![]() Of course it's better to visit a big music store where you can try different makes to find one that feels right for you, rather than buying "blind" by mail order. ![]() ![]() But a top-of-the-range Disklavier costs nearer $100,000 than $1,000! Compositeur, producteur, ingénieur de mixage et de mastering avec une carrière de 30 ans et plus de 50 titres publiés sur différents labels internationaux (C. The ultimate solution is to use a real piano that is fitted with a MIDI output system - either a "ready-to-go" system like the Yamaha Disklavier, or you can get "MIDI output kits" to convert any piano to generate MIDI data. As usual, you get what you pay for - and the top end of the price range is well over $1,000. Some also emulate the "let-off" of a piano action, which allows repeated notes to play when the key is only partially released. You can get "semi-weighted" or "hammer-weighted" keyboards where the mechanism is closer to a real piano action. ![]() ![]() Similarly you can't do much about problem #2, unless you have an expensive keyboard with mechanical adjustments built into it - and if you had that, presumably you wouldn't be asking the question.Ī simple spring-loaded MIDI keyboard will never feel like a real piano, but for some purposes you want "accuracy" from a MIDI keyboard rather than "musicality", and for that a simple keyboard can actually work better, so long as it's not so "heavy" to play that it is physically tiring. I don't use Logic so I can't tell you exactly where to find that option - it's probably somewhere in the MIDI setup dialogs.īut if you are literally not playing some notes at all, rather than just playing them too softly, you can't do much about that except play "louder". Most software has a way to use "velocity curves" to match your keyboard playing style to your synth's idea of what note velocity it wants. ![]()
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