right now i only have an m-audio radium, and its starting to crap out on me...i'm planning on soon getting a novation remote- 61key, as it has very nice features, and most importantly controllers critical expression atributes such as aftertouch. i also want to get an 88-key...i'm wondering what to get though, i've seen the m-audio keystation pro-88...looks nice with nice features, but feels like plastic garbage...what do you guys use (or recommend) and what do they use in the video demos on this sight? thanks
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What Midi Controller do you use for VSL???
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well the feel is close enough for me. I'm using the Post Steinway D mostly these days, but as soon as I can afford it I'm grabbing Ivory. There is noticable latency(~15ms), but thats because of the way I have it routed. Keyboard midi out> control PC midi in> control software(finale or cubase) > gigastudio PC via midioverlan > VSL Performance tool > Gigastudio (converted to sound at this point) > rme optical out > control PC rme optical in > cubase > speakers
all those hops add time, if I were to run gigastudio on the control PC the latency wouldn't be as bad, and it would feel pretty darn close to real. Honestly, I have a heavy touch and this KB feels like pianos that require that (steinways for instance) to me. I tried out the rolands, korgs and a few others and decided I deffinitly liked the studiologic feel the best.
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thanks for the info...i actually looked into this model and want to try it out, looks like it has nice keys...i'm a bit weary of some bad reviews i've read concerning reliability, and considering i'm going through that problem right now with my radium, i'm a bit nervous investing money into a potentially unreliable piece of gear...do you remember how long the warrenty is? or if you can get an extended warrenty?
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I have a Fatar Studio Logic SL-1100, an out-of-date model. It has weighted keys and aftertouch, but it feels nothing like a real piano to me. I have a Steinway-designed Boston GP-178 at home, and I record that when I need a real piano sound. When I want a fast good sound I use Ivory, which I recommend highly.
I wish my keyboard had an input for a soft pedal, since Ivory has special samples for it (I can draw in the control after the fact). The newest Studiologic VMK-188 has three pedal inputs and some knobs, too.
The ideal solution would be the Gulbransen optical key-scanning midi strip, which reads notes and velocities of an accoustic piano without interfering with any of the action. I would do this if my piano and studio were in the same place. A Disklavier would be another, more expensive method.
JD
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I switched from a Roland D-70 to a VMK-88 about a year ago. The Fatar is obviously of a lower quality but offers a lot of programmable buttons and sliders. I thought 88 keys would be important but growing up with synths and varying keyboard sizes has made this almost a none issue. Thus far into things, 88 or 61 or whatever makes no difference. I'd say trust your instincts and go with what you're comfortable with.
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IMO, keyboard without knobs is better solution. You can put nothing on KB with knobs (in most cases the design is awful). You can always add some additional controllers (like UC33) and have a lot of space on masterKBoard left for computer keyboard, mouse, coffee, ashtray and whiskey [:)]
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This one looks promising... not available quite yet i don't think.
http://www.arbitermt.co.uk/cme/images/uf8.jpg">http://www.arbitermt.co.uk/cme/images/uf8.jpg
i was just looking at this one...it looks very promising, so many high end features in a midi controller for a very reasonable price.
my buying factor would come from how the keys feel. anyone have a chance to play it yet?