Resolves an issue in which a concert that was compressed with certain utilities might not load if the concert contained a patch with a forward slash “/” in the name.
MainStage no longer quits unexpectedly when opening a concert that was created in MainStage 2.x and is missing some content.
Improves stability and reliability, including to resolve these issues:.
In fact at the beginning he was a little negative (he did not know the Nord brand) and after 6 or 7 classes he’s absolutely impressed with the quality and sound of the Nord keyboard. In any case he’s a classical piano teacher used to play with wall pianos and gran pianos and he’s now discovering how a stage keyboard is. Note the I have started to use the pedal some days ago. Last week I asked him (quickly) about the pedal technique and he detected that sometimes I don’t release totally the pedal before press it again but that is other issue that I am already correcting. I have a piano teacher for a couple of months and in fact he was who suggested me to start using the pedal. Maybe because after 2 weeks, I don’t play it yet at the normal speed and with the pedal it sounds more continuous. I see a big difference between playing Passacaglia with or without the pedal. I feel a little embarrased, but if I don’t ask I don't have the answer. If I press softer those bass notes it sounds pretty well. it’s more a question of technique and way of playing. I am testing with the headphones and I’m afraid you are right. Just in case you want to be able to play romantic music some day, you might really need it - and of course getting used to it might open you the path to get there in the end. So no need to buy a triple pedal for the moment. When you are good enough, you shouldn't need the pedal for that sort of music any more. It took me much more than 1 year and my teacher kept giving his (or her) comments. Managing the right balance between left and right hand velocity will be a big part of any piano style. I hadn't played it before, and indeed, for beginners, it seems easier to play it with sustain pedal, but you will have to be very careful with the chords in the left hand while jumping from one to the other. But the sound was much thinner and didn't sustain for long. Thanks!īasement29 Posts: 8 Joined:, 17:11 Location: Madrid Country: Has thanked: 12 times Been thanked: 1 time Your Nord Gear #1: Nord Stage 3Īnd try to play the Passacaglia with a harpsichord sound - Haendel composed it in 1720 or before - the "pianos" at that time didn't have hammers and dampers - so no need for a sustain pedal to set aside the dampers. I’m going to investigate a little about that triple pedal. With my pedal, or it is sustained or it’s not. Maybe the solution, as explained by FZiegler, is to use a triple pedal where if I understand well I can press 50% and the effect is not so radical. Is it posible to reduce the strenght or duration of the sustain effect? It seems it’s not. Only that C so bass and heavy give me problems. Nevertheles for the rest of arpegios, starting a little more on the right (D, G.) it sound better. What is happening, I can explain it better with the real problem tha I am facing: normally the pedal works well when I play chords, but Now I am playing “Passacaglia” of Handel, and when my left hand goes to the “C” key (second C key from the left) as first note of the arpegio, this C sounds strong and overlaps or “cover” too much the melody done with the right hand. I already knew what it’s explained in the video of Martin (thanks anyway). Yes I have a Nord Stage 3 HA88 and I am quite neophyte (20 years playing guitar but only 1 year with the keyboard and I started from scratch)