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Piano

Piano / Keys Plugin by mda
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Piano

The macOS downloads are for VST2 Intel and Audio Unit Apple Silicon / Universal 2 Binary. The Windows download is VST3.

Piano by mda is a Virtual Instrument Audio Plugin for macOS and Windows. It functions as a VST Plugin and a VST 3 Plugin.
Product
Version
1.1
Product
Version
1.1
Instrument
Formats
Copy Protection
None
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Piano by mda is a free virtual piano plug-in.

Features:

  • Up to 32 note polyphonic.
  • Decay, Release and Stereo Width controls.
  • Stretch and random tuning.

Latest User Reviews

Average user rating of 3.43 from 14 reviews
Piano

Reviewed By Tea [all]
June 16th, 2004
Version reviewed: 1.0 on Windows

I first used this piano about 18 months ago when I was starting out with Cubasis. I knew nothing about samplers, romplers or humplers so used it in my first composition because it was all I could lay my hands on. At the time I thought it sounded like crap - shallow, tinny, no facility for expression - and I don't think it actually sounds anything like as rich as the subsequent VST pianos I've tried.

However... I have come to love this little plugin. Partly because I nurture a silly romantic astonishment that a piece of software that you could fit on a floppy disc can contain all the notes right across the length of my keyboard, and partly because it just somehow seems to have a goshdarn character all of its own.

As long as you're not intending to make a feature of it, mda piano can work in even the most sophisticated of mixes, and its numerous editable features only enhance its usefulness.

Of all the free pianos I've tried this is definately a favourite. 4Front is the weirdest, EVM Grand Piano is the most lifeless, but mda piano is a firm fave.

Don't think of it as a rich palette, for making broad-brush authentic creations, but as a cheap retractable pencil for making sketches and maybe filling in some detail.

Interface: idiosyncratic.
Features: plenty
Documentation: none available, none needed
Presets: useful
Support: unescessary
Value for money: definately!
Stability: complete

As Orange Juice once sang: 'You'll always have a place in my heart...'
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Piano

Reviewed By VitaminD [all]
July 7th, 2002
Version reviewed: 1 ? on Windows

the interface is rather easy to move around, with only a handful of sliders.. i like this- its ugly but functional.

i liked the decay/release and hardness factors you can apply to the sound.. it has enough features to really mold what you want..

however the sound, well it sounds like a piano- but IMO it doesnt really have a lot of character to it.. it sounds very thin and tiny to me.

i normally use, instead.. a small, free soundfont in place of this piano (converted from an impulse tracker multisampled instrument which was sampled from an alesis synth). Nothing is as good as the real thing, but i have free soundfonts that (to me) sound much better than this vsti.

i would say, since its free, no one has anything to lose by trying mda piano, but it just doesnt fit the bill for me..

different strokes for different folks, i guess.. :)
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Piano

Reviewed By yasodanandana [all]
July 6th, 2002
Version reviewed: 9 on unspecified OS

There is nothing like a real piano, this is so important in our western music that is impossible to be completely satisfied with synths or samplers.

But we have some standard in electronic music with "not so real" piano emulations that have become familiar and fashion with musician and listeners, think of Roland U20/220 and P330, Korg M1, all Kurzweil, some EMAX and AKAY s1000 etc.
Now MDA sets a new standard, i have recognized it in some late dance hits. It sounds so good, surprisingly for it's 1,2 meg (in mac), that i have completely dropped my big, hundreds meg, halion/akay pianos. As in all good real istruments emulation the samples are not the only aspect to care, the fundamental thing is to reproduce the dynamic response and the articulation of the source and MDApiano has got them. The user interface could be more nice and clear, but i do not care too much, with these few controls it is easy to learn. MDApiano could be a great value also if MDA decides to sell it instead of giving it free!!!
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Piano

Reviewed By kritikon [all]
June 9th, 2002
Version reviewed: 1.0 on Windows

A very simple to use VSTi that does exactly what the name suggests. There aren't huge numbers of presets, but who need them for a piano? There are enough parameters to tweak for a bit of variation, such as 'hardness' and 'muffle' and flat or sharp tuning, so you can get a good-ish reproduction of pedal use and timbres, and nobody would need a manual with this thing - it's too straight-forward to need one.

It sounds better than any S+S workstation piano sounds I've ever played with (including the famous Korg M1 - which was excellent, but only suited certain styles IMO), and can be used in almost any mix or style. It can't compete with a full sampler, but for most people it will be perfectly good enough, and only true orchestral types will complain about the sound.

Add a little reverb and it will cover over any imperfections you might hear (not that I had any complaints with the dry sound anyway). Considering it's free, it is an amazing VSTi, and competes with most of the piano rack modules that came out a few years ago.

It's very reliable and you'll barely register any CPU useage, so no need to save power and record to audio.

I've always wanted a decent piano sound and can't get it on any of my hardware synths, but never considered it worth the several hundred bucks to buy a module. This fills the gap perfectly.

Everybody needs a piano at some stage, and this is it. I scored a few points off it for features and presets, but really that's irrelevant, as it is a piano - if you need envelopes and filters, then put it through some plug-ins to make it un-piano-like (?) but why would you want to?

Simple, reliable, uncluttered, clean and a VERY good emulation of a piano - it does everything it should.
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Piano

Reviewed By Emerald Tablet [all]
April 9th, 2002
Version reviewed: ? on Windows

About all this logic audio users who complain about crashes .... fruity loops never crashes.

anyway ...great plugin this mda piano, simple in use but a bit tin. When used with pianoverb you can create a good clasic piano with the preset : "concert piano" that sounds much more realistic and fatter (if you can speak of fat with a piano sound :-))

anyway ...want a more realistic piano ...buy a steinway (if you can affort it) This is a good vst alternative.
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Comments & Discussion for mda Piano

Discussion
Discussion: Active
shmackydoo
shmackydoo
11 March 2013 at 4:23am

How the shit do these work on OS X?

the VSTi programs don't work either... sorry for my tone but I'm bugging out. I keep hearing how great these are but i can't get them to work.

prietales
prietales
2 June 2013 at 11:01pm

Check it out:

http://sourceforge.net/projects/mda-vst/.

;-).

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