Before start I would like to thank Philippe Guillaume and Modartt team for enrich this software even more with those new add-ons.
Thank you folks!!!!
OK. Everyone who knows what is a haprsichord can undestand that it's not a dynamic instrument, and piano was invented to get the dynamic that harpsichord didn't have. Harpsichord is a plugged instrument, while piano it's a hammered instrument. The first pianos, or similar was quite like a hammered harpsichords (similar body but with hammer sytem added).
But harpsichord, despite be a almost dynamic-less instrument, there were models that had some little dynamic when compared a very soft play with a very strong play. A very weak difference, but it was there.
After the pianoteq harpsichord I felt no kind of "little bit minimal dynamic".
While I know some models of harpsichord had more "little bit minimal dynamic" than others, I also know that some models have no noticiable dynamic.
I remamber when I tried to play some variable sampled models of harpsichord, made by Michael Post, and some models had little dynamics, and others have virtually none we could notice.
Perhaps we could have a adjust to enable little bit dynamic or no dynamics, as our taste prefer.
A example of dynamic harpsichord sampled I can tell about the harpsichord of my Roland F-90, which is full 88 keys and with dynamic for each touch. Sure it don't sound good, since it's just a simple limited sample, and can't be compared to Pianoteq great skills.
This 1773 harpsichord sound great, but I would like to know who would like a option to add some dynamic to the harpsichord model.
Personally, I would like a little bit of it, and perhaps just a bit of aleatory variance. Harpsichords was pluged by feathers, so we can presume the feather it's not a perfect and can get few temporary deformations while playing.
The C Bechstein (1896) have a strong bass, remambering a upright piano sound for bass range.
Those add ons still keep a interesting fine variaion of "sonority". What I mean is that they together represent a very good variety of piano sound, like to say each one have a very distint personality. Those models was very well chosen.
Pianoteq now, with all those Add-Ons together, it's the best software to represent a piano in historic terms, and give perspective of piano evolution.
Those last storic grand pianos recreations sound natural along the entire keyboard. I'm almos conviced that Pianoteq could recreate a modern Steinway Grand Piano precisely. This is trully the begining of a revoltution in digital instruments.