The Reface electric piano has been in and out of action since I got it - lately I’ve left it in my daughter’s play area, since I use a big midi controller with it that stays elsewhere I’m not super concerned about her breaking it.llllllllllllllllllll wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 2:45 pm Good idea, I had it going through a Tronographic Boxidizer, but I think an EQ pedal would find the sweet spot a little better. Plus a vintage style comp to help shave off that 80s style attack. I never made the connection between the Rhodes Mk II and that one goddamn DX7 sound, but I can see its kind of a logical progression now.
I’m sure part of it’s probably a quirk having to do with monitoring, but running these things dry w/ no onboard drive or effects, adding your own pedals, and plugging them into a tube amp really makes these things sound their best. I started out doing that, loved it, then just started DI-ing every time I recorded with it of laziness and it kind of started to get boring and got demoted downstairs.
I had a Roger Mayer Univibe plugged in on the Wurlitzer setting and was getting sounds right off of Paris 1919.
I tried micing the amp with a 421, ribbon, condenser, etc - it all works depending on the song, but I think the position was most important as micing it right in the center of the speaker cone doesn’t really do it any favors if you are going after a vintage thing, even with a ribbon. I was using a big bright EV 15L speaker and should probably try a stout 12 next time.
I noticed HP/LP filters as needed were better than EQ boosting certain areas can throw the balance of the keyboard off depending on the range you are using for that song. Compression of course, tape sim just to take the edge off the very hardest hits, but most of the sound should already be there. None of the pedals/outboard/amp, including the univibe, are doing very much at all, but all together it just gets a classic sound with a weight I couldn’t get out of the DI.
A DI works of course, but that isn’t how I was able to get that thing sounding its best. I was also doing all this stuff before it got to the recorder.
Very, very happy with this thing right now. I found with monitoring through the amp I also calmed down my playing a lot, so things turned out better all around.
I should probably even try a mic on the shitty little internal speaker and see what that sounds like - I have it turned off by default, but it could be cool, especially if you wanted to monitor w/o headphones live in a room but keep the volume down.