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OK, I worked it out — changing the velocity sensitivity on the Nord itself also changes the velocity that it sends for MIDI, which I had assumed it would not effect.
Still though, upon further testing, I am getting more 'bark' (saturation and grit) when playing the hardest notes
out of my small MIDI keyboard on the same electric piano VST patch than when I play with same velocity on the Nord.
Citizen wrote: ↑26 May 2024, 04:03
Still though, upon further testing, I am getting more 'bark' (saturation and grit) when playing the hardest notes
out of my small MIDI keyboard on the same electric piano VST patch than when I play with same velocity on the Nord.
Odd. Not quite sure what is going on here.
How can you be sure you "play with same velocity" on 2 different type of keyboards (a small synth one and a waterfall)?
Probably the small keyboard has a lighter keybed and lets you reach top velocities easier (hitting keys with less less strenght) than the E2 waterfall (and a Hammer Action would require even more), but that's normal, it is due to the different weighting of each keyboard.
Besides, it is not always necessary to use the full range of MIDI velocities, as far as you can play with expressivity you need and you can adjust the velocity curve also on the VST (host or single plugin) side to compensate a smaller range sent by a given master if your touch doesn't allow to reach 127 on it.