![]() Having wooden keys under your fingers makes it easier to approach playing like it’s a real piano. However, the Grand Touch keyboard is tough to match if it’s about realism. ![]() ![]() If that’s the case, there is a cheaper version of the Numa X Piano without wooden keys. It’s fair to say that some users may prefer plastic keys, which may be better for certain voices. The feel of the wooden keys isn’t something you can get from plastic keys. The Grand Touch keyboard has real wooden hammer-action keys, escapement, and monophonic aftertouch. GT stands for Grand Touch, which is an ultra-premium Fatar keyboard. The Numa X Piano GT takes it several steps further. Studiologic showcased its ability to create keyboards with a wide range of convincing sounds in the cheaper Numa Compact range. Outside of the acoustic piano sounds, the electric pianos (especially the Rhodes Mark I), organs, synths, and strings stand out. ![]() Everything from string resonance to note release is perfect. It’s not just the sound alone it’s how well Studiologic has captured the behavior of real acoustic pianos through dedicated DSP effects. You have multiple grand pianos, including German, Japanese, American, and Vintage.īetween the 15 acoustic pianos, you have everything from rich, powerful bass tones, articulate, crisp highs, and bright Pop tones to authentic Honky-Tonk saloon sounds. The grand piano voices have a realism rarely heard in a keyboard. The categories are acoustic piano, electric piano, keys, bass/guitar, organ, synth, orchestra, and other. There are over 200 sounds in total, divided into eight categories. Studiologic’s True Sound (TRS) multi-sampling and high-resolution modeling technology is at the heart of it all. Sound generation in the Numa X Piano GT comes from physical modeling, multi-sampling, and waveshaping. ![]()
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