Ok sorry, I didn't consider personal issues. Of course when you find some free time, you really should try out the pianos for yourself.Winds wrote: with my current situation I have to make do with what I can, so my time is extremely precious and limited.
In the meantime, you have all those threads about the "best" Nord piano sounds, that can be summarized in short:
- Nord piano sounds are "raw", without much -if any- postprocessing after sampling. So don't expect lush, balanced, "perfect" sounds like you will find on other brands. That's the result of a lot of processing, EQ, compression, reverb etc. On Nords, you are expected to do this by yourself and find the tone you like using the controls on the panel.
- on average, the Nord pianos are quite bright and with a relatively short decay. A bass note from a real grand piano will ring for almost a minute before completely dying out. Nord doesn't have such long samples.
- Brightest pianos, useful for cutting through a dense mix (electric rock-pop bands etc): Bright Grand, Silver Grand, Italian Grand, Royal Grand. Among them, the Bright is the brightest (you'd guess!), almost to the point of being harsh. The Italian and Royal are not as harsh but maybe a bit bland, not much personality. My personal favourite is the Silver, I find that it cuts through the mix as well as the Bright but it also has some nice overtones and character. With these pianos, usually the thing you'll do the most is use EQ to tame the highs/mid highs as needed.
- "Rich" pianos, with lots of harmonics and overtones: White Grand and Imperial Grand. These are the ones that maybe sound the most like a real grand piano in the room. Great for solo piano, ballads, or anything really. Can get a bit lost in a dense mix. Having tons of harmonics in all the frequency ranges makes them very malleable to EQ, you can adapt them to almost any setting, room or amplification.
- Soft pianos: there's really only one, the Velvet Grand. It can sound muffled and boring, but don't dismiss it. With EQ and using the dynamics curves you can bring out a nice character from it, and it's maybe the sample with the longest decay. For what is worth, it's my second-favourite after the Silver.
- oldies but goldies: Grand Lady D, Studio Grand 1 and 2, Concert Grand Close and Ambient. These are not available in XL format (it was not introduced at the time) but it's their only real weakness. Apart from that, they are still perfectly usable and are some of the best all-around pianos you can find. The Lady D is still at the top of the list for many Norders!