A deep dive into the 9 basic articulations at the piano with Dominic Cheli
In this workshop, Dominic teaches the 9 basic articulations found in piano music, and takes a deep dive into explaining their meaning and HOW to execute them!
Click this link to join!
https://app.tonebase.co/piano/live/player/pno-9-basic-articulations
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Hi Dominic, wich software are you using to send the streams? Watched some older streams and could hardly get you loud enough on the laptop. If you still use same settings i'll look into it for you - there were however louder recordings in between.
If by chance you're using OBS:
In your streaming software click
cogwheel at Mic/Aux -> Filters -> + -> compressor
Ratio (x:1): 2.5
Threshold: -15db
Attack: 2 ms (or lowest possible)
Release: 60ms
Output Gain: 8db
Sidechain: none
In the streams i've watched you rarely ever in that headroom so these settings compress only very loudest peaks if any. Therefor enabling pulling up everything to make use of the available range with the compressed zone as a little security cushion. If peaks hit 0db at the end of the red zone, that will yield clipping distortion. Then you could lower threshold to -18 or 20, there鈥檚 room to go.
Kind regards
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When "pf"/"fp" is written under a single note in a score (like in Waltz #11 of the Schubert pieces discussed in accents), how is this realized at the keyboard? Does it end up meaning that the next note will be louder/softer than the one under which the pf/fp is written (since increasing/instantaneously decreasing is impossible for a single note on the piano)? Also, what differentiate "fz" from ">" accents in the Schubert score?