I ordered Keyscape last year but won't be able to hear it "in-person" for many months yet, unfortunately. Just sayin'.ĮDIT: To be fair 'though, Aziza's a musical gal, and I really appreciate your sharing her with us, keepitsimple. OTOH, if you wanna hear more-or-less-unfettered / unshackled dexterity and imagination, my gal Hiromi's tough-to-beat. I listened to a bunch of clips from the early '90s through 'til 3 years ago, and I kept hearing the same muscle-memory-driven right-hand action over and over again ad nauseam, 'til I couldn't take it anymore. If I may say so, as a talentless armchair critic, IMHO Aziza's no Hiromi. Noire from Native Instruments sounds pretty good as well.Real pianos, and all real instruments have resonances. Art Vista Supergrand is another amazing one. There's plenty of developers out there who actually can hear, and make a quality product.įor pianos, Garritan CFX is probably one of the most amazing I've heard and the only sampled piano or piano VST I've ever heard that has dimensionality. I don't need to pay for their bad decisions. It's one thing that their ears are shot, it's another when they absolutely refuse to acknowledge it. I lost all interest in the library after that. So what? So you guys can't hear sh!tty resonances. If it's good enough for them, then it's good enough for keyscape. I got a somewhat nasty reply where I was pretty much told that the C7 in Keyscape is in a famous studio used by rock stars. I was hoping it was something they could fix. I reached out to them on another forum and provided audio examples of the resonances and how loud they were and obtrusive. There's some really bad and obvious resonances in the bass area, that once you hear them, you'll never not hear them and they'll make the piano unusable.