SouthPark

I have you on Ignore, but I will take a moment to briefly address you, as kindly and openly as I can. And I won’t address you any further after this.

Nothing I say is “flame-baiting” or with the goal of stirring up anybody. I own a digital piano and have owned everything from a Yamaha P125, to a Yamaha P515, to a Yamaha Clavinova CLP-785, to a Yamaha N1X, to a Casio GP-310. It would make no sense whatsoever for me to be attempting to “stir up digital fans”
when I am a digital fan.

That said, although I am a digital fan and user, they are not the holy grail to me that they seem to be to you. I am a classically trained pianist who performs advanced works and composes. My needs are specific and may be different from others who may play other genres/styles, be at different levels in their journey (higher or lower), or have different needs. I do not think there is a digital out there that is as good as an acoustic. Period.

The true question, though, is why does this offend you so? Why are you so upset that I don’t like what you like? That my needs are different from yours, and that what you consider excellent doesn’t meet my needs. Why does this matter to you? What impact does my opinion have on you? Do you look at your P525 differently because some random person on the internet doesn’t like it? I think you need to sit with why that is. Your emotional response to my opinion comes from within, and you need to sit with why your sense of validity, value, worth, enjoyment is impacted by someone’s different opinion. Your response is to attack people or aggressive equalizely everyone and everything with yourself and what you like, but that is not helpful.

In this thread alone, you’ve called johnstaf’s questions “dumb”, declared his take was wrong, quoted me numerous times even as I intentionally ignore you, accused me of having ulterior motives, declared that you had some great revelation after reading a Wikipedia article that differs from even what digital piano makers believe, and announced that you can “enlighten” everyone here, including people who have played longer, studied wider, and reached more advanced levels than you. Does that seem conducive to healthy interactions to you?


You were banned from Pianoworld multiple times, before being permanently banned. You were nearly banned from Pianoclack for the same reasons. You should step back and do the work to realize that the problem is not everybody else, and that the plethora of negative intentions and ulterior motives you assign to people are not true.

You have a remarkable opportunity to not have the same issues here that you had on other piano forums. And you’re already becoming the central source of contention. Please take a step back.

I have you on Ignore, and will be placing you back on it. I strongly, strongly encourage you to do the same. That way you won’t see my posts which offend you so.

PianoTell is very much like PianoClack and PianoWorld. I saw many posts when I came here about being inclusive. I hoped it would be different. It's not. Unfortunately, this forum, like the others I mentioned, has too many elitists.

According to many on this forum, there is classical music and non-classical music. That is not at all how the rest of the world separates music into genres. It's insulting to folks who primarily listen to and play other genres. All genres should have equal standing if we are inclusive.

Piano hierarchy: This is the feeling I get from reading the posts in this and the other forums I mentioned.

  1. Acoustic Grand pianos --- The ONLY worthy piano. What you must aspire to own and play.
  2. Acoustic upright piano --- OK, but just not good enough
  3. Hybrid digital piano --- OK ONLY for practicing for when you will play a real piano. An acoustic grand.
  4. High end digital with grand action --- sort of OK, but ONLY for practicing for when you will play a real piano. An acoustic grand
  5. Pianoteq --- Completely OK to bash whenever someone post about it.

Do folks here not see the prejudice in threads like "Can even the top end hybrids really satisfy a grand player?" or the popular "will practicing on a digital ruin me?"

I used to have photography as a serious hobby. The film vs digital was the same thing there. "REAL photographers use film". "I can tell photographs taken with digital cameras. They're awful." "Digital will never equal film."

I'm going to be true to my name "Quitter". I don't think this forum has much to offer me.

P.S. I really enjoyed the "Alfredos" and like threads on PW. Great people, and enjoyable interactions. Not much of that here though.

Studiologic Numa X 73, Pianoteq, Mac, Motu M2, Kali LP6 Monitors and WS 6.2 sub

    Quitter Unfortunately, this forum, like the others I mentioned, has too many elitists.

    I see no elitists here.
    I only see people who have studied long and hard, and often made sacrifices to attain the highest level they can achieve, and as a very lazy, mediocre player myself, I have great respect for them.

    I also respect those who are just beginning on their piano journey, and admire their enthusiasm and willingness to learn about all things piano.
    If some people are not comfortable in their own skin, regarding their personal level, quality of instrument, etc., then that is very sad, as whatever our 'level' it is still possible to have a lifetime of enjoyment playing music for ourselves, or for sharing with others. Nothing more, nothing less.
    I see this forum as a breath of fresh air, a new start if you like, and a place to let go of the past, and I hope it stays that way.

      Quitter

      So a couple things. Pianotell and Pianoclack are off-shots of Pianoworld. For both PC annd PT, the primary user ship comes from PW. So, you’re not going to find anything particularly different on either one.

      Pianoworld is the granddaddy of all these sites. And, it was always hugely classical-based. Classical, classical, classical. Period. Everything else was often an afterthought. I don’t agree that that should be the case, and I have called out the elitism which sometime shows there. Unfortunately, that’s the way the classical world is: highly (and undeservedly) elitist. That’s the nature of it. We have to remember that classical music, as beautiful as -some- of is, was entertainment for extremely rich “savoir-vivre” people. They were the cream of the crop: rich and thick. Not particularly or overwhelming intelligent, but wealthy and powerful enough to convince themselves that they are the only ones with class and value and that everything else is just simple “folk” music for the peasants. In many ways, that ideology has persisted in classical music, even today. So you’re always going to have an upward battle when you’re in a classical heavy space.

      That said, it’s up to us to be the change we want to see. Pianotell is in a nascent stage. There’s a great opportunity here to create a space in the image of what you want it to be.

      If you’d like to focus on music that is non-classical, you can do that. Navindra seems very open to encouragement and guidance on new sections of the forum, new topics. I don’t think anything is set in stone. If you’d like to see more genres and spaces for other styles, I think you should reach out to Navindra, or create a thread and say “Hey, we need more than just stuffy classical people ranting about Brahms and Beethoven all day and proclaiming that everything else is inferior.” Goodness knows I’d welcome it, and I’m sure many others would. Maybe we should even have a Classical only section, and then a section for modern music, and even break that down into genres as necessary.

      What happens at PW or PC doesn’t have to be an indicator of what happens here, if people want more.


      The piano hierarchy you’ve shared is what you’ll encounter often, among those who play music with advanced technical requirements. Because it’s true. The more advanced and complicated the music you’re playing becomes, the more you need an action that is super responsive, super fluid, with super repetition speeds, and proper balance and regulation. And unfortunately, it tends to follow that acoustic grand actions tends to be the ones with these abilities the best, because of simple physics and the technology and mechanisms that have been refined over three centuries by dozens of genius technicians to create actions that meet this standard.

      Upright actions were a compromise on this, and use a slightly slower mechanism, typically have less regulation, and, because they’re often cheaper, aren’t always made with the best materials like their grand counterparts (which also vary in quality as price goes down).

      Then of course hybrids, which are essentially these actions minus the hammers.

      And then digital actions, which originally, were pretty bad. Now we’re getting to a point where they’re improving drastically, and may even be preferable to bad acoustic actions. But, still, some are not yet “there”.

      And you may harm your technique or miss out on building your technique if you’re not practicing on an acoustic or an action that properly captures the mechanics of an acoustic, because if you’re playing certain genres, like classical or complex jazz, that music was created on actions that had particular qualities, so reproducing it requires a similar action.

      So I get the validity of those arguments, and even would teach them myself.

      But I guess my feeling is still the same as it is in my previous reply. Why does this matter if YOUR needs are met? If you have no need for some super sprightly action, and the action in your digital is just fine for you, that’s all that should matter. It might not be “superb” to a user who needs something different, but if it’s good for you, that’s all that matters. It’s your journey, your fingers, your needs, your standard. If for the genre you play, the level you’re at, the technique you possess, you’re realizing your goals, then you have what you need.

      The hierarchy of piano actions doesn’t translate to the value/worth/validity/skill/talent of the people using them.

      I consider Elton John and Stevie Wonder among the greatest musical minds of the 20th Century, but goodness knows they don’t care about the action anywhere near the way someone who plays Liszt or Monk or Tatum may care. But does that make them less than either of those names? No.

      I feel like we need to realize that hierarchy doesn’t always translate to value/validity. It’s just about which actions are more capable at certain requirements, and whether those requirements are apart of your genre


      As for Pianoteq
listen, if you’re a fan of that, you’re going to have an uphill battle. It’s probably the most hotly contested VST out there, because of how it creates sound. For some, it’s wonderful, for some it suffices, for others it’s dreadful. I liken it to alternate sweeteners like Stevia or monk fruit or artificial sweeteners. Some people love it and swear by it, and even prefer it to the standard sugar. Others can tell the difference and just want their good old fashioned sugar!

      But, again, if you like it, forget those people.

      Sure you’ll have people like me who don’t like it, but I’ve tried my best to keep my tuckus out of Pianoteq-centered threads, because I know I don’t like it, and there’s no reason for me to be in there spreading discouraging thoughts about it. If you encounter people who can’t keep their beaks out of Pianoteq-centered threads, tell them that. You have a right to like what you like.


      I think we have to create the spaces we want to see, especially when those spaces are in nascent phases and open to development.

        Quitter High end digital with grand action --- sort of OK, but ONLY for practicing for when you will play a real piano. An acoustic grand

        How is this elitist? I use my digital only for this. Should I use it differently? Nobody has said (or implied) that this should be the case for anyone else.

        Other people's use of the piano can be different from yours.

        The only music I play on the piano is classical. Is that elitist?

        I have synths and guitars for other music, but playing non-classical piano music doesn't interest me.

        Taushi I consider Elton John and Stevie Wonder among the greatest musical minds of the 20th Century.

        Songs in the Key of Life is a masterpiece.

        Come on guys, let's not be snobs. There is a place for that and it's not here 😁

        Do let's all jump down from those soap boxes and be friends... it's getting a little silly now, no?

        Anyone who still continues this crazy argument about what is a piano and what is not is a dunce, don't let it be you 😁

        I use a Roland digital piano. I have seen Roland criticised heavily on forums. Should I be upset about it? Why would I be offended by other people's preferences? It's the same with Pianoteq. I don't like it. Some people dislike the stuff I use. I want to hear their opinions. I want to hear people's opinions on Pianoteq. My favourite piano is Vienna Imperial by VSL. Nobody has been more critical of VSL on forums than I have. I don't identify with the gear I use, and I'm not offended when people criticise it.

        Better still, I have teenage Kittens. They are crazy as heck and my husband just read the riot act about them wrecking the piano... I might just ship them to the first one who continues this silly banter.

        Their piano (of any kind) will never be the same afterwards đŸ€Ș

        @johnstaf I told my husband that when I want his opinion, I'll give it to him. Didn't work đŸ«€

          Shall we start a pillow fight instead Pallas? Or mud wrestling? That might provide some fun excitement...

          Sophia @johnstaf I told my husband that when I want his opinion, I'll give it to him. Didn't work đŸ«€

          đŸ€Ł

          When someone posts something that I don't agree with, I don't have to reply and let the world know that I disagree. I may reply if I think I can write something helpful that would be well received. Otherwise, I do not engage.

          Sometimes when I get angry I write an email or a text or a post... but I never send it. In my experience communicating electronically while angry just makes whatever I'm angry about worse.

          @Quitter I'm sorry if anything I have written on this forum comes across as elitist. As far as I'm concerned, if you are having fun playing the piano you are doing it right! The fun is the whole point, not the genre, technique, piano type, or virtual piano.

          Let's keep PianoTell friendly and fun!

            Also: if someone insults or attacks me on a forum, I can choose not to respond, or to respond with kindness instead of counter attacking. If someone is trying to pick a fight on this forum and no one fights back, the fight will not get very far.

            In the not so distant future, digital pianos will very likely be able to not only provide a better action, but also better sound than acoustic ones. Like the Turing test, a professional pianist, trained his whole life with acoustic pianos that is, he is presented with the aforementioned key-full music box. When asked the question "Is it a real piano", his answer is a vehemently "Yes!". Then almost immediately the power goes out.

            Using the words of a fellow neuroscientist: Reality is just a hallucination that we all agree on (A. Seth). So let's just replace the "better" from my initial paragraph, with "unique" and keep enjoying all instruments.

            rogerch When someone posts something that I don't agree with, I don't have to reply and let the world know that I disagree.

            Most of the time I'm the same, but I think it's important not to allow anyone to use accusations of snobbery or elitism to shut down other people, or to dismiss their opinions.

            Random story time:

            "It's delicious, tender meat," said the father, sharpening his axe.
            "It's the root cause of my omelette," said the mother, grabbing her frying pan.
            "It's my beloved pet", said the child, gently stroking its soft feathers.
            "You're all dead wrong," said the scientist, frowning disapprovingly. "It's a Gallus gallus domesticus and don't you forget to capitalize the first G!"
            "Huh?" said the family, "are you talking about our chicken here?"

            I'm glad we're all friends again 😃 Please let this forum be different from other places... pretty please?

              It's all nonsense. If you can tune it, then it's a piano, because a nice tuning can fundamentally change the character of an instrument. And if you can voice it and thus change the character of the instrument, then it's a real piano. And if it has an una corda pedal, then using it gradually changes the character of the instrument.

              If your instrument can't provide any of these features, then it's not a piano.

              Does that mean we are going to get another round of this fight? 😂