Poor anotherscott had to go back and record it several times, but in the end everything worked and we now have a high quality test file for this DP. Piano World forum member "anotherscott" was kind enough to provide us with a DPBSD MP3 of the Yamaha P-95 - thanks loads anotherscott! This is the maiden voyage of DBPSD v1.9, and it seems to be effective in turning off the reverb during MIDI playback, which is something that was dogging us. Tests in the order they appear in the MIDI file: Shortened the key down times in the partial pedaling test (1/4 => 1/16). Added "external effects depth" (reverb send) controller cc91 = 0 start of file. Fixed "Evaluating Results" section to reflect the actual tests. "Partial pedaling test" is now "Half pedaling test". "Quick pedal partial damping test" is now "Quick partial damping test". "Pedal down silent replay test" is now "Silent replay test". "Key down sympathetic resonance test" is now "Key sympathetic resonance test". "Pedal down sympathetic resonance test" is now "Pedal sympathetic resonance test". Please use this new MIDI file (located in the root directory of the DPBSD share point) instead of all previous versions. Freight both ways can easily be over $100, which is a lot to pay to try it out.Īdded controller setting for reverb off, a very slight tweak to the half pedaling test, and some minor fixes and changes in terminology in the readme file. You're right that trying via mail-order isn't practical for something of this size. Maybe James can convince them to send Dewster a DPBSD file! Eventually someone should be able to do that, and at least then we'd have some kind of both audible and quantitative way to experience at least some aspects of the differences. But some kind of sound demo would be helpful. Lots of things sound good on paper that don't necessarily translate to real world performance anyway. My geek side would like technical detail as well, but really, that's not so important. when you could be saying, "Yeah- that sound- that's what I want." And no printed page will ever tell you that. Of course, absorbing that information requires a kind of time travel, too. Releasing the user manuals online does help. Anyone who's seen more than one cycle of marketing puffery can remember when yesterday's breathless description of the latest and greatest, turns into "We had so many user complaints about the weaknesses of the former flagship product" (insert a few damning specifics here) "that THIS latest and greatest release is so much better you can't even compare it." It's understandable to me that makers' and retailers' marketing materials are intended to conceal more than they are to reveal, but as a consumer it's not much of a help- I might as well believe Gyro. 'Ship it back in 30 days if you don't like it' is a lot easier to say than to do. Especially since retail outlets are few to find and many will be ordering them from mail-order outfits. It also seems to me that a demo that shows off these 'subtle changes in timbre' in at least CD-quality isn't beyond today's recording technology, the limitations of bandwidth, or what a set of decent headphones or speakers could reproduce. I wouldn't mind hearing a bit more of a technical explanation. Comparing the past models with the present (unless you have one) is a problem, and comparing anything with the MP10 would require time travel into the future. I realise this may mean require extra leg-work seeking out a dealer, but it's really the only way." That's why I'm always recommending consumers play-test instruments 'in the flesh' before making any purchasing decisions. Users should search our sub before posting questions too, because your answer may already exist.".you really need to 'feel' the subtle changes in timbre. Please refer to our new rules section here and consider other users before posting. And more! See the complete list of features.Numerous effects including change speed or pitch and vocal reduction or isolation (given suitable stereo tracks).Cut, copy, splice or mix sounds together.AC3, M4A/M4R (AAC), WMA and other formats supported using optional libraries.Edit WAV, AIFF, FLAC, MP2, MP3 or Ogg Vorbis sound files.Convert tapes and records into digital recordings or CDs.Record computer playback on any Windows Vista or later machine.The interface is translated into many languages. They have expressed a wish that we try to include the version number of Audacity when posting anything, or to indicate if no version was included in anything linked here.Īudacity is a free, easy-to-use, multi-track audio editor and recorder for Windows, Mac OS X, GNU/Linux and other operating systems. The Audacity Team are now aware of us and plan to post here from time to time using the /u/audacityteam account.This is the defacto subreddit for discussing Audacity and related topics.
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