Underwhelmed by Nord Grand
Posted: 19 Feb 2020, 04:28
I have now played the Nord Grand in a music store twice for a total of approximately 2 hours.
The first point that needs to be clear is that this instrument is very expensive even when compared with full featured boards.
For the limited functionality it offers, it is easily the most expensive stage piano by a long way.
Having said that, the limited functionality need not be a draw back as this instrument is intended to do simple things very very well.
To put a finer point on it, the action is intended to be 'as piano like as one can buy in a portable keyboard'.
The action is good. It does a decent job of recreating a piano action with various technologies. So, to my mind, the control interface is solid and as good as you will find in a stage piano.
The action and all it's supposed subtleties and nuance is somewhat wasted on the piano sounds. For me, this is the underwhelming aspect of the instrument.
Lets take the White Grand XL. I have listened closely and played at all velocities and tried to express as much subtlety as possible.
At lower velocities it is hard to get much variation.
At higher velocities the sample starts to have a thin HF attack. This sound simply doesn't exist on a real piano.
This leads to me ponder why the samples aren't "full featured".
There just isn't any deep information there. I haven't yet researched how many velocity layers are present but there aren't anywhere near enough.
The recording and result needs to be addressed at higher velocities as well. Once harder attacks are occurring we move into the realm of the "unreal".
With the level of detail, accuracy and playability of some stand alone piano libraries (which have been around a long time now) I simply didn't understand how this "Grand" has 2GB capacity. Why isn't it 2Tb capacity with the most seriously sampled pianos in the world?
It sits at $5500 AUD (Australian) which is an absolute premium price. For that money I want a great action and incredible sounds that have the most subtle nuance available.
This simply isn't the case with the Nord Grand.
Must I wait another 10 years until this happens? Why? The tech is there now and has been there for a long time already.
The first point that needs to be clear is that this instrument is very expensive even when compared with full featured boards.
For the limited functionality it offers, it is easily the most expensive stage piano by a long way.
Having said that, the limited functionality need not be a draw back as this instrument is intended to do simple things very very well.
To put a finer point on it, the action is intended to be 'as piano like as one can buy in a portable keyboard'.
The action is good. It does a decent job of recreating a piano action with various technologies. So, to my mind, the control interface is solid and as good as you will find in a stage piano.
The action and all it's supposed subtleties and nuance is somewhat wasted on the piano sounds. For me, this is the underwhelming aspect of the instrument.
Lets take the White Grand XL. I have listened closely and played at all velocities and tried to express as much subtlety as possible.
At lower velocities it is hard to get much variation.
At higher velocities the sample starts to have a thin HF attack. This sound simply doesn't exist on a real piano.
This leads to me ponder why the samples aren't "full featured".
There just isn't any deep information there. I haven't yet researched how many velocity layers are present but there aren't anywhere near enough.
The recording and result needs to be addressed at higher velocities as well. Once harder attacks are occurring we move into the realm of the "unreal".
With the level of detail, accuracy and playability of some stand alone piano libraries (which have been around a long time now) I simply didn't understand how this "Grand" has 2GB capacity. Why isn't it 2Tb capacity with the most seriously sampled pianos in the world?
It sits at $5500 AUD (Australian) which is an absolute premium price. For that money I want a great action and incredible sounds that have the most subtle nuance available.
This simply isn't the case with the Nord Grand.
Must I wait another 10 years until this happens? Why? The tech is there now and has been there for a long time already.