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If you like the sound of the Lexicon PCM you might want to check PhoenixVerb or R2, the author is Michael Carnes who also wrote the algos for the Lexicon.
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Each comes with its own color and the more reverb you mix, the more room sound and color you are going to hear.
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Yes, Pianoteq Reverb does change the sound because it's based on IRs which are actual recordings of a room. I use ir-s from and They are high quality and sound beautiful. Go grab some free impulse responses (wav files) and load. Pianoteq standard/pro have a option to load external impulse responses inside of it. It would be great if the Pianoteq standalone programme functioned as a VST host.
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I'd be keen to try - for example - the Lexicon PCM Native reverb plugin but it's a lot of money and I don't know how to integrate something like a VST plugin reverb with Pianoteq, without having to run Pianoteq as a VST instrument in something like a DAW (which I don't really want the hassle of doing). It has digital i/o with which I connect it to my RME soundcard and I then use the RME mixer application to adjust send/return levels - works a treat.īut I use an external hardware unit simply because I happened to have it lying around. I now use an old external hardware reverb - Lexicon MPX 500 - which I like a lot. I found that Pianoteq's built-in reverb seemed to change (in a bad way) the whole character of the sound, to the extent that I just had to turn it off altogether.