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#1
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I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been
underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Thanks Bri |
#2
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Piano is perhaps the most difficult instrument to reproduce properly.
It takes on the playback end, a large and dynamic speaker (dynamic as in performance, not necessarily design) and amplifier power capable to deliver the dynamics. A load of other variables also apply as the entire chain from recording to playback is complex, but the sheer scale of the instrument and lack of any mixing techniques make the loudspeaker the weakest link in the playback system. It is an entirely different experience to hear the same piano recording from a large pair of Tannoys to that of a small set of Paradigms for example. - Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 "Brian Patterson" wrote in message ... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Thanks Bri |
#3
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"Brian Patterson" wrote in message
... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Whoever does the piano recording for Hyperion seems to have the technique down pat. If you don't find these to your taste, I suspect that your preferences are not shared by the majority of listeners. Cheers, Norm Strong |
#4
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"Brian Patterson" wrote in message
... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Thanks Bri What you're hearing is a difference in typical recording techniques for classical vs. non-classical. Classical piano (as is the case with MOST classical recordings of any kind) is typically recorded with the aim being to reproduce what the listener would hear in the concert hall/performance space. That means mid-distant miking which picks up the instrument as a whole unit as well as the acoustics of the space. On the other hand, most popular recordings are made in a studio, and not meant to be a representation of a particular instrument in a particular space, but a "target sound" that represents what the artist and producer want to hear and what will fit into the mix. Usually that means close-miking the intrument with multiple mikes (in order to cover the entire instrument evenly), and that means you hear a lot more of the mechanicals of the piano--the pedals, the hammers, etc. In attempting to acheive "that sound", effects are used which would be completely out of place in a classical recording, and Sarah McLachlan uses more (or at least more obvious) effects than most. One tecnique isn't "better' than the other, just more appropriate for a given situation. I don't know of any classical recordings in the style that you're looking for, but I'm sure they must be out there. The first thing that comes to mind is the George Winston new age music recordings from the '80's, but I'm guessing that's not really what you're after. Bill Balmer |
#6
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"Brian Patterson" wrote in message
... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Thanks Bri Here are a couple of good sounding (to my ear/on my system/in my listening environment) piano recordings: George Winston Linus & Lucy -- The Music of Vince Guaraldi Windham Hill 04934 11184-2r Roberto Szidon Hungarian Rhapsodies -- Franz Liszt Deutsche Grammophon 423 925-2 |
#8
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#9
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Uptown Audio wrote:
Piano is perhaps the most difficult instrument to reproduce properly. It takes on the playback end, a large and dynamic speaker (dynamic as in performance, not necessarily design) and amplifier power capable to deliver the dynamics. A load of other variables also apply as the entire chain from recording to playback is complex, but the sheer scale of the instrument and lack of any mixing techniques make the loudspeaker the weakest link in the playback system. It is an entirely different experience to hear the same piano recording from a large pair of Tannoys to that of a small set of Paradigms for example. He should look at a pair of large Magnepans. Piano and vocals are two things the speaker seems to excel at. Pop and rock - eh - not quite as much. |
#10
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I agree. The most obvious example of this is Enya. There is a lot of
sound processing involved to get her to sound that way. Her voice isn't half as good by itself. I quite disagree on both points. Her voice sounds great to me on the parts that only use one track of her voice and, to my knowledge, there isn't any processing of her voice at all except some added reverb on some of the single voice tracks which is neither excessive nor unusual in recordings of pop music. |
#11
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"Brian Patterson" wrote in message
... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Check out any of the Dorian Recordings recordings of the Ames Quartet. For that matter, check out all of the Dorian catalog. I don't believe there are any better sounding recordings to be found. N.B. I just noticed on Dorian's website (www.dorian.com) that they just announced the acquisition of Reference Recordings. I don't know whether consolidation among independent, sound quality conscious labels is a good thing or not, but it certainly bears watching. |
#12
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S888Wheel wrote:
I agree. The most obvious example of this is Enya. There is a lot of sound processing involved to get her to sound that way. Her voice isn't half as good by itself. I quite disagree on both points. Her voice sounds great to me on the parts that only use one track of her voice and, to my knowledge, there isn't any processing of her voice at all except some added reverb on some of the single voice tracks which is neither excessive nor unusual in recordings of pop music. But those effects are there. If you listened to the same piece acapella and un-processed, it would sound much more flat and lifeless. The equivalent in piano would be a heavily EQd jazz piano(with pickups in in action) versus a piano in a concert hall and mics 20 ft out. |
#13
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"S888Wheel" wrote in message
... I agree. The most obvious example of this is Enya. There is a lot of sound processing involved to get her to sound that way. Her voice isn't half as good by itself. I quite disagree on both points. Her voice sounds great to me on the parts that only use one track of her voice and, to my knowledge, there isn't any processing of her voice at all except some added reverb on some of the single voice tracks which is neither excessive nor unusual in recordings of pop music. Choice of preamp may be critical. Nowadays, their are preamps made known as "voice" preamps (because that is their primary use) that have compressors, equalizers, harmonic "optimizers", and other tools built in so that the raw voice never actually hits the medium..the processing is all done in the take itself. And then of course engineers argue endlessly over microphones, trying to match mic to voice to get the desired effect...not necessarily (or even mostly) the actual sound of the voice. |
#14
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Good Explanation, Bill!
Telarc and occaisionally Cheskey Records tend to do classical recordings with mixed micing techniques. I have a copy of Murray Perahia's Bach Goldberg Variations from Sony Classical. It sounds very good and I believe they also mix close mic'd and far field together. Murray kicks ass on the performance as well. If jazz will do, nothing beats Diana Krall's piano sound. The 20 foot wide piano soundstage is a bit fake but who cares when it sounds that good. Wessel "Cossie" wrote in message news:LU_Jb.125072$VB2.371566@attbi_s51... "Brian Patterson" wrote in message ... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Thanks Bri What you're hearing is a difference in typical recording techniques for classical vs. non-classical. Classical piano (as is the case with MOST classical recordings of any kind) is typically recorded with the aim being to reproduce what the listener would hear in the concert hall/performance space. That means mid-distant miking which picks up the instrument as a whole unit as well as the acoustics of the space. On the other hand, most popular recordings are made in a studio, and not meant to be a representation of a particular instrument in a particular space, but a "target sound" that represents what the artist and producer want to hear and what will fit into the mix. Usually that means close-miking the intrument with multiple mikes (in order to cover the entire instrument evenly), and that means you hear a lot more of the mechanicals of the piano--the pedals, the hammers, etc. In attempting to acheive "that sound", effects are used which would be completely out of place in a classical recording, and Sarah McLachlan uses more (or at least more obvious) effects than most. One tecnique isn't "better' than the other, just more appropriate for a given situation. I don't know of any classical recordings in the style that you're looking for, but I'm sure they must be out there. The first thing that comes to mind is the George Winston new age music recordings from the '80's, but I'm guessing that's not really what you're after. Bill Balmer |
#15
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"Wessel Dirksen" wrote in message
... Good Explanation, Bill! Telarc and occaisionally Cheskey Records tend to do classical recordings with mixed micing techniques. I have a copy of Murray Perahia's Bach Goldberg Variations from Sony Classical. It sounds very good and I believe they also mix close mic'd and far field together. Murray kicks ass on the performance as well. If jazz will do, nothing beats Diana Krall's piano sound. The 20 foot wide piano soundstage is a bit fake but who cares when it sounds that good. Wessel Different perspectives are always interesting. The thing that bothers me most about piano recordings is that which you don't care about. A 20 foot wide piano is totally unnatural by any standard and from my standpoint defines a bad piano recording. For some great jazz piano, check out some of Telarc's recent recordings of Oscar Peterson, SACD or standard. Some great stuff. Good dynamics, tonal balance and proper perspective. Most importantly, you can tell he's playing a Bosendorfer and not a Steinway. To hear what a Steinway should sound like, check out the Dorian recordings that I mentioned earlier in this thread. |
#16
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But those effects are there. If you listened to the same piece acapella
and un-processed, it would sound much more flat and lifeless. Of course. But that is the result of her singing in a small heavily damped booth. If she were recorded with a piano in a nice reverberant hall she would hardly sound lifeless and flat. Whether or not you like her music or her singing, it is technically excellent. It would be wrong to assume her approach to music production is there to compensate for a lack of ability. The equivalent in piano would be a heavily EQd jazz piano(with pickups in in action) versus a piano in a concert hall and mics 20 ft out. That is the nature of popular recordings in studios. Again, there is nothing unusual or excessive in the proccessing of her voice. Artificial reverb is pretty common. Now if you contrast that with say Paula Abdul who was sued for royalties by the woman who sang her guide tracks (yes she, like many of today's popular vocalists hired a singer to sing a guide track for her to follow) because their voices were synthesized together into one voice. *That* is a lot of proccessing! I just don't see artificial reverb on a few vocal tracks as "a lot of proccessing." |
#17
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"Bruce Abrams" wrote in message
... Different perspectives are always interesting. The thing that bothers me most about piano recordings is that which you don't care about. A 20 foot wide piano is totally unnatural by any standard and from my standpoint defines a bad piano recording. It's certainly a bad recording if your want it to sound as it would from your favored seat in the concert hall. OTOH if your interest is more on the order if peering inside the pianist's head in an attempt to better understand what he/her is attempting to say you might want that unnatural recording. Glenn Gould, an unconventional classical artist in most respects, understood what a piano should sound like. He also had a great interest in recordings per se, and must have had a large role in determining how his recordings would sound. Most of his Sony/Columbia recordings are rather close in approaching that 20 foot wide piano. IMHO we are fortunate in having all types of recordings available and a significant part of the "fun" in listening to those recordings is finding those which you happen to favor. Over the years I've come to lose interest in re-creating the live event in my listening room, an impossible task to begin with and which I no longer feel worthwhile pursuing. Believe it or not, I've arrived at the point where I favor the 20 foot wide piano as heard on 6 panel Magneplanar Tympani loudspeakers. It is almost like sitting inside the piano itself. I don't care to hear what the studio/hall sounds like and want to get as close as possible to the heart of the music itself, as if arriving *inside* the composer's/artist's head. |
#18
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#19
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"Brian Patterson" wrote in message
... I have bought a few classical CD's over the years and have always been underwhelmed at the sonic quality of piano compared to say Sarah McLachlan's "Angel". Classical piano recordings always seem to sound thin with lot's of room noise. Can anyone point me in the direction of a great "sonically" Classical Piano recording? Thanks Bri I just listened to Liszt's two piano concertos on Philips label- Swiatoslaw Richter on the piano, Kyril Kondrashin conducting London Symph Orch. The piano sound is truly spectacular, almost here now. The playing is wonderful. For someone who "bought a few classical recordings over the years" Liszt is not only a famous but also a very accessible composer. If his fireworks do not grab you nothing in the "classical" canon will.. I understand the analogue master was originally made by the Mercury famous engineering team. As is often( though not always the case with Philips thedigital remastering is excellent. Ludovic Mirabel |
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