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Disklavier

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Re: [disklavier] I need your collective help on a problem with my Yamaha Disklavier

2016-01-12 by PEOPLES, SAM

Yeah I think a lot of folk who buy Disklaviers if they’re no in education or that sort thing just buy it for snob appeal or for background music, just my opinion though there are people who buy it for using to learn and stuff. Not saying using it for background music or just to have the piano play and listen to it is a bad thing or there’s anything wrong with it, just that why people don’t seem to emphasise how useful it can be I dunno, like I say my dealer didn’t really say much about it he kinda mentioned it at the end of showing me the piano, which was kinda odd for such a major feature, even if it was the old wagon grand. Maybe that’s the point mine’s 25 years old so it’s real obsolete in terms of technology and most folk who don’t know what to do with such old gear wouldn’t have any interest in using it. Oh well I got a nice freebie, even if an old player unit isn’t worth anything anymore it’s still a great thing to get for free especially as I wasn’t looking for one in the first place. What model of piano have you got by the way, you can check out my youtube channel Samthebam4044 to see mine’s in action and some of my playing on my other pianos I have had.
Cheers

Sent from Windows Mail

From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Sent: ‎Tuesday‎, ‎12‎ ‎January‎ ‎2016 ‎14‎:‎18
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com

Sam, very good point, we purchased the piano mainly to brush up on my wife’s skills and to use it to teach the grandkids how to play. We are using the DKC-850 for enjoying a “private” concert and the radio sounds like a great feature. Thank you for your E-Mail.

Dennis Baldwin, PMP, Ph. D. | Project Director
Oracle Consulting Services

Mobile: +1 813-465-8952

2502 Rocky Point Dr | Suite 600 | Tampa, Florida 33607

From: 'PEOPLES, SAM' SPEOPL200@caledonian.ac.uk [disklavier] [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2016 6:49 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] I need your collective help on a problem with my Yamaha Disklavier

I think a lot of people have missed the main use of a Disklavier to learn on, especially if like me you can’t read music and can watch the keys of one hand playing and change the tempo and key. That is a bigger feature than I think a lot of people consider when buying one. I mean I went into my local dealers shop, bought a G2B, and he just mentioned off the cuff, oh hang on this is a player piano but didn’t say a lot about it at all. Acted like it was a minor feature. Dunno why I mean when you consider even if it is the old system it is still very good technology and can be used for serious use. Maybe it’s just most clients who come in to buy a player piano just want it for show-off or because they can’t play themselves, just saying that’s my take on it LOL.

Sent from Windows Mail

From: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Sent: ‎Monday‎, ‎11‎ ‎January‎ ‎2016 ‎23‎:‎43
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com

That’s a pretty wide spectrum of “noise” that you’ve described there. Between a silent concert hall with a symphony orchestra performing… and a house full of kids with their noise, a TV, the phone ringing etc — there’s a lot of room between those two extremes.

While I enjoy my DKV as an actual piano most of the time (you know, actually playing it) and sometimes putting on a performance from some of those excellent PianoSoft Plus Audio CDs, a great use I’ve found is DKV radio. Turn that on to a channel like “Sue Downs Mix Tape”, and you’ll feel like you’re in a genuine cocktail bar. Fantastic for when you have a few friends over — it’s a totally different vibe than having the usual background music, and it’s great.

This, of course, is without going into the merits (or lack thereof) of background music… which is something that doesn’t need to be around all the time, but there’s certainly a time and place for it.

…..HK

On Jan 11, 2016, at 3:32 PM, Spencer Chase lists@spencerserolls.com [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

i completely agree with this. i listen only at performance levels. if i am listening to music i am listening to music.

it is amazing how rare this is, most people have some sort of noise all the time, TV, games, phone and music and some time even a combination of them. i must be from another planet.

On 1/11/2016 2:55 PM, Skanter123 skanter123@gmail.com [disklavier] wrote:

I think the idea of using a DKV for "background music " (a concept I generally abhor anyway) will not work unless the space is very large. Use the digital piano and play at the volume level that is appropriate.

I like to use the DKV to -listen- to performances, as if there were a live musician playing.

YMMV


On Jan 11, 2016, at 8:39 AM, Dennis Baldwin dennis.baldwin@oracle.com [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

Well it may be coming to that…. :>)

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Dennis Baldwin, PMP, Ph. D. | Project Director
Oracle Consulting Services

Mobile: +1 813-465-8952

2502 Rocky Point Dr | Suite 600 | Tampa, Florida 33607

<image008.jpg>

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From: Sam Kanter skanter123@gmail.com [disklavier] [mailto:disklavier@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2016 2:47 PM
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [disklavier] Re: I need your collective help on a problem with my Yamaha Disklavier

One can throw a heavy blanket over the piano, but that's not a very good solution. 😉

Sam

(212) 684-3304

*(Sent from phone - please excuse brevity and typos.)


On Jan 9, 2016, at 1:48 PM, james bond mikeb44683@yahoo.com [disklavier] <disklavier@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

I have a 2008 Mark IV Yamaha Baby Grand Disklavier. I'm sure that you have already taken into consideration the physics of a piano. A piano can only create sound at a its acoustical/physical minimum and no less. Just as an unmuted trumpet or practically any other instrument. I can reduce the sound volume to the inclusion of the mute pedal yet in terms of its capability to continue to produce sound it still fills the room to the point of making it difficult to carry a conversation over. I have been told multiple times by desk clerks at hotel lobbys that they are at their wits-end as to how to reduce the volume of their piano and I simply laugh. The physics won't allow it. Again, I'm guessing that you've already taken this into consideration.

From: "rightnightboy@hotmail.com [disklavier]" <disklavier@yahoogroups.com>
To: disklavier@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, January 9, 2016 5:08 AM
Subject: [disklavier] Re: I need your collective help on a problem with my Yamaha Disklavier

Hi, Im not the expert here (there are a few very good ones ! ) so I would guess that your piano is an E3 and I think it doesn't make a difference which file you download for E3 or for the dkc-850. I have an upright retrofitted with the dc-850 and yes in many cases the piano is too loud... So many say have the piano "voiced" (which I would eventually do) and that should help much... Otherwise I find that on the DKC-850 the lowest volume acceptable without muting is 6 ; from 7 to 10 the piano is mutes and many notes dont play.

I'm on a mac and I use some software also to remap and change the velocity on the fly so that works pretty well also. But I kind of think that a perfect soft piano sound, where one can quietly chat beside the piano is not reachable... (Im not an expert) it is not an amplifier that you can turn up or down .

One other thing i find that files that are stored on the DKV (in the FromToPc section or on a usb stick) are playing better with less notes skipped in lower volume.. If anyone can comment on this I would appreciate !!!

-- 
Best regards, Spencer Chase
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