Definitely the sound of a beautiful grand piano, but unique. You won't get far trying to get it to sound exactly like a Steinway D, or Bosendorfer Imperial, or Yamaha U1, etc. Yes, you can tweak it infinitesimally, but you're tweaking a single model really, so the core character is always there (love it or hate it). The thing with the V-Piano is that it has a signature sound of its own. If anything the physical modelling technology in the V-Piano is more akin to a Yamaha VL7 or Korg Z1, but a few generations later. Not sure I agree with the JP-8000 comparison. Yamaha or Kawai much more to my taste.Fair enough, and of course it's all a matter of personal taste. Given I didn’t love they keybed either- ruled the JD out for me. Just didn’t like it I just kept switching to the sampled pianos on the JD Fine if that’s what your after but that combined with I just wanted a good piano sound pretty much straight off ( no need for something with infinite tuning etc). Probably a poor analogy but the V-piano just doesnt sound like a real piano to me It was like a “JP8000 of pianos.not really analogue but not sampled either a sound of its own. I really, really wanted to like the RD- love Roland and its features and controls. ( Nord ruled out right away, I just don’t like them plus overpriced to me anyway). To answer original V-piano right out of my price range.Īnd given I’m a pretty low level player, not it’s target demographic either) Fair question.About year ago in market for getting a good digital piano, tried as many as I could.
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