

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