Re: Piano Library, which sample?
Posted: 31 Jan 2022, 05:48
>The best course is to not "trust my ears". Seriously? <
Yes, seriously. It's not good advice, because it presumes everyone's ears are trained or experienced enough to hear the best sounds, and I'm sorry to say - wait for it - for most of us that is not the case.
Here's a scenario - let's say Chick Corea and I are sitting around sipping espresso and testing all the Nord EP samples. I say "gee, of all of them I like the EP1 best. I know some of these are newer but that one just sounds the best to me." Chick then says, "yeah, it's a nice sample, but the EP4 is the richest one here. If I was going to use one to record, I'd use that one."
SO - am I going to "trust my ears" and keep using the EP1? Or am I going to trust the ears of one of the best Rhodes players in the business, and work with the EP4 for a while, so I can maybe develop some more sensitivity and hear what he's talking about?
A lot of times people come on this forum and they want to know what's the best piano sample to play. And a lot of times they get unhelpful answers to just "trust their ears." Clearly if they trusted their ears they wouldn't have asked the question in the first place. Instead, they are acknowledging that they lack the training, time or experience to fully hear the nuances in all the samples so they are asking for advice.
You may think that $10 bottle of wine is great, and that the $100 bottle doesn't taste any better - but you're wrong. Your palate just hasn't been trained to detect the quality inherent in a much better-crafted wine. Don't worry, mine hasn't been either. This is is why we have wine magazines to help us learn how to develop our taste. The same goes with Nord piano sounds. So don't always "trust your ears." Find out what more professional or experienced ears think. Then someday your own ears will be worth trusting.
Yes, seriously. It's not good advice, because it presumes everyone's ears are trained or experienced enough to hear the best sounds, and I'm sorry to say - wait for it - for most of us that is not the case.
Here's a scenario - let's say Chick Corea and I are sitting around sipping espresso and testing all the Nord EP samples. I say "gee, of all of them I like the EP1 best. I know some of these are newer but that one just sounds the best to me." Chick then says, "yeah, it's a nice sample, but the EP4 is the richest one here. If I was going to use one to record, I'd use that one."
SO - am I going to "trust my ears" and keep using the EP1? Or am I going to trust the ears of one of the best Rhodes players in the business, and work with the EP4 for a while, so I can maybe develop some more sensitivity and hear what he's talking about?
A lot of times people come on this forum and they want to know what's the best piano sample to play. And a lot of times they get unhelpful answers to just "trust their ears." Clearly if they trusted their ears they wouldn't have asked the question in the first place. Instead, they are acknowledging that they lack the training, time or experience to fully hear the nuances in all the samples so they are asking for advice.
You may think that $10 bottle of wine is great, and that the $100 bottle doesn't taste any better - but you're wrong. Your palate just hasn't been trained to detect the quality inherent in a much better-crafted wine. Don't worry, mine hasn't been either. This is is why we have wine magazines to help us learn how to develop our taste. The same goes with Nord piano sounds. So don't always "trust your ears." Find out what more professional or experienced ears think. Then someday your own ears will be worth trusting.