Modartt / Karsten Collection (add-on for Pianoteq)
Posted: Apr 01, 2020 3:39 pm
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Modartt has released a new expansion or add-on for Pianoteq: the Karsten Collection, a set of five historic instruments modeled after originals which are part of the impressive Peter Karsten Collection (Braunschweig, Germany). Mr. Karsten himself collaborated with Modartt on the development of the modelled instruments.
Included are a NY Steinway 'Square' piano (evaluated and authorised by Steinway & Sounds), a Weimes pianoforte, a Schmidt 'sure' piano, a Giusti harpsichord and a Salodiensis virginal.
Great collection of less familiar keyboard instruments, the use of which certainly needn't be restricted to 17th-18th century music.
I did a little demo for the Salodiensis (the music in the video above). I originally intended to do some 60's-70's tv thriller music (a style that often features the harpsichord -- you occasionally even hear it in early episodes of "Columbo") but somehow, the music decided on a different course for itself -- that happens sometimes, doesn't it? -- and I suddenly found myself with a medium slow waltz theme, ever so slightly dark-ish in character, that I began to associate with Sherlock Holmes, especially after adding a rather prominent part for the solo violin. Hence the title: "A Three Pipe Problem" (Holmes, in the short story "The Red-Headed League", measures the difficulty of problems he's faced with by the number of pipes he predicts he'll smoke during the times it takes him to find the solution.)
Anyway, the result is music that, to my ears, still has a sort of 70's tv-music style and sound, a quaint 'European' tv-studio sound, if you like. I don't know how that happened, it just did. It's certainly not Hollywood sounding.
_
Modartt has released a new expansion or add-on for Pianoteq: the Karsten Collection, a set of five historic instruments modeled after originals which are part of the impressive Peter Karsten Collection (Braunschweig, Germany). Mr. Karsten himself collaborated with Modartt on the development of the modelled instruments.
Included are a NY Steinway 'Square' piano (evaluated and authorised by Steinway & Sounds), a Weimes pianoforte, a Schmidt 'sure' piano, a Giusti harpsichord and a Salodiensis virginal.
Great collection of less familiar keyboard instruments, the use of which certainly needn't be restricted to 17th-18th century music.
I did a little demo for the Salodiensis (the music in the video above). I originally intended to do some 60's-70's tv thriller music (a style that often features the harpsichord -- you occasionally even hear it in early episodes of "Columbo") but somehow, the music decided on a different course for itself -- that happens sometimes, doesn't it? -- and I suddenly found myself with a medium slow waltz theme, ever so slightly dark-ish in character, that I began to associate with Sherlock Holmes, especially after adding a rather prominent part for the solo violin. Hence the title: "A Three Pipe Problem" (Holmes, in the short story "The Red-Headed League", measures the difficulty of problems he's faced with by the number of pipes he predicts he'll smoke during the times it takes him to find the solution.)
Anyway, the result is music that, to my ears, still has a sort of 70's tv-music style and sound, a quaint 'European' tv-studio sound, if you like. I don't know how that happened, it just did. It's certainly not Hollywood sounding.
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